Monday, July 24, 2017

Forwarding Trade Plaque and Museum, Prescott, Ontario

In Prescott, Ontario, the Forwarders' Museum occupies the southwest corner of Water Street West and Centre Street. Nearby to the west of the Museum stands a plaque, titled, 'The Forwarding Trade at Prescott.'


What's Forwarding?
Forwarding is the business carried out by a person or company called a forwarding agent, a freight forwarder or a forwarder. The forwarding agent organizes shipments to get goods from a manufacturer or producer to a market, customer or a final destination for distribution. Most of the work forwarders do involves transportation logistics and the handling of documentation related to the movement of goods, including invoices, bills of lading, and documents for moving goods across international borders.




THE FORWARDING TRADE AT PRESCOTT
Before the completion of the canals between here (Prescott) and Montreal in 1847, Prescott was the eastern terminus of Great Lakes navigation. Established at the head of Galops Rapids in 1810, it soon became a centre for the forwarding, or shipping, trade and an important centre in Montreal's commercial system. One of the earliest forwarders at Prescott was Captain William Gilkison, who began operations on this property about 1811. As the population of Upper Canada increased rapidly after 1820, the trade expanded and forwarding firms, including Henderson & Hooker and Macpherson, Crane & Co., established shipbuilding yards, wharfs, and warehouses along this waterfront. Prescott's position in the forwarding trade began to decline in 1847 when uninterrupted navigation from Montreal to Lake Ontario became possible.
Erected by the Ontario Heritage Foundation, Ministry of Culture and Recreation






Inside the Forwarders' Museum Visitor Information Centre the visitor will find fascinating historical artefacts and a wealth of information about Prescott's historical sites and the city's history. There is not admission fee and the reception to visitors is friendly.