DeCew Town



DeCew Town in 1925. Photo Courtesy of the Niagara Falls Digital Collections.
 


 


 


 


Secord Significance

Laura Secord made her famous trek to the home of Captain John DeCew, whose Georgian-style stone home was one of the finest houses in the emerging hamlet that would eventually bear his name. At the time of Laura's visit, there were very few homes in the area, but after the War of 1812 ended, the tiny village began to grow and prosper. However, the growth of DeCew Town was quickly curtailed when the development of the Welland Canal resulted in water diversions that seriously affected the operation of DeCew's mill.

The vanished hamlet of DeCew Town was located along the edge of the Niagara Escarpment between DeCew House and DeCew Falls.

Settler John DeCew built several mills on 200 acres of land he purchased in 1792 on the escarpment above 12 Mile Creek. After his capture by American Patriot forces and imprisonment in Philadephia, DeCew escaped in 1814 and returned to Canada after the war. He rebuilt his sawmill and constructed a stone grist mill at DeCew Falls. Other pioneer services followed, and a small settlement called DeCew Town developed in the kilometre of road west of DeCew House towards DeCew Falls. These buildings formed the nucleus of a village called DeCew Town.

The settlement owed its existence to the waterpower generated by the creeks and streams in the region. Despite occasional problems with a diminishing water supply which caused idle spells during dry weather, DeCew Town became a significant centre of economic activity.

John DeCew was an early supporter of the Welland Canal. He anticipated that the newly proposed Welland Canal would pass through DeCew Town, and that the future of the little hamlet - and of his businesses - would be assured.

However, the actual route of the canal was relocated further east, bypassing his land entirely. Water was diverted from local streams to supply the newly constructed Welland Canal, and the DeCew Town water supply was soon reduced to a trickle.

In 1833, angered by his rivalry with Welland Canal proponents William Hamilton Merrit and George Keefer, and frustrated by his inability to get compensation from the government for the water diversions that ruined his business, John DeCew left the area and moved to Haldimand County near Hamilton. There, aided by a substantial compensation he eventually received from the Welland Canal Company itself, he founded another settlement known as DeCewsville, west of Cayuga. He died there in 1855 at the age of 89.

In 1837, DeCew's grist mill was put up for sale. It probably never sold, because it was in ruins by the mid 1860s. The other enterprises in DeCew Town likely met the same fate, and the town began a slow decline. Apart from the DeCew House ruins, the only thing left today is an 1820s house on DeCew Road that may have been a blacksmith's shop and is now a private residence.

Hughes, Alun. 2008. Shades of Reynoldsville and DeCew Town: A History of Power Glen and Vicinity. Newsletter of the Historical Society of St. Catharines, December 2008.

Thorold, Ontario

Latitude: 43.107649358600000
Longitude: -79.250268525900000

From the parking lot at DeCew House, you can take a walk along the Bruce Trail which follows the edge of the water westward around Lake Moodie near the site of the original settlement of DeCew Town. The Trail route is marked by distinct white blazes on trees and posts, and follows the edge of the water behind the foundation of the house. This trail will bring you to the edge of the Lake Moodie hydroelectric reservoir on the edge of the Niagara Escarpment and past DeCew Falls, near the western edge of the tiny hamlet of DeCew Town.


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