- Jan 29, 2018 SCUGOG—A new hotel, live entertainment and additional room for more slot machines and table games are all in the cards for the Great Blue Heron.
- Gaming Experience the thrill of the most exciting slot action! Featuring the newest blockbuster games to classic favorites, or enjoy the table game action in our separate, tables-only environment. Stadium gaming Play $3 blackjack, $1 roulette with a $5 wager per spin, or $5 baccarat, Sic-Bo and even craps! We have attendants available who can.
- Great Blue Heron Charity Casino Great Blue Heron Charity Casino is a Native American Casino in Port Perry, Ontario, Canada and is open daily 24 hours. The 70,000 square foot casino features 452 slots and fifty table games. The property has three restaurants. The website is www.greatblueheroncasino.com Great Blue Heron Charity Casino Address.
(Redirected from Port Perry, Ontario)
Historic Post Office in Downtown Port Perry | |
Coordinates: 44°6′N78°57′W / 44.100°N 78.950°WCoordinates: 44°6′N78°57′W / 44.100°N 78.950°W | |
Country | Canada |
---|---|
Province | Ontario |
Regional municipality | Durham |
Township | Scugog |
Settled | 1821 |
Incorporated (village) | 1871 |
Population | |
• Total | 9,453 |
• Density | 1,207.2/km2 (3,127/sq mi) |
Time zone | UTC−5 (EST) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC−4 (EDT) |
Forward sortation area | |
Area code(s) | 905 and 289 |
NTS Map | 031D02 |
GNBC Code | FCIAS |
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Port Perry is a community located in Scugog, Ontario, Canada. The town is located 84 km northeast of central Toronto and north of Oshawa and Whitby. Due to its location in the Greater Toronto Area, many residents commute to Toronto for work.[2] Port Perry has a population of 9,453 as of 2016.[1]
Port Perry serves as the administrative and commercial centre for the township of Scugog. The town is home to a 24-bed hospital (Lakeridge Health Port Perry), Scugog Township's municipal offices and many retail establishments. Port Perry serves as a hub for many small communities in the Scugog area, such as Greenbank, Raglan, Caesarea, Blackstock and Nestleton/Nestleton Station. The Great Blue Heron Charitable Casino is a major employer. Located at the basin of the Trent-Severn Waterways is Lake Scugog, one of Ontario's largest man-made lakes.
History[edit]
The area around Port Perry was first surveyed as part of Reach Township by MajorSamuel Street Wilmot in 1809. The first settler in the area was Reuben Crandell, a United Empire Loyalist who built a homestead with his wife in May 1821. Their original home is still in use and can be seen on King Street between Prince Albert and Manchester. In November 1821, Lucy Ann Crandell became the first child of European descent born in the area. In 1831, Crandell and his family moved to a homestead at what became Crandell's Corners (later called Borelia)[3]. It had its own Post Office, near the present-day junction of Queen Street and Highway 7A.
Settler Peter Perry laid out village lots on the shore of Lake Scugog in 1848 on the site of a former native village known as Scugog Village. The townsite was named Port Perry in 1852 and its first Postmaster was Joseph Bigelow. It was incorporated as a village in 1871. At the time there was an intense rivalry between Port Perry and two nearby towns, Prince Albert and Manchester. Expecting great things for 'his' town, Peter Perry predicted that goats would eat grass off of Prince Albert's main street.[4]
At the time, Prince Albert sat astride a planked toll road running south to Whitby. Grain and lumber from areas throughout the area south-east of Lake Simcoe fed through Prince Albert, which was a major grain trading area. Perry and others in Port Perry felt a railway was a much better option, and Perry's prediction would eventually come true.
