Preserving Niagara-on-the-Lake’s heritage since 1962.
We like to fund raise in style. Support our activities. Every summer The Niagara Foundation holds three cocktail parties, each on a different Saturday, at a different home in Niagara-on-the-Lake. From 5:30-7:30 drinks and hors d'oeuvres are served in a garden setting, rain or shine. $200 per person - come once, twice or every time!
2023 dates are:
Saturday, June 17
Saturday, July 15
Saturday, August 12
To purchase tickets, contact Jane Dagg at 905.468.7781 or [email protected].
Each year The Niagara Foundation chooses a resident of Niagara-on-the-Lake to receive the Foundation’s prestigious Living Landmark Award. The recipient of the award is an individual who the Foundation feels has made an outstanding contribution to the quality of life in Niagara. The 2023 dinner will be Saturday, Nov. 18, at Navy Hall. In 2022 we recognized Jim Alexander.
Past recipientsGoettler Family Foundation Pledges $1 Million To Help Safeguard The Wilderness Read 2022 announcement
Niagara Foundation to Acquire Half Interest in Historic 5.5-acre Niagara-on-the-Lake Woods Read 2018 news release
The Niagara Foundation asked candidates in the 2022 municipal election to share their views on a number of key heritage and development issues that are important to our community. Read what the candidates said
Foundation to Town re Transportation Master Plan July 25, 2022 Read submission>
Foundation to Council re Rand Estate Sept. 27, 2021 Read submission>
Foundation to Council re Parliament Oak Sept. 27, 2021 Read submission
THE NIAGARA FOUNDATION
PO Box 790, NOTL, ON L0S 1J0
[email protected]
Website design by Punch & Judy
Photography by David Cooper
and Cosmo Condina
News Release May 11, 2018
NIAGARA-ON-THE-LAKE, ON — The Niagara Foundation is pursuing the purchase of a half-interest in an historically significant Old Town property known as the Wilderness, the Foundation announced today.
The 5.5-acre (2.2-hectare) wooded property and its historic buildings in the heart of Old Town is being acquired from the estate of one of two sisters belonging to a family that has owned the site for many decades, to protect it for posterity. The purchase, subject to court approval, is designed to protect the Wilderness and the properties on it from further development.
The Wilderness is being acquired by the Foundation because it has rich historical significance, said Niagara Foundation President Michael Howe. “It is not only an area of natural beauty; it’s also important to Indigenous people and our region’s military and political history, as far back as the 18th century,” Mr. Howe said.
“We believe this historic land and building must be preserved for everyone — Indigenous people, residents of Niagara, visitors and indeed, all Canadians.
The property was once the home of William Claus, Deputy Superintendent of the Indian Department and one of the three trustees of the Six Nations. The Wilderness was originally given by the Six Nations Indians to Mr. Claus’ wife Nancy Johnson “in token of her many deeds of kindness.” Her father Sir William Johnson negotiated the Treaty of Niagara with 24 Indigenous nations in 1764. The Treaty formed the basis for the original treaty relationship between Indigenous peoples and settlers in Eastern North America.
Sir William Johnson met with more than 2,000 Chiefs from all of eastern North America in Niagara in 1764 to negotiate the Treaty. It was considered the high point of colonial relations with Indigenous peoples. It was specifically conceived as a treaty of sharing of the land, not conquest.
The site provided shelter for soldiers and a family in a root cellar during the War of 1812 after Niagara-onthe-Lake was razed by the fleeing American forces in 1813.
The Town of Niagara-on-the-Lake designated the Wilderness a heritage property in 1994. This designation applies both to the heavily wooded land as well as the entire exterior and interior of the house on the site, as well as the carriage house and the archaeological remains. The house was built in 1816. A creek that meanders through the property is protected by a conservation easement.
The Ontario Heritage Trust has strongly encouraged the preservation of this property.
About the Niagara Foundation
The Niagara Foundation is a not-for-profit charitable corporation with the express goals of preserving and protecting the heritage of Niagara-on-the-Lake. It was incorporated in 1962.