Key elements contributing to the heritage value of this site include: the location of the settlement on the banks of the Wye River, which flows into Georgian Bay; viewscapes to and from the site and the river; all archaeological evidence discovered and as of yet undiscovered of the Jesuit-Wendat settlement during the period. Address : off Highway 12, Midland, Ontario. Designation Date: Other Name s :.
Plaque s Existing plaque: at parking lot in front of museum entrance off Highway 12, Midland, Ontario Founded by the Jesuits in , Sainte-Marie was designed as a central residence for the mission to the Wendat Huron peoples. Heritage Value Sainte-Marie Among the Hurons Mission was designated a national historic site of Canada in because it was headquarters of the Jesuit Mission to the Hurons from Download our free APP! By , Sainte-Marie was a wilderness home to 66 French men, representing one-fifth of the entire population of New France.
Sainte-Marie's brief history ended in , when members of the mission community were forced to abandon and burn their home of nearly ten years. Located near Midland in the beautiful Southern Georgian Bay area, this world-renowned reconstruction illustrates the interaction of the French and Wendat nations.
Visitors get a unique opportunity to see the earliest Canadian pioneer life, through guided or self-guided visits, school group tours, interactive education programs, special events, and corporate functions. Visit our Interpretive Museum and themed gift shop, and complete your stay with a delicious meal in Restaurant Sainte-Marie. Step back in time to 17th century Canada on Georgian Bay. Explore, hear the legends in the Longhouse and join in.
Touch history, and experience life at this historic French Jesuit mission in the heart of the Huron-Wendat First Nation. They believed, with their founder Ignatius Loyola, that the first step in saving one's neighbour was to educate him. With the exception of one Italian priest, the only people who lived at Sainte-Marie were Frenchmen. No women accompanied them. The Huron-Wendat, drawn by curiosity, often came to visit the priests and their helpers to learn about their strange and different ways.
About 70 percent of this area was arable land and was well described by a 17th century Recollet, Brother Gabriel Sagard.
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