Loyal Orange Lodge building in Moreston Heritage Village

Loyal Orange Lodge

Grey Roots’ Orange Hall is a recreation of Loyal Orange Lodge No. 67, the first Orange lodge organized in Grey County. Lodge No. 67 opened on November 5, 1847 in the village of Sydenham (now Owen Sound). The lodge at Grey Roots is dressed to represent a hall in the 1920s.

The Loyal Orange Institution, more commonly known as the Orange Order, is a Protestant fraternal organization. With British settlement, the Orange Order’s membership in Canada grew quickly, and an Orange lodge was established in almost every town and village by the end of the 1800s. Lodges served as community meeting places, social centres, employment agencies and immigrant re-settlement organizations.

 

Moreston Heritage Village

There's lots more you can do while visiting us

The Grey Monument

During the First World War (1914-1918), Grey County sent thousands of citizens to the battlefields of…

The Big Red Shed

The Big Red Shed is a big, bright open space that was built specifically to house Grey Roots’ BIG items that pertain to farming and transportation. These…

Outdoor Amphitheatre

The stones of the Amphitheatre were set in place in the fall of 2010. While it's a beautiful spot for visitors to the Village to take a moment to sit…

Loyal Orange Lodge

Grey Roots’ Orange Hall is a recreation of Loyal Orange Lodge No. 67, the first Orange lodge organized in Grey County.…

Carpentry Shop

This single-storey, cedar log structure was built by museum staff and volunteers in 1972. It is made up of salvaged logs from a small barn found in Derby…

1948 Bluewater Garage

With a small office area, two service bays, and an indoor grease pit, this

1925 Arnott General Store

Welcome to the Arnott General Store, the most recent addition to Moreston Heritage Village, open since June of 2023.

The 19th and early 20th…

1920s Timber Framed Barn

The rock elm timbers of this 86 foot x 56 foot barn were originally framed in 1907 on a farm…

1920s Schoolhouse

One room schoolhouses were once an integral part of life in rural Ontario. These schools provided a space…

1920s Herb Miller Sawmill

In 1980, Herb Miller, owner of Grey County’s Welbeck Sawmill, and a woodworking history enthusiast,…

1920s Good Cheer Bandstand

Designed by architect G. M. Diemert and constructed in Moreston Heritage Village in 2009, the bandstand…

1920s George Rice Blacksmith Shop

This timber-framed structure, which opened in June 2010, is made of reclaimed timbers from Grey County…

1920s Farmhouse

This is an altered one-and-a-half storey, wood-framed farmhouse, originally built in 1892. The…

1897 Caboose

This caboose was donated to Grey Roots in 2016 by Robert and Darren King. It originally served as a box car before being converted to a caboose. After 1919…

1886 Log House

This one and a quarter-storey cedar log house has deep roots in Grey County. Originally constructed in the mid-1800s, the…

1853 Log Cabin

Museum staff and volunteers built this cabin in 1971-1972, using beams and logs salvaged from various local…

Take a tour

Click on the locations / buildings below to learn about the Heritage Village

The Big Red Shed Blue Water Garage 1920's George Rice Blacksmith Shop 1920's Herb Miller Sawmill 1920's School House 1920's Timber Framed Barn 1920's Farm House 1920's Orange Hall 1886 Log House 1920's Good Cheer Bandstand Outdoor Amphitheatre Carpentry Shop 1853 Log Cabin Moore & Muir Engine Works1897 CN Caboose1925 Arnott General StoreThe Grey Monument

View 3D Model of Moreston Village (30 MB)

 

3D model created in collaboration with St. Mary's High School