Essex Free Press - August 15, 2019

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Vol. 139

Thursday, August 15, 2019

Issue No. 32

Lakeshore Council tours Walls historic site

Essex Council notes PAGE 3 _______________ The Town of Essex Council Special Meeting PAGE 8 _______________ Comber celebrates its 160th annual fair PAGE 10 _______________ Essex Centre BIA news PAGE 14 _______________ Essex Railway Station hosts a Family Fun Day PAGE 19 _______________ Steam & Gas Engine Show PAGE 20 _______________

Looking For A Good Home

“PETER PAN” See Page 5 for adoption info.

Kyah Henderson-Lezama, Zali Miles, Anna Walls, Dr. Bryan Walls, Justin Escoto, Lakeshore Mayor Tom Bain, Deputy Mayor Tracey Bailey, Councillor Kirk Walstedt, CAO Truper McBride Councillor Kelsey Santarossa, and Councillor John Kerr take in the John Freeman Walls Historic Site. The Freedom Train which the Walls used to signify the end of the Underground Railroad.

by Garrett Fodor Nestled along Puce Road, the John Freeman Walls Historic Site is passed by hundreds of area residents each and every day. On Tuesday, August 6, Dr. Bryan Walls and his wife, Anna, opened the grounds and invited members of Lakeshore Town Council to enjoy a tour of the facility. This is the first time Lakeshore Council toured the grounds as a group, Walls noted, and he was thrilled to host the tour.

The Town of Lakeshore has been very supportive since the museum was launched, he added, and he is optimistic that they can continue to build and grow that relationship. Since 1846, the Walls family has looked after the 20-acre grounds. The site was the final destination for John Freeman Walls and Jane King Walls on the journey where they used the Underground Railroad to escape slavery. Their journey began in Troublesome Creek, in Rockingham County, North Carolina. Upon arriving in Canada in 1846, the two purchased 12-acres of land from the Refugee Home Society, which they used to create their homestead. In 1989, the site opened as a museum, drawing thousands of people from all over the world visitors are educated on the Underground Railroad, the Walls’s personal journey to escape, and the process former slaves went through. The site features seven different buildings, from the Freedom Train, which signifies the end of the Underground Railroad, to the Peace Chapel, built to honour Rosa Parks, and John and Jane Walls’s original two-storey cabin, which was built in 1846. The house served as the first home for First Baptist Church, Puce. Lakeshore Deputy Mayor

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