NOTE: The March 29 maple sugaring event has been cancelled due to forecast rain. The event will now be held April 12, from noon to 2:30 p.m.
As the North Country begins the annual maple season we should look to days gone by and how the production of maple syrup and maple sugar was once achieved. Long before vacuum systems and gas fired boiling pans, the sap was delivered to the sugar houses with horses or oxen.
Refined white cane sugar was the height of luxury in the 18th century. Indeed, sugar did not factor highly into the average French-Canadian diet, as sugar consumption in New France was less than two pounds per person per year. Compare that to the nearly 152 pounds of sugar the average American consumes in that time today.
When Europeans made first contact with the Indigenous people of North America in the 17th century, they discovered that maple sugar was common in their diet. Native people all over the Northeast had been boiling and freezing maple sap to refine it into syrup and sugar since time immemorial.
Maple Sugar was an important part of gift giving ceremonies which strengthened political and economic ties between many Indigenous nations and provided quick energy for warriors and travelers making their way through the waterways of the St. Lawrence River Valley.
In early spring a majority of the 3,000 Iroquois living around Fort de la Presentation would have been employed in boiling pure maple sap into the sugar that they would use for the rest of the year. French Canadians soon learned how to make maple sugar from the natives. After 1760 when New France became a part of Britain, maple sugar production remained an integral part of the early spring season and continues today as a vital part of our unique identity in the north country.
Hitch up your sleigh and come to the Fort de La Presentation site on Van Rensselaer Point and discover the history and importance of maple sugar as historians make maple sugar the 18th century way. This is a popular family event that offers visitors of all ages an opportunity to help in the sugar-making process.
The event will be held Saturday, March 29, from noon to 2:30 p.m. if the weather permits. The rain date us April 12. The demonstration is free and open to the public.
