Point Pelee celebrating 100 years as a designated national park - Action News
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Windsor

Point Pelee celebrating 100 years as a designated national park

The park hosted a 'birthday party' Monday complete with cake at their visitor centre to celebrate the momentous occasion.

Admission will be free on October 13

Point Pelee National Park was established May 29, 1918 as the first national park established for ecological conservation reasons. (Melissa Nakhavoly/CBC)

Canada's smallest mainland national park is 100 years old.

Point Pelee National Park was establishedMay29,1918 as the first national park established for ecological conservation reasons.

The park hosted a 'birthday party' Monday complete with cake at its visitor centre to celebrate the momentous occasion.

Point Pelee National Park turns into a haven for stargazing on Dark Sky Nights. (Parks Canada)

The beginning

W.E. Saunders a naturalist and conservationist, convinced bird enthusiast Jack Miner to go to the area now known as Point Pelee. Miner got help from four people in Leamington and convinced two wildlife protectiongroups in Essex County to protect the land.

"They really recognized the [park's] incredible biodiversity ... They recognized the global importance of the park as a stopover for migratory birds," saidpark superintendent MariaPapoulias.

The grouplobbiedthe federal government to keep the land safe from human activity.

On May 29,1918, Point Pelee was designated as a Canadian national park.

An aerial view of Point Pelee and the light blue water.
Toursim Windsor Essex Pelee Island and the Southwest Ontario Tourism Corporation are making a push to attract visitors from the Greater Toronto Area to Essex County. (Southwest Ontario Tourism Corporation)

Maintaining the park

More than 300 cottages had populated Point Pelee National Park after its designation during the next fourdecades. As a result, Point Pelee was closed to being de-listed as a national park in the 1960's.

"They thought the ecologicalintegrityhad been so damaged, itwouldn'tqualify as a national park," Papoulias said.

The park eventually bought all of the cottages returning the land to its natural form.

The clean-up was part of a dual-mandate by Parks Canada to "protect and present" Point Pelee's national heritage.

"One cannot happen without the other. We need to protect it to show it to Canadians. And we need to show it to Canadians so that they care," she said.

Canada's Minister of Environment and Climate Change, Catherine McKenna, announced $5.5 million in funding for projects at the park, including the Marsh Boardwalk. (Fae Tigre/Facebook)

Celebrating 100 years

The Government of Canada is investing approximately $5.5 million in federal infrastructure funding to provide new and improved visitor experiences in Point Pelee National Park. The tower and stationary section of the Marsh Boardwalk will be refurbished.

"With this money, we're also going to be building a brand new 8-foot tall viewing tower," saidPapoulias.

To celebrate diversity in 2018, the Government of Canada is also offering free admission to new Canadian citizens for one year with the Cultural Access Pass.

The park will also be hosting celebratory events through the remainder of the year, including a vintage car show on June 16 and a free admission day on October 13.