Current Issue

March 4, 2026

Current Conditions in Shawville 11.6°C

A celebratory bus tour of Clarendon

A celebratory bus tour of Clarendon

Above, from left, tour guide and historian Jo-Anne Brownlee, artefact collector Phil Holmes and Brownlee’s husband Randy Beattie were among those who made the tour possible on Saturday.
The Equity

By Ruth Potter

Thirty-two people piled onto a school bus on Saturday morning in Shawville to embark on a bus tour of Clarendon led by local historian Jo-Anne Brownlee.

The free bus trip was an anniversary event organized to celebrate 20 years of the Shawville-Clarendon Library and Pontiac Archives at their current location at 356 Main Street.

Brownlee said she was pleased to see all generations participate in the three-and-a-half-hour tour.

St. Matthew’s Anglican Church in Charteris opened its doors especially for the tour. Reverend Susan Lewis said she heard from participants that they appreciated how well the church had been cared for and preserved.

The St. Matthew’s Anglican Church in Charteris was one of the stops on the historical bus tour of Clarendon on Saturday. The church has been carefully preserved by a team of dedicated volunteers over the years.

At Little Red Wagon Winery, Brownlee showed a slideshow she had prepared on the Clarendon Roller Mills – a flour mill that was in operation until 1944.

The final stop on the tour was Starborn Farms, where Phil Holmes showed the artifacts that were found in his farm field, just a stone’s throw from Starborn, using a metal detector.

He said his favourite is the remnant of a musket ball, and the most useful find was a hitch pin that he lost out of his hay baler a few years ago.

Brownlee thanked the Pontiac Archives present and past, as it was from their work and collected documents that she was able to research her book A Self-Guided Historical Tour of Clarendon, published in 2005.



Register or subscribe to read this content

Thanks for stopping by! This article is available to readers who have created a free account or who subscribe to The Equity.

When you register for free with your email, you get access to a limited number of stories at no cost. Subscribers enjoy unlimited access to everything we publish—and directly support quality local journalism here in the Pontiac.

Register or Subscribe Today!



Log in to your account

ADVERTISEMENT
Calumet Media

More Local News

A celebratory bus tour of Clarendon

The Equity

How to Share on Facebook

Unfortunately, Meta (Facebook’s parent company) has blocked the sharing of news content in Canada. Normally, you would not be able to share links from The Equity, but if you copy the link below, Facebook won’t block you!