A group of local businessmen started the process of bringing the railway to the town in 1867, and the first train on the Port Whitby and Port Perry Railway reached the terminus in Port Perry in 1872. In the following year the grain elevator was built, still standing today as Canada's oldest existing grain elevator.[5] Cargo from all over northern Ontario was shipped via the Trent-Severn Waterway to Port Perry via Lake Scugog, and then via the railway to Whitby, where it could be loaded onto the CP or CN mainlines running along the shore of Lake Ontario, or onto ships in Port Whitby. Businesses quickly moved out of Prince Albert and moved to Port Perry, leaving Prince Albert effectively a suburb of Port Perry today. The Port Perry Granary still stands as a tall sentinel on the shores of Lake Scugog and proud of being Canada's oldest grain elevator outlasting numerous fires and modern day demolition.
The Port Perry mill and grain elevator, circa 1930. Originally built in 1873, the building remains a major landmark to this day. The original line of the PW&PP Railway can be seen in the foreground.
The village was amalgamated with Cartwright, Reach and Scugog Townships to form the Township of Scugog in 1974 upon the creation of the Regional Municipality of Durham.
An Ontario Historical Plaque was erected at the Scugog Shores Museum by the province to commemorate Jimmy Frise's role in Ontario's heritage.[6]
Culture and recreation[edit]
Port Perry's Victorian-era downtown is a tourist destination, with clothing stores, restaurants, cafés, bookstores, galleries and antique shops. In the summer, the town features the festivals Mississauga First Nation Pow Wow, the Highland Games, the Dragon Boat Races and StreetFest. Port Perry is also home to the Theatre on The Ridge summer theatre festival featuring 6 shows performed at Townhall 1873 during July and August. Its annual fair, held every Labour Day weekend, has been running for over 150 years. There are also golf courses, both public and private. Other attractions in Port Perry and surrounding area include the Great Blue Heron Charity Casino, Scugog Memorial Library (featuring the Kent Farndale Art Gallery), Scugog Island Cruises (MV Woodman Tour Boat), the Scugog Shores Historical Museum and the Town Hall 1873 Centre for the Performing Arts.
At many local farms, visitors may pick their own seasonal fruit (strawberries, raspberries, apples). In the summer, bass tournaments and lakeside activities are also featured.
The Lake Scugog shoreline offers two popular lakeside parks, Palmer and Birdseye. There are active fishing seasons, both winter and summer. In the winter months, Lake Scugog is dotted with ice-fishing huts and is a destination for ice fishermen and snowmobilers.
Notable residents[edit]
- Kate Beirness, TSN sports broadcaster and Port Perry native
- George Burnett, hockey coach in NHL, AHL, OHL and Hockey Canada
- Bill Clark, NHL forward of the 1990s
- George A. Cope, CEO, Bell Canada Enterprises[7]
- Gertrude Spurr Cutts, English-born painter spent latter part of her life in Port Perry
- Ty Dellandrea prospect for the Dallas Stars
- Travis Fortnum, journalist with Global News
- Brad Goreski, celebrity fashion stylist and TV personality born in Port Perry
- Vladimir Hachinski, renowned clinical neurologist and researcher in stroke and dementia; born in Ukraine and raised in Port Perry
- Bill Lishman, sculptor, filmmaker, inventor, naturalist and public speaker; lived in nearby Blackstock
- James Howden MacBrien, Commander of the Canadian Army and RCMP; born in nearby Myrtle and raised in Port Perry
- Jayde Nicole, Canadian Model, born in Scarborough and raised in Port Perry
- Daniel David Palmer, the founder of Palmer School of Chiropractic; born in Port Perry
- Dan Petronijevic, television actor
- John Ross Roach, NHL goalie of the 1930s and born in Port Perry
- Craig Russell, female impersonator, best known for his lead role in the movie, Outrageous!; buried in Port Perry
- Emily VanCamp, film and television actress; born and raised in Port Perry
- Fred Whitcroft, amateur and NHA hockey player, inductee of Hockey Hall of Fame; born in Port Perry
- Silvija Pukitis, Koho debit card spokesperson
- Matthew Clancy, ridiculously good looking and funny. Owner of MCV ventures.
