by Dick Eason
I remember the ball game that was always held in the field adjacent to the railway tracks.
I do definitely remember carrying the tables and benches downhill and storing them above the equipment shed. We usually did not arrive in time for lunch, but stayed late.
My dad (pictured below) used to talk about the kids climbing the hill west of the barns.
Representing the Chamberlain pioneers who settled in Otonabee in the early 1800s are, L-R, Alan Eason, Ron Frankish, Lavina (Fife) Tripp, Hazel (Chamberlain) Bradfield, Ethel Reynolds, Maud (Dixon) Robinson, and George H. Chamberlain