Not surprisingly, boats and the water again featured prominently in my writing projects during 2025. On March 1, 2025 the BSM Beacon published an article titled Access to the Waters of Charlotte Harbor which described various options for messing around on boats. Charter boats, excursions, fractional ownership and boat clubs were some of the options described. On November 1, 2025 the Beacon published The Charlotte Harbor Lighthouse which described the history of a lighthouse located just off the shores of Burnt Store Marina from 1890 to 1943. The latest in my Nautical Book Reviews series titled Sailing Alone was published by the Beacon on January 1, 2026.
In Canada our local online community news sources PelhamToday and MyPelham published a few of my local history articles. Look for more in 2026. How a Mystery Photo Led to a Journey Through Fonthill’s Past was published on November 30, 2025. It described the tenants and owners of an 1888 building in the town core which has been variously described as the Emmett, Damude, Lampman and Lache building.
On December 31, 2025 PelhamToday published Pelham Local and Family History: 2025 in Review and on January 11, 2026 MyPelham published Temperanceville, Fonthill and Pelham: Whats in a Name.
The 200th anniversary of the beginning of construction of the Welland Canal has been celebrated throughout late 2024 and 2025, so it was fortuitous that I had an opportunity to transit the canal again in June 2025. On August 28, 2025 Bill Schwenger and I made a presentation to the Probus Club of Pelham about this trip. The slides are available at Upbound on the Welland Canal.
As noted in an earlier post, I delivered a Webinar titled Tremaine’s Map Establishment and their 1862 Lincoln & Welland Counties Map to the Ontario Ancestors – Niagara Peninsula Branch on February 21, 2025. The next day, on February 22, 2025, a presentation on the Pelham PNYX was delivered to the Pelham Historical Society, again virtually. Ontario Ancestors also published the third in my nineteenth century Ontario maps series, The Tackabury Brothers and their 1862 Map of Canada West in the February issue of the Families Journal.