In film[edit]
Port Perry has attracted many film crews over the years, both for feature film and television; it doubled as the Maine town of Mooseport in the 2004 film Welcome to Mooseport and was used briefly as a small town in New Hampshire during the sixth season of The West Wing.
The town was the primary production location for the 1996 film, Fly Away Home, based on local inventor Bill Lishman's experiments in the 1980s and 1990s imprinting geese in order to alter and preserve migration routes. Roulette porte coulissante douche castorama. The film fictionalized Lishman's personal life, but used him as a consultant for its aerial and technical production.
Port Perry is also used as exteriors for the TV series Hemlock Grove which is set in a fictional small town in Western Pennsylvania.[8]
Port Perry is being used as a small town known as Lakeside for season three of the Amazon show American Gods (TV series). They painted the Mill black and added fake shops, the 'PORT PERRY' wording at the top of the Old Mill will be changed to 'LAKESIDE as well as adding fake snow around the town.
References[edit]
- ^ ab''Port Perry [Population centre], Ontario and Ontario [Province] (table)' Census Profile. 2016 Census'. Statistics Canada. May 3, 2017. Retrieved 2017-05-14.
- ^Gilligan, Keith (February 4, 2016). 'Durham commuter life getting longer, more time consuming'. Metroland News. Retrieved 2018-09-01.
- ^Arculus, Paul (2000). Steamboats on Scugog. Port Perry, Ontario: Observer Publishing. p. 13. ISBN0-9684932-2-X.
- ^'The Nip N' Tuck', Scugog Shores Historical Museum
- ^https://scugogheritage.com/history/grainelevator.htm
- ^'Ontario Plaque'. Archived from the original on 2008-10-17. Retrieved 2009-01-07.
- ^Arculus, Paul. 'Three Port Perry High school graduates among Canada's top 100 highest paid CEOs'. scugogheritage.com. Retrieved March 17, 2013.
- ^Hall, Chris (March 16, 2012). 'Film crews to return to Port Perry'. durhamregion.com. Retrieved February 19, 2013.
External links[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Port Perry, Ontario. |
Wikinews has related news: |
- Port Perry at Geographical Names of Canada
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Port_Perry&oldid=935851172'
The Great Blue Heron Casino is located on Scugog Island, just east of the community of Port Perry, Ontario, and northeast of Toronto. Both the Casino and the land on which it is built are owned by the Mississaugas of Scugog Island First Nation. The First Nation theme is carried throughout the facility, in the interior art and is especially noticeable in the signature red, blue and cream colour roof.
The Great Blue Heron Gaming Company, a partnership of Casinos Austria, the Steiner Family, and Sonco Gaming, operates the Casino. The Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation manages the slots, while the Baagwating Community Association, a non-profit, charitable organization formed by the Mississaugas of Scugog Island First Nation, manages the table games. Revenues and profits are distributed among the parties, and to various charitable organizations, based upon contractual sharing arrangements.
Opened originally in 1997, with slots and a 650-seat bingo hall, the Casino was extensively renovated in 1999 and 2000. Its floor area is approximately 25,000 square feet (2,300 m2), in which there are now two bars, one restaurant, a slots' room with 545 machines and a 60 table games. The table games include: Roulette, Blackjack, Spanish 21, Mini Baccarat, Let it Ride Poker, Texas Hold Em Poker, Pai Gow Poker, Three & Four Card Poker and Texas Hold Em Bonus Poker. As of 2007, there is no longer a bingo hall on premises.
The Casino is currently receiving renovations that will be completed in July of 2020. The expansion includes a 100 room hotel as well as a 20,000 square foot addition to hold more slots and tables and a 500 seat entertainment centre.
See also[edit]
Great Blue Heron Casino Expansion
External links[edit]
Coordinates: 44°10′52″N78°53′20″W / 44.181111°N 78.888992°W
Great Blue Heron
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Great_Blue_Heron_Casino&oldid=926809999'