Holtyre

On the other side of the Black River, Holtyre is ten minutes east of Highway 11 on road 572.  Like its cousin Ramore, Holtyre is a tiny three-street (Euclid, Gleason, Pearl) francophone hamlet.

Holtyre, Ontario farm off highway 11

A farm in Holtyre

Dwight emailed me to tell me that Holtyre was built in the early 1930’s after gold was discovered. The town was named after 2 mines: Hollinger and Macintyre – hence the name Holtyre. The mine had high grade gold which was mined from 1935 to 1988 – over half a century.

Up until the late 70s there were 2 stores, a large hotel, bowling ally, 2 schools (English and French – K to 8) and gas station. There was (and is) a larger school bus business that first started by transporting miners to the Johns Mansville Asbestos mine site between Holtyre and Matheson after WWII – the business evolved from there.

Dwight also emailed to tell this story: supposedly in the mid-70’s the gold mine changed ownership and it was decided to save costs, close the smelter, and truck the raw ore to Timmins for smelting. Sounded logical, and for nearly 20 more years, this is what happened. In order to make room on the property, they decided to simply burn the old smelter building down – after all, it was over 40 years old and well used. The thing is, that inside of the structure had been in place since 1935 and was made of wood. Gold dust from the smelting process had been building in every crevice and crack in the old building. When they burned it down, there was enough pure gold that had melted into clumps on the ground, that when it was collected (as I understand in quite a surprising panic!), the new owners paid for the mine – that day. It was clear profit from then on. Who would have guessed – certainly not the previous owners !

Holtyre, Ontario

Does photography count? Uhm, probably…

I noticed some interesting houses with two level front balconies, kind of like in New Orleans, but less extravagant.  I wanted to take a photo, but Holtyre is so small that I felt oddly conspicuous and didn’t take any photos directly in town. (And hey, on my journeys I’ve been taking photos of everything and anything, so if I feel too out of place, then you know I felt weird!)  I think it was because the community was just so small and was also off the road.  I had no reason to be there, so it felt a bit weird.  So instead, I took some shots of a local farm. The tiny photo doesn’t do it justice…it was such a great summer evening the first time I was in Holtyre.

Holtyre has its own church, a playground, and an inordinate number of school buses.  I think there is a school bus operator in town, but there were also old buses in a few fields and yards, so I wonder what’s up.

I didn’t see any stores in town, but then again I skirted around and didn’t stop too long.  I’m sure there’s a variety store.  I don’t think there is a caisse or a gas station.  There is an abattoir outside of town, if you happen to have any animals that need butchering.

For more info, check out J. Charles Caty’s excellent history of Holtyre or the 25-minute documentary from 1971 on Holtyre that is online – you can watch it here, on Youtube.

Holtyre boys Highway 11

Photo of some cabin builders, maybe late 50s early 60s (posted at the request of a reader)

1966 Holtyre, Ontario public school photo 1-4

December 1966, Holtyre Public School Grades 1-4

HOltyre, Ontario public school photo 1996 5-8

December 1966, Holtyre Public School Grades 5-8

 

For an archive of the more than 450 comments (yes you read that correctly.  More than four-hundred and fifty!) that were posted to Highway11.ca’s profile of Holtyre between 2008 and 2012, please click here.

66 thoughts on “Holtyre

  1. Hi to everyone who was there from 1966 to 1968. Dad (Kieth Gagnon) was at the radar base. I remeber my buddies from those few years, Randt Birdick who lived next door, Robbie Buckley, Graden Andrews, Joe Doxtater Ross Wixon. Probably not all spelled right, that was a long time ago. That was one of the greatest places to live from all the postings we were at from P.E.I to B.C., for a boy to grow to spend his younger years. I played on the hockey team there and remember leaving a pool of blood on the ice in South Porcupine at a game there. I have been back to Ontario a few time since but have never gotten back up tp Holtyre. To Bruce Gagnon who wrote a note earlier, David is in Regina, Colleen is in New Westminister in the lower mainland and I am in Prince George B. C. with Judy where we have been since Dad retired in 1973. I am going back east in the next couple of years and will hopefully get to take my wife to see Holtyre.

  2. about blog ‘Ontario Highway 11’ …in this article you reference J.Charles Caty’s excellent history of Holtyre…and we then click on history to read this history….however, the history is missing a page 3 from a total of 7 pages.
    Could you send this to me by email please…tks nic

  3. Just to wish everyone from Holtyre past and present a very merry Christmas and a happy new year. I hope we can get this site used a bit more this year.

  4. Hi everyone in Holtyre.l lived in sesekinika until 1967. Went to the one room school house and then to KLCVI.l visited your town many times with friends.l never knew many people from Holtyre but some of my friends did and when ever we visited we had a great time. So many memories.l live in Calgary and would move back home in a heartbeat.Alberta has much to offer but Ontario is home to me. Sesekinika will always be in my heart .was nice to read all your comments even if l am not from there. Sesekinika is not that far from Holtyre and l thought l might know some of you. My grama used to say ,strangers are just friends that we haven’t met yet. So maybe we will meet one day.l hope to go home if not to live then for a visit.maybe ?????thanks for sharing your comment site. Pattie Morin. McGugan. Calgary

Everyone has a story to tell. Share yours.

Your email address will not be published.

*