Lake of Bays is the northeastern township in Muskoka, sharing its name with one of the region's largest lakes. About 4,000 (2021) people live here year-round. It's a rural cottage country area popular for lakefront cottage getaways and rest stops en route to the west end of Algonquin Park's Highway 60 corridor.
The township surrounds the Lake of Bays, one of the largest lakes in Muskoka. A number of tiny communities have settled on the many bay, but they're easy to miss- most homes and cottages are well secluded from the highways, found at the ends of winding roads leading to the shore. Along the major driving routes, the villages of Dwight (at the north end of the lake, on Highways 35 and 60), Dorset (at the east end, split by the county border with Haliburton, on Highway 35), and Baysville (at the sound west end of the lake, on Muskoka Road 117) are the township's main settlements.
The Lake's long shoreline provides archaeological evidence of tools used by people who fished and hunted these lands about 5,000-7,000 years ago, after the last glaciers retreated from the Canadian Shield about 10,000 years ago. Trading routes are an important part of Muskoka's cultural history over the last 2,000 years. By the 1800s, the Lake was an important Anishinaabe settlement known as Lake Nagatoagoman (Lake of many forks), with trade routes reaching as far as Montreal, and seasonal camps harvesting abundant fish, meat, berries, and maple syrup, supplemented by gardens of corn and potatoes. Red clay from the earth in some areas was turned into pigment. A trading outpost was established on Bigwin Island by the Hudson Bay Company's post in Orillia to take advantage of fur trade.
European settlement was underway by the 1860s, when land was subdivided in the Baysville area, and a sawmill opened to support a timber industry. Land routes were still treacherous, but settlers were attracted by the promise of the most beautiful fertile lands available at the time. While the beauty of the land was undisputed, the lands were not at all suitable for farming. Would-be farmers turned to logging and started hosting sportsmen traveling to the area by train and steamship, sometimes converting farmhouses into larger lodges to accommodate the new boom in tourism, while others operated hotels and services in town for loggers or tourists, depending on the season. As transportation links improved, affluent families began purchasing the waterfront lots for their private use. As most land became privately owned, indigenous fishers and trappers were displaced when it became impossible to work on the land as their families had for generations. Bigwin Island still contained a number of burial grounds and the trading outpost, but the island was acquired by a Huntsville entrepreneur who started building a large resort hotel and golf course starting in 1915. Between the 1920s and 1960s, the Bigwin Inn was known in some social circles as the country's foremost wilderness resort. During World War II, the Dutch royal family spent summers in some of the private cottages at the resort, storing the Constitution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in the hotel's safe. Baysville owes its paved road to Bracebridge to the popularity of the island resort.
Until service ended in 1958, the Portage Railway was the shortest commercial railway in the world, operating 1.8 km between Peninsula Lake (which offered a boat connection to Huntsville further west) and the north part of Lake of Bays, where passengers laden with their luggage could connect to steamboats heading to the island or other points on the Lake.
Tourism and recreation still dominate the township's economy. Thousands of people visit cottages with their own slice of the lake's long shoreline, or make a stop in town on the way to Algonquin Provincial Park or Huntsville.
The township is located east of Highway 11. Highway 60 passes through the township between Algonquin Provincial Park and the junction with Hwy 11 in Huntsville. Further south, Muskoka Road 117 (sometimes called Highway 117) runs east from Bracebridge and Hwy 11 toward Baysville and Dorset.
From the east, Highway 35 connects Lake of Bays via Dwight and Dorset to the Haliburton Highlands.
Highways and regional roads cross the township, and encircle the lake. A car is the best way to get around the township.
Public boat launches are available throughout the township, including:
Many cottages are available surrounding the lake and throughout the township on smaller waterways further from the highways. If you're looking for accommodations with a few more services and amenities, or if you just need a room to use as a base for exploring the region, there are several motels, resorts and lodges to choose from.
2nd-order administrative division
Primary administrative division