Puneet Varma (Editor)

Ipperwash Provincial Park

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Governing body
  
Ontario Parks

Established
  
1936

Management
  
Ontario Parks

Area
  
56 ha

Nearest city
  
Grand Bend

Ipperwash Provincial Park

Similar
  
Pinery Provincial Park, Highland Creek, Ausable River, Ontario Parks, Chutes Provincial Park

Duguid ministerial statement re ipperwash provincial park 6 1 09


Ipperwash Provincial Park is a former provincial park on the shores of southern Lake Huron in Lambton County, Ontario.

Contents

Located near Grand Bend, the 56-hectare (140-acre) park was established in 1936. It contains a long sandy beach on the lakeshore, as well as rare flowers and sand dunes. Wildlife include migrating jaegers, scoter, grebe, and Brant goose.

Ipperwash Crisis

In 1942, during World War II, the Government of Canada appropriated land for a military base from the Chippewa of Kettle and Stoney Point First Nation, purportedly only for the duration, and initially with a promise of compensation. The military continued to use Camp Ipperwash for summer training of cadets into the 1990s. During the late 1980s, the Stoney Point First Nation began to pressure the federal and provincial governments to revert ownership of the entire property as per the 1941 expropriation agreement. The adjacent land at Ipperwash Provincial Park was claimed by the Stoney Point First Nation and was reputed to contain a burial ground. First Nations activism led protesters to occupy the base and the park in September 1995. A confrontation between Ontario Provincial Police and the protesters resulted in the death of Dudley George, the only aboriginal killed in 20th century land claims disputes.

In 2003, the provincial government commissioned an investigative inquiry into George's death and events of the protest. This led to changes in policing policy, and findings that some officials had made racist comments.

On 20 December 2007, the Ontario government announced that it would return Ipperwash Provincial Park to the Chippewas of Kettle and Stony Point First Nation, and that the park would initially be administered jointly.

On 4 February 2015, chief Tom Bressette informed Lambton County that a cultural center would be built on site of the former park, with a hotel complex nearby.

References

Ipperwash Provincial Park Wikipedia