Heritage & Culture.
The Stephen Leacock Museum National Historic Site at 50 Museum Drive on Old Brewery Bay preserves the 19-room lakeside summer home of humorist Stephen Leacock (1869–1944), designated a National Historic Site in 1992. Below the house, the lawn drops straight to Lake Couchiching — the same lake-edge view that shaped Leacock's "Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town" sketches of Mariposa, the fictional stand-in for Orillia.
The brief.
The Stephen Leacock NHS is operated by the City of Orillia in partnership with Parks Canada; admission fees apply and the museum runs full programming roughly late May through October with reduced shoulder-season hours. The Champlain Monument anchors Couchiching Beach Park downtown, commemorating Samuel de Champlain's 1615 visit to the area, and is freely accessible year-round.
The Orillia Museum of Art and History occupies the 1895 Sir Sam Steele building on Mississaga Street — the heart of downtown — and is open year-round with rotating exhibitions. The Mariposa Folk Festival has run annually since 1961 at Tudhope Park on the Lake Simcoe shore each July, drawing folk acts to a multi-day weekend on the waterfront.
4. places.
- 01
Stephen Leacock Museum National Historic Site
Restored 19-room lakeside summer home of Stephen Leacock at 50 Museum Drive on Old Brewery Bay (Lake Couchiching); designated NHS in 1992.
- 02
Champlain Monument (Couchiching Beach Park)
Early 20th-century monument commemorating Samuel de Champlain's 1615 visit; freely accessible at the lakefront.
- 03
Orillia Museum of Art and History (OMAH)
Downtown museum in the 1895 Sir Sam Steele building on Mississaga Street; rotating exhibits on regional art and local history.
- 04
Mariposa Folk Festival (Tudhope Park)
Annual July weekend folk festival on the Lake Simcoe shore; running continuously since 1961.
Today's read.
Cold but firm — winter-ready conditions · light winds · clean air.