History
In 1810, besides finishing a government contract for the survey of a large part of what became known as the Talbot Road in response to petitions from land grant recipient Colonel Thomas Talbot, Mahlon Burwell (1783–1846) received instructions to survey the vacant land between Houghton and Yarmouth townships, and to divide it into two townships, under the names of Malahide and Bayham. The work was done and in 1811, Malahide and Bayham were made part of the county of Middlesex. In making this survey, Burwell selected for himself a block of land in Bayham at the mouth of Big Otter Creek, the site of what became Port Burwell. Writing of that region to the Surveyor General in June 1815, he said "Otter creek discharges more Water than all the small Rivers which disembogue themselves into the North side of lake Erie excepting the Grand River. When a few drifts are cleared out of it, Boats may descend from the Mills in Norwich t what is now Otterville, in Oxford Countyto its mouth, at almost any Season of the year. There are beautiful Groves of White Pine Timber, on each side of the Creek, interspersed with Groves of other Timber, alternately; there is therefore no doubt, but what ere long considerable quantities of Lumber will be conveyed down that stream, from Norwich and other places to the Lake. It would appear as if Nature had intended the mouth of Big-Otter Creek for a place of greater importance than any other in the District of London. In my mind it is highly probable that such will be the case before many years. I am about to lay out what Land I own on the East side of the mouth in a Town Plot." He urged the government to use an adjacent lot held as a reserve for the same purpose, and "if it should meet with the approbation of His Excellency the Provisional Lieutenant Governor, it would much facilitate the future growth of that part of the Province, to have it laid out by the Government, for a Town at the mouth of Big Otter Creek." Nothing was done by the government, but Burwell and his family kept up interest in the development opportunity at the mouth of Otter Creek and the potential water route north into Oxford County, particularly as Mahlon Burwell served as the elected representative for Oxford and Middlesex from 1812 to 1820. Although he had ownership of the township lots on both sides of the creek mouth – lots 10 and 11 in concession 1 of Bayham township – he needed lot 12 as well to form the village site, and it was a lot reserved by the government under theChronology
* 1812 – first settlers in what was originally known as Otter Creek * 1829- The post office was established. *1830 – village plot surveyed by Mahlon Burwell on height of land above Lake Erie and east bank of Big Otter Creek; free village lots offered to settlers taking up residence; Customs tax officer appointed for harbour shipping * 1832 – Port Burwell Harbour Company formed to improve and operate harbour, first tavern built, and construction of first church begun in village * 1834 – first shipyard opened for schooner construction * 1836 – population 200 * 1840 – lighthouse constructed on west edge of village land height (now part of Port Burwell Marine Museum and Historic Lighthouse) * 1849 September – Ingersoll and Port Burwell Plank and Gravel Road Company formed to construct a toll road 31 miles in length, half in Oxford County (Ingersoll to Tillsonburg) and the remainder through Bayham township connecting Tillsonburg, Vienna and Port Burwell * 1849 Dec 31 – export totals from area sawmills recorded for Port Burwell harbour: 8.4 million feet lumber, 3.1 million shingles, 119,155 staves, 193 vessels loaded * 1851 – first steam-engine sawmill, with capacity to cut 1 million feet of lumber per annum * 1852 – completion of final three-mile Port Burwell section of Ingersoll and Port Burwell Plank and Gravel Road * 1877 – population 700 * 1895 – completion of railway line linking to Tillsonburg and Brantford * 1899 May 12 – fire destroys entire business district on main street; rebuilt in the course of the following * 1900 – organized under ''Ontario Municipal Act'' as a police village; harbour develops as major terminus for coal shipments into Ontario from Pennsylvania through harbour at Ashtabula, Ohio; sandy beaches running along lakeshore west of harbour for two miles increasingly drawing tourists for summer day visits * 1949 – incorporated as a village under ''Ontario Municipal Act'' * 1967 – Ontario government begins acquiring lakeshore property west of harbour for new provincial park * 1971 – campground adjacent to beach area begins operation as Iroquois Beach Provincial Park * 1983 – population 700 * 1986 – expanded lakeshore beach and parking areas and 230-site campground and nature trails on 243 hectares reopened as Port Burwell Provincial Park * 1998 – merged with village of Vienna and Township of Bayham to form Municipality of Bayham as part of restructuring of Elgin County * 2012 – retired cold war submarine HMCS Ojibwa installed as museum attraction * 2016 – not-for-profit Periscope Playhouse Cultural Centre opened on Wellington Street opposite Royal Canadian Legion. Motto: Come for the beach, stay for the show! * 2018 – wheelhouse from Great Lakes freighter installed as new attraction at Port Burwell Marine Museum and Historic LighthouseHistoric churches
Locations and histories of churches and cemeteries have been studied and documented extensively by the Elgin County branch of the Ontario Genealogical Society: * Trinity Anglican Church – services continue in the picturesque 1836 edifice * Baptist Church – the first congregation formed in 1819 north of the village site, built a church in 1835 that was taken apart and moved into the village in 1865 near the Anglican church; closed 1970, demolished 1986 * St Paul's United Church – first church (Methodist) completed 1852; new church on same site 1910, joined United Church movement in 1925; closed December 2014 when remaining congregation joined Straffordville church * Free Methodist Church – the Methodists who chose not to join the United Church movement formed their own congregation using the old 1852 church, until it was closed in 1969 * Free Presbyterian Church – built 1867, closed in the 1870s, sold 1896 * St Joseph's Catholic Church – mission established 1937, first small church building 1941, new church 1966 closed 2004 * John Paul II Cultural Center – summer camp and retreat continues north of village * Lighthouse Gospel Church – non-denominational services in the former St. Joseph's; separate services in German for local Mennonite congregationNotable people
* Leonidas Burwell (1818–1879), son of Mahlon, took over family's interests at Port Burwell in 1842 and made it his home * Mary Ella Dignam (1857–1938) painter, teacher, and art organizer; born in Port Burwell * Earl Hutchinson (1888–1976) railroad engineer, member of Legislative Assembly of Ontario; born in Port Burwell * William James Hughes (1894–1979) Anglican bishop of British Honduras, first Bishop of Matabeleland, Archbishop of Central Africa; retired in 1970 to Canada, where he continued to minister at Holy Trinity, Port Burwell * Charles Frederick (Fred) Bodsworth (1918–2012) writer, journalist and naturalist; born in Port BurwellSee also
*References
Further reading
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{{authority control Communities in Elgin County Former villages in Ontario Populated places disestablished in 1998 Populated places on Lake Erie in Canada