
Upper Canada Village — Morrisburg
📍 13740 County Road 2, Morrisburg, Ontario
🏛 Living-history village recreating rural life in early Ontario
🌾 Historic buildings, farm demonstrations, pioneer traditions
Plan Your Visit
📍 Location: Morrisburg, Ontario (St. Lawrence River region)
🕒 Season: Open seasonally with special events throughout the year
🏛 Experience: Historic village buildings, demonstrations, heritage programs
🚗 Parking: On-site parking available
🌐 Official Website: Upper Canada Village
Step Into the Early Rural Communities of Upper Canada
Located along the St. Lawrence River near Morrisburg, Upper Canada Village invites visitors to experience life in rural Ontario during the mid-19th century. The living-history site recreates a working village where farms, trades, and community institutions formed the foundation of daily life.
Visitors can explore historic homes, barns, mills, and village buildings while learning about the traditions that shaped early agricultural communities. Demonstrations and seasonal programs illustrate how farming families worked the land, produced food, and supported growing settlements throughout the region.
Through its carefully preserved buildings and living-history interpretation, Upper Canada Village offers visitors a vivid introduction to the agricultural heritage and rural life that helped shape Ontario’s early communities.
Did You Know?
Many of the historic buildings at Upper Canada Village were relocated from communities flooded during the construction of the St. Lawrence Seaway in the 1950s, helping preserve an important part of Ontario’s rural heritage.

The Heritage Attraction at a Glance & the Story Behind the Site
Upper Canada Village is one of Canada’s largest and most immersive living history attractions, located at 13740 County Road 2 in Morrisburg, Ontario. Founded in 1961, the village preserves life in a rural Upper Canada community circa 1866 by assembling more than 40 authentic historic buildings, many transported from towns that were lost during the creation of the St. Lawrence Seaway.

Visitors step into a recreated 19th-century village where costumed interpreters demonstrate daily life, traditional trades, crafts, and rural activities. Historic structures include homes, mills, workshops, and farm buildings, all designed to give guests a vivid sense of how people lived, worked, and traded in a pre-Confederation rural community.

The site is operated by the St. Lawrence Parks Commission and offers both seasonal programming in the main summer months and special events throughout the year — from harvest-era weekends to holiday celebrations like the Alight at Night Festival in late fall and winter.























