The township of South Glengarry comprises a number of villages and hamlets, including the following communities:
In the former Charlottenburgh Township:Glen Walter, Green Valley, Martintown, Summerstown, Summerstown Station, St. Raphaels, Williamstown; Avondale, Cashions Glen, Glen Brook, Glendale, Glen Falloch, Glenroy, MacGillivrays Bridge, Munroes Mills, Tyotown; Bayview Estates, Glendale Subdivision, Glen Gordon, Loon Island, North Branch; Camerons Point, Danis Point, Farlingers Point, Flannigans Point, Fraser Point, McGibbons Point, Pilons Point, Prevost Point, Stonehouse Point
In the former Lancaster Township: Bainsville, Brown House Corner, Dalhousie Mills, Glen Nevis, Glen Norman, Lancaster, North Lancaster, South Lancaster; Bridge End, Curry Hill, Pine Hill; Lancaster Heights, Maple Hill, North Lancaster Station, Picnic Grove, Redwood Estates; Brittania Point, Creg Quay, Faulkners Point, Nadeaus Point, Pointe Mouillee, Westleys Point
The township administrative offices are located in Lancaster.
Martintown
Williamstown
James Clyde's Blacksmith and Farrier Shop (right) and Farm Implement Sales Shop (left), [between 1895 and 1910]
Daniel Columbus McArthur Blacksmith Shop, [between 1895 and 1910]
Charlottenburgh and Lancaster were two of the original eight "Royal Townships", established along the Saint Lawrence River in Upper Canada in the 1780s. This area was first settled by United Empire Loyalists. The development of this area was encouraged by Sir John Johnson, then the Superintendent General and Inspector General of Indian Affairs, who had been forced to abandon his land holdings in New York State during the American Revolution.[2] Johnson built a house in Williamstown; the home was completed in 1785 and is now a Canadian National Historic Site, the Sir John Johnson Manor House. A grist mill and saw mill, now gone, were also built on the same location. Williamstown also has the oldest house in Ontario, The Bethune-Thompson House built in 1784. Occupants over the years have included the Reverend John Bethune (1751–1815), the great-great-grandfather of Doctor Norman Bethune, and David Thompson, Canadian explorer.
The Glengarry Celtic Music Hall of Fame is located in Williamstown. The Nor'Westers and Loyalist Museum is also located in Williamstown.
Williamstown is also home to Ontario's oldest continuing agricultural fair,[4] which celebrated its bicentennial in 2012.[5]
South Glengarry is the location of four National Historic Sites of Canada: the Bethune-Thompson House,[6] the Glengarry Cairn,[7] the Sir John Johnson House,[8] and the ruins of St. Raphael's Roman Catholic Church.[9]
Operation of a horse-powered treadmill around the turn of the 20th century, Martintown.
St. Raphael's Catholic Church was completed in 1821 under the authority of Alexander Macdonell later Bishop of Regiopolis (now Kingston, Ontario). This is one of the oldest churches in what was then the colony of Upper Canada. In late 1970, the church interiors, roof and tower were destroyed by fire, but the ruins were preserved. In 1973, a smaller church with the same name was built, attached to the ruins.
The township was established on January 1, 1998, with the amalgamation of the former Townships of Charlottenburgh and Lancaster, along with the Village of Lancaster.
Demographics
Historical census populations
Year
Pop.
±%
1986
10,946
—
1991
11,971
+9.4%
1996
12,649
+5.7%
2001
12,700
+0.4%
2006
12,880
+1.4%
2011
13,162
+2.2%
2016
13,150
−0.1%
2021
13,330
+1.4%
Population amounts prior to 2001 is total of Charlottenburgh TP, Lancaster TP, and Lancaster VL.
In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, South Glengarry had a population of 13,330 living in 5,431 of its 5,848 total private dwellings, a change of 1.4% from its 2016 population of 13,150. With a land area of 605.02 km2 (233.60 sq mi), it had a population density of 22.0/km2 (57.1/sq mi) in 2021.[10]
Canadian author Hugh Hood mentions Williamstown in his short story "Getting to Williamstown," first published in 1928.
Sport
Group portrait of Martintown football team, 1903
The Char-Lan Rebels of the CCHL2 League play out of the Char-Lan Recreation Centre in Williamstown. The Char-Lan Skating Club is based out of the Char-Lan Recreation Centre.
Eric Collette, resident of South Lancaster; claims to be the toughest man, pound for pound, in South Glengarry.
David Thompson, resident of Williamstown; Canadian explorer.
John Sandfield Macdonald; born in St. Raphael West, Glengarry County, Ontario which was then Upper Canada [12](joint premier of the Province of Canada and the first premier of Ontario).