The camp opened in 1937 and ran for 82 years, making it the second oldest Girl Guide camp in Ontario. It was named after Mary Woolsey and her husband Edgar. It was Mary that spearheaded the campaign to raise money for a camp in Ottawa. The property itself is quite old, it was originally a farmer’s field. At the time, there was one farmhouse on the property, which is still standing today. The building is called Pinhey, named after one of the early women, Anna Pinhey, who helped raise money for the camp. It was built in 1824, which makes it 200 years old!
The first building built after the camp was established was Lloyd Hall in 1937. Lloyd Hall named after Wilmont Lloyd. Since Guides was mostly tenting back then, they needed a place to store food and cook. The original building did fall into disrepair, but they’ve since built a new one in its place.
The first time I ever went to Woolsey was 2003. I was really interested in their canoe program, and even did some canoe trips in Algonquin park. In 2007 I did the leadership program and worked at camp from 2008-2017. I had a whole bunch of different jobs during that time. I was a lifeguard at first, and eventually the Day Camp Program Director (2016-17). Those years we ran a day camp and an overnight camp at the same time. My job was overseeing the day camp staff and campers. In 2018 and 2019 I went back to volunteer for a few weeks because I was travelling during the summer, so I wasn’t available to work. Then the camp closed in 2020.
Why did Woolsey close?
I’m not an expert on the behind the scenes part of that, but I can speak to it a little. In 2017, an email was sent around from Girl Guides saying that it was too costly to run the Ontario Girl Guide camps. They said a lot of people weren’t using Girl Guide owned properties. I can’t speak to the rest of Ontario, but in Ottawa, our guides were using Woolsey. However not all the camps ran summer programs and I could see how smaller camps may have been losing money.
Woolsey’s last summer should have been 2020, but the pandemic cancelled the summer season. The camp was then sold in 2021. Throughout this time, we were told there could be ways to save the camps. For example, if the camps could make enough money, or if people had proposals, they’d reconsider. I honestly don’t know how that went. There were a few proposals, but obviously nothing worked. Woolsey’s last major event was a “Thinking Day” event, which happens on February 27 every year. It’s a day we learn about the history of Guiding. We didn’t know the camp was closing at the time, but it was nice to have that final special event.
Camp Woolsey has since become a camp ground called Camp Capital, and I actually got to take one of my units there and wake up in Lloyd Lodge for the first time since 2018.
Woolsey wasn’t the biggest camp in Ontario, but we ran a pretty popular program. Usually we had about 200-250 kids a week, and we ran for eight weeks. One of the things about Woolsey was that you didn’t actually have to be a member of Guiding to go to the camp. So a lot of kids would bring their friends who weren’t in Guides.
Now that Woolsey is closed, each individual unit has a specific place they meet every week. These places could be schools, churches, community centres. We don’t really have a dedicated space in Ottawa anymore. We used to have a Guide Store, but that closed in 2008 or 2009. In terms of my units, my current Spark unit has 20 kids, which is at the limit. My older group, the Trex, is 15 right now, but could be bigger. The older the kids are, the less Guiders you need for the ratio of supervision.
Do you have any fun memories or stories from your time at Woolsey?
When you work with kids, there’ll always be funny memories. Some of my favourite memories from working at the camp in the summer were the traditions we had. I already mentioned camp names, and it became a game for the kids to try and guess what your real name was. Luckily my camp name is kind of vague, and since my real name is Julie, it was really easy to get away with tricking the kids. If I ever needed to initial a form, they both started with J. For some people their camp name might have been their favourite animal, or their favourite character or food. One of my friends actually convinced the kids her real name was Tortillia.
One of the other games we played every week was called counsellor hunt and the idea was the counsellors were all afraid of something, and we’d run away and hide. The kids would have to try to coax us to come back to the main space with them, which was called the Council Fire. Maybe they had to figure out what we were scared of, then draw us back, and then we joined their team. There was a series of little challenges we had to do and the kids could vote on which counsellor they wanted to represent them. So we’d do the silly challenge. One of my favourite parts of it was if you could think of a way to cheat in an entertaining way, you could usually get away with it.
My personal counsellor hunt victory was in a game where we had to stack cups blindfolded. We had to make the biggest tower within a certain amount of time. What we didn’t realize was that there was only one stack of cups available. So I grabbed the stack and hopped away from where everyone else was. What I didn’t know was that I had only left 3 or 4 cups behind. I balanced the cups on my head and sat still while the other three counsellors fought over 4 cups! I won that challenge, and it was my absolute favourite moment of the game.
Another thing I loved about camp was regatta day, where we did a bunch of beach activities. Regatta had this recurring creature called the Swamp Monster, that would show up and try to spook the kids. At the end of Regatta, she would run off the end of our dock and the lifeguards got to chase her. As a kid, I always thought this was really funny, and then I got to participate once I became a lifeguard. I realized quickly it was very difficult to run on our docks because they were floating docks. It was fun to see this happen as a kid, and then participate in it as a counsellor.
Celebrating Camp Woolsey's 80th birthday
Is there anything else you want to share?
My friend Emma Kent and I are currently writing a book about Woolsey. We started the project before we knew the camp was closing, so around 2017. We initially created a Facebook page for people to share memories and that’s how we got the inspiration to turn this story into a book. We’re very very close to finishing, and hoping to have the book out this summer.
The Facebook page is called ‘The History of Camp Woolsey’.
Some historical photos of the camp:
1947 Pinhey
1948 Hilltop Site
1948 Lloyd Lodge

