Clearview's Small Halls

The Rural Heartbeat of Ontario

Clearview Township • Simcoe County • Southern Georgian Bay

Drive the backroads of Clearview Township and you’ll find them tucked between farms, villages, and rolling hills: modest community halls with wooden floors, hand-built stages, and kitchens that still smell faintly of pie socials and church suppers. To outsiders they may look simple. To locals, they are the living rooms of rural Ontario.

These “small halls” are more than buildings. They are memory keepers, gathering places, emergency shelters, wedding venues, polling stations, concert halls, and community anchors all rolled into one.


Visitor Experience

📍 Location Various villages throughout Clearview Township
📅 Season/Best Time Year-round • Fall Festival season especially popular
⏰ Hours Event-based
💲 Admission Many events low-cost or donation-based
♿ Accessibility Varies by hall
🅿️🚻 Amenities Parking and washrooms at most halls
🕒 Recommended Time Half-day to full weekend exploration
🌐 Contact smallhallsfestival.ca


What You Need to Know

Many of Clearview’s halls are volunteer-operated and deeply connected to the surrounding villages. Events range from folk concerts and craft fairs to pancake breakfasts, theatre productions, quilting shows, and harvest suppers.

The annual Small Halls Festival has become the best way to experience them, transforming these rural venues into stages for music, art, theatre, food, and storytelling across the township. (Clearview Small Halls Festival)

Clearview's Small Halls - Avening Community Centre

Avening Community Centre

Why These Places Matter

In cities, people gather in arenas, restaurants, and convention centres. In rural Ontario, communities traditionally gathered in halls like these.

They were often built by local labour, funded through dances, raffles, and community fundraising. Over generations, they became places where neighbours celebrated milestones, debated township issues, mourned losses, and supported one another through hard winters and changing times.

As rural populations shifted and many small communities struggled to keep shared spaces alive, Clearview Township recognized these halls were not relics — they were cultural infrastructure worth preserving. That idea eventually evolved into the Small Halls Festival, launched in 2014 to support the viability of the halls while attracting visitors to rural Clearview. (Township of Clearview)

Today the festival hosts concerts, culinary events, theatre, comedy, art exhibits, and family activities across multiple halls and villages. It has repeatedly been recognized as one of Ontario’s Top 100 Festivals and Events. (Township of Clearview)

Brentwood Community Centre

Brentwood Community Centre

Fun Fact:

Some of these halls still have original hardwood dance floors worn smooth by decades of community dances, weddings, and harvest socials.

Journey Through Time

  • Late 1800s–Early 1900s: Rural halls emerge throughout Simcoe County as farming communities grow.
  • Mid-20th Century: Halls become the centre of rural social life — hosting dances, political meetings, church suppers, and seasonal celebrations.
  • 1970s–1990s: Many rural halls across Ontario face declining attendance and rising maintenance costs.
  • 2014: Clearview Township launches the Small Halls Festival to celebrate and sustain these historic gathering places. (Township of Clearview)
  • 2020–2021: The festival pauses during the pandemic, later re-emerging as a larger festival series format. (Township of Clearview)
  • Today: The halls continue serving residents while attracting visitors seeking authentic rural Ontario experiences. (Clearview Small Halls Festival)
Clearview's Small Halls - Dunedin Village Hall

Dunedin Village Hall

Behind the Story

What makes Clearview’s halls special isn’t architecture — it’s continuity.

In many places, rural halls disappeared decades ago. Here, they survived because communities refused to let them fade away. Volunteers still maintain them, organize events, and unlock the doors before gatherings much the same way previous generations did.

During the Small Halls Festival, visitors experience something increasingly rare: culture rooted directly in place. A folk concert inside a tiny village hall feels different than one in a city theatre. The audience knows each other. Homemade desserts appear during intermission. Musicians often mingle with visitors afterward. There’s a warmth that can’t really be manufactured.

These halls remind people that rural Ontario isn’t just scenery — it’s community.

Nottawa Memorial Community Centre

Nottawa Memorial Community Centre

Small Halls to Discover

  • Avening Community Hall — Known for intimate concerts and artistic performances tucked into rolling countryside.
  • The Duntroon Hall — A classic rural hall serving generations of local gatherings and events.
  • Brentwood Community Centre — Community hub for socials, local celebrations, and festival programming.
  • Singhampton Community Centre — A favourite gathering place near the Niagara Escarpment countryside.
  • Nottawa Memorial Community Centre — Historic hall connecting village life with surrounding farm communities.
  • Sunnidale Corners Community Centre — A rural crossroads hall that continues to host community events year-round.
Clearview Small Halls - Singhampton Community Centre

Singhampton Community Centre

Explore Other Hidden Gems

Distance Detour Idea Why Go
12 km Creemore Historic village filled with heritage storefronts and small-town charm
20 km Scandinave Spa Blue Mountain Forest spa retreat in the Niagara Escarpment landscape
24 km Collingwood Arboretum Lakeside trails and peaceful natural spaces
32 km Wasaga Beach Provincial Park World-famous freshwater beach and shoreline sunsets
Sunnidale Corners Community Centre

Sunnidale Corners Community Centre

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