
Glengarry House National Historic Site of Canada
Posted by:
colincan
N 45° 02.372 W 074° 37.159
18T E 529983 N 4987412
Quick Description: This site is directly linked to Lieutenant Colonel John Macdonell of Aberchalder who served in the British military and then became the first Speaker of the Legislative Assembly of Upper Canada. The remains of his home Glengarry House are nearby.
Location: Ontario, Canada
Date Posted: 10/7/2009 7:09:35 AM
Waymark Code: WM7D0Q
Views: 1
Long Description:
The federal plaque reads as though Lt Col John Macdonell were a
National Historic Person of Canada. In fact it is his former home
whose stabilized remains lie nearby which is the national historic
designation as evidenced in the HSMBC Minutes of 2005. Rewording of
the inscription when the unilingual plaque was made bilingual in
the late 1970s lead to this mistaken inference. Glengarry House was
a rallying point for the Glengarry Fencibles during the War of 1812
prior to the engagement with American forces at Salmon River.
Macdonell (1750-1809) came to Canada as a loyalist in 1776, served
for a time with Butler's Rangers and then settled in Glengarry
district. He went on to represent Glengarry in the legislature
where he became Speaker from 1792-1796. Glengarry House was
designated of national importance in 1921 and the original plaque
erected in 1923.
Classification: National Historic Site
 Province or Territory: Ontario
 Location - City name/Town name: Glen Walter
 Link to Parks Canada entry (must be on www.pc.gc.ca): [Web Link]

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