Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Wawa is a township in the Canadian province of Ontario in the Algoma District. Formerly known as the Township of Michipicoten, named after a nearby river of that name, the township was officially renamed in 2007 for its largest and best-known community of Wawa, located on the western shores of Wawa Lake. [4] This area was first developed for ...
Potholes Provincial Park is a park in Algoma District, Ontario, Canada, located 38 kilometres (24 mi) east of the community of Wawa. It can be accessed via Ontario Highway 101 . [ 3 ]
Lake Superior Provincial Park is one of the largest provincial parks in Ontario, covering about 1,550 square kilometres (600 sq mi) along the northeastern shores of Lake Superior between Sault Ste. Marie and Wawa in Algoma District in Northeastern Ontario, Canada. [2]
Camp Woodlands was a Salvation Army camp in Manitoba, Canada from 1976-2007. Camp Glenhuron was a Salvation Army camp in Bayfield, Bluewater, Huron County, Ontario, Canada. [17] Camp Madawaska is a former Salvation Army camp in Nipissing District Ontario, Canada, near the entrance to Algonquin Provincial Park.
Gros Cap 49 is a First Nations reserve located near Wawa, Ontario. It is one of four reserves of the Michipicoten First Nation. References
Wanakita began as an all-boys camp and during its early years, the nurse was the only woman who was regularly on the camp grounds. In 1969, the camp started offering the same opportunities to girls. [5] Since 1991, Wanakita has partnered with Hemophilia Ontario and offered instruction on the proper use of clotting agents. [6] [7]
Hammer Lake is a hammer-shaped lake in Ontario, Canada located between White River and Wawa. Activities at Hammer Lake include canoeing , fishing , blueberry-picking, swimming , and picnicking . Loons , beavers , and chipmunks are common, and moose are occasionally sighted as well.
Algoma Central Railway telephone car, Algoma District, Ontario, [ca. 1925] The Algoma Central Railway was first owned by Francis H. Clergue, who required a railway to haul resources from the interior of the Algoma District to Clergue's industries in Sault Ste. Marie; specifically, to transport logs to his pulp mill and iron ore from the Helen Mine, near Wawa, to a proposed steel mill (which ...