Laura Secord Legacy Trail
Laura Secord Legacy Trail is a 32-kilometer trail as a monument to Laura Secord's journey and legacy. It includes the Laura Secord Commemorative Walk that was established in 2013. Secord embarked on a journey in June 1813 during the War of 1812 from the Secord Homestead in Queenston, Niagara-on-the-Lake to deliver a message on 22 June 1813 to Lt. James FitzGibbon at the DeCew House in Thorold, Ontario.
Secord's journey
During the War of 1812, Laura Secord's husband was wounded, yet she left him and their six children to travel to Thorold to spread the word of an impending attack by Americans. She took the journey on 22 June 1813 through the "war-ravaged countryside" to notify Lieutenant James Fitzgibbon of approaching troops from the United States. As a result, British troops and the Kahnawake Mohawk were able to resist the invasion and defeat the Americans during the Battle of Beaver Dams.Trail
The trail, located along the CanadaWide Great Trail, can be hiked in five stages along modern sidewalks, footpaths, bridges, and ancient forested trails of Indigenous peoples. A 20–metre pedestrian bridge was built at Twelve Mile Creek and completed by June 22, 2013, the 200-year anniversary of Secord's journey.Interpretive signs are placed along the trail, which is divided into five stages:
- Laura Secord Homestead to Firemen's Park
- Firemen's Park to Niagara College
- Niagara College to the Rodman Hall Art Centre on St. Paul Crescent in St. Catharines
- Rodman Hall to Rotary Park
- Rotary Park to DeCew House
The trail overlaps with the Bruce Trail in the eastern part of the trail.