Rideau Lakes is a community of Villages and Hamlets. Explore and learn about the landscape and the people. Each village and hamlet have a unique culture and story to tell. Whether you’re a visitor looking to discover your roots in the area, a family trying out an adventure on the water, or an urbanite seeking a safe and quiet, rural lifestyle… Rideau Lakes will find a place in your heart.
For thousands of years before European settlers arrived in what is now called Rideau Lakes, Algonquin speaking peoples, the Massasauga and proto-Hurons lived in these lands. Indigenous artifacts have been discovered around all of the lakes throughout this area, some that are more than 9000 years old. When the European settlers arrived, just over 200 years ago, the communities of Rideau Lakes were born.
Rideau Lakes offers a variety of establishments from fine dining to food trucks. Experience an elegant dinner at the Stagecoach Inn Restaurant in historic Newboro after shopping at Kilborn’s destination store or have a shore lunch prepared by Stirling Lodge on Newboro Lake. Try the licenced waterfront patio overlooking Big Rideau Lake at The Galley Restaurant in Portland, or meander to little cafes and chip wagons as you explore the quaint villages and small communities in Rideau Lakes. Click the following link for a list of accommodations from the Leeds-Grenville business directory of listings for Rideau Lakes.
List of Accommodations in Rideau Lakes
(For Bed & Breakfast, please refer to the next article entitled Antiques, Tea Rooms and Inns).
Rideau Canal
Beaches and Parks
Harbours and Boat Launches
Fishing
Waterfront Development
The centre for religious (and social) Newboyne life, for approximately a century and a half, was this imposing c1875 St Peter’s Anglican Church, one of the most striking and elegant churches of the township. This building replaced an earlier c1850 frame structure. The appealing photo reveals the church, shed for horses, with the cemetery and stone vault ( for storage of caskets during the winter months when the ground was frozen) located across the road: a reminder of the once important role of the Anglican church in the rural Newboyne community (in 2017 the church was deconsecrated with a subsequent sale to a private owner). The cohesiveness of community was completed with a brick one room school (now also closed) situated on an adjacent lot.
Monday to Friday
8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
1-877-798-5725
4427H Old Kingston Road, Portland
1-800-928-2250 ext. 230
Open: Wednesdays & Saturdays
8:00am to 4:00pm