|
Giant White Pine Forests and Lumber camps drew many an adventurous lumberjack up the Line. Lodging and services sprang up along the way, and farming homesteads tried to hold on to the rough and rocky terrain.
When lumber finally dwindled, many settlers gave up on the sparsely soiled land. The once busy road began to fade into a quiet country lane and that is what you'll find today. Many of these "Lines" have completely disappeared, but the Opeongo Line survived. (although some parts of it are deserted) |
 |

Many of our early settlers must have been quite stubborn, because they refused to leave the land they had settled. Some of these communities still exist and some don't, and some just hold on because a few families still live where hundreds once lived.
|