The township comprises the communities of: Beachburg, Chenaux, Cobden, Finchley, Foresters Falls, Garden of Eden, The Glen, Grants Settlement, Haley Station, Kerr Line, La Passe, Ledgerwoods Corner, McLaren's Settlement, Meath, Millars Corner, Perretton, Pleasant Valley, Queens Line, Rocher Fendu, Shields Crossing, Snake River and Westmeath.
Beachburg Beachburg () is one of the larger population centres in the Whitewater Region, having a variety of stores and restaurants, an arena, several halls, a public elementary school and a public library. It was founded by and named after David Beach and became a stop along the
Canadian Northern Railway line with a station and grain elevators. In 1853, the entire village, except for two houses, was destroyed by fire. By 1869, Beachburg was a village with a population of 250 in Westmeath County, Renfrew. There were stages to Pembroke and Sand Point. The average price for land was $8. Beachburg was devastated by a fire in 1931, destroying the station, the grain elevators, and the Main Hall and Dining Hall of the Exhibition Park. In 1959, the Village of Beachburg was separated from Westmeath Township and incorporated.
Cobden Foresters Falls Foresters Falls () was founded in the early 1840s by Oliver Forester, a prominent pioneer who was the community's first postmaster. By the 1870s the community had three stores, a
grist mill, and a sawmill, all of which were destroyed in a fire later that same year. The
Canadian Northern Railway does not pass through Foresters Falls, save for at a small intersection outside the town known as Miller's Corners. A large railway bridge, known to the locals as Black Rock, crosses a gully just beyond Miller's Corners. The rail track was torn up in the late 2000s but the bridge remains and is now a popular route for ATVs. Foresters Falls is now a small community having regressed since the invention of motorized transport. Attractions include the Ross Township Museum that is located in the heart of Foresters Falls.
Haley Station Haley Station (also known as
Haley,
Haleys, ''Haley's'', with or without Station)() derives its name from a station built on the
Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) where the railway right of way crossed the farm of George Haley, an early settler on the second concession of Ross township (now part of Whitewater township). Haley Station once boasted a blacksmith shop, a general store, two churches (
United Church and
Free Methodist), two service stations, a railway station and an
Orange Hall. With the advent of the automobile, people found it more convenient to go to
Renfrew. Of the establishments mentioned, only the United Church remains in operation.
McLaren's Settlement McLaren's Settlement () originated in the 1840s when members of the McLaren family came to the area from
Scotland. It was located a short distance upstream from the present
Ontario Power Generation (OPG) Chenaux Generating Station. The McLarens arrived during the peak of the
lumbering industry in the
Ottawa Valley, and one of their number constructed a
timber slide in the
Ottawa River to facilitate the movement of squared
timber rafts past the
Chenaux Rapids. These slides could be described as a
sluice about wide and about long and steeply sloped through which some river water was diverted. Floating bundles of about 25 pieces of squared timber would be steered toward the upper end of the slide. Once into the sluice, the bundle of timber would descend at a great speed, emerging undamaged into the river below the rapids. ==History==