Port Elmsley – Drive-In Dreamin’

Bill Willliams opened Port Elmsley May 1953

Someone decided one night long ago, that we should save a few dollars, and put a couple of people in the trunk of a car, so they could get in for free, at the Port Elmsley Drive-In Theatre.

I guess we can just chalk this one up, along with the other peculiar things that we did as teenagers.  Luckily no one was hurt, but for the three bucks they each saved on admission, it was a pretty undignified way to arrive at the movies.

It’s possible that we weren’t the first ones to try that little stunt.  After all, the Drive-In had been open for a long time before any of us had ventured there.

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It was in September 1952 that ‘The Perth Courier’ ran a short article about a Drive-In being constructed at Port Elmsley.  The article stated that it was the first to be fabricated in this district, and it was built by Gordon White of Ottawa for W.J. ‘Bill’ Williams, of Newboro.

Bill Williams Port Elmsley Drive In

Bill Williams, founder of Port Elmsley Drive In

The article went on to say that it would be assembled on a ten acre property, and that the Drive-In would have a capacity for 300 cars. It would feature a design first of its kind in Ontario, where the projector booth would be in a two-story building, nearly 400 feet from the screen.  This was a distance that was 150 feet greater than any of the other Drive-In theatres at that time.  It was to open the following May of 1953, at a total cost of $75,000.  True to their word, they opened on schedule, and called the new Drive-In ‘the Showplace of the Golden Triangle’.

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Port Elmsley was indeed a great location for a Drive-In theatre, because it’s situated about halfway between Perth and Smiths Falls.  There were always droves of cottagers and tourists staying around Rideau Ferry, and the surrounding lakes in the summer. There were also many residents of the towns and villages nearby, that enjoyed a drive up Highway 15, on a warm summer night, to see some great movies.

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Because the Drive-In opened in 1953, many folks had parked in that huge parking lot and viewed many movies on that big screen long before my friends and I ever made it there in the ‘70s. In fact, it was more than twenty years after it opened that it became one of our familiar haunts each summer, as we passed the nights away, under the stars.

Some of us were lucky enough to have gone to the Drive-In as children, dressed in pajamas, playing on the teeter-totter and swings between the first row of cars and the giant screen. As the sun sunk low in the sky, we were having the time of our lives. What could be better than staying up past your bedtime with a whole bunch of other kids, the aroma of popcorn in the air, and watching the cartoons at the beginning of the show?

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Every kid knew the words to the concession jingle ‘Let’s all go to the lobby, let’s all go to the lobby, let’s all go to the lobby, to get ourselves a treat.”  When we heard that song it was our cue to start heading back to our parents’ cars, because the movie would be starting soon.  By the time they played the Chilly Dilly song, about the big, juicy, dill pickles, we were in the back seat, with our pillows and blankets, all ready for the show to begin.  Much to the delight of most parents I’m sure, we were asleep by the time the second feature began, and this allowed them some peace and quiet, and time alone – well, almost alone.

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We’d usually begin assembling all of our gear during the afternoon.  First, we’d pack up a bottle of Windex, and a roll of paper towels, because there was nothing worse than having a big messy streak or some bugs splattered right in the middle of your window.

Mosquito coils were also vital to a relaxing evening.  Because of the speaker hanging off of the front window, we weren’t able to close it all the way, so burning a mosquito coil would take care of any of the little pests that flew into the car.  If none of the gang had any, we’d have to head out to Canadian Tire on Highway 7, and pick some up before the show.  We’d place one of the little green coils on its small metal stand, set it on the dashboard and light it up. Many years later I happened to read on the side of the package that those coils were for outdoor use only.  Oh dear!

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A couple of pillows and a blanket, were a nice touch, and made movie-viewing a comfy, cozy event.  We’d also bring a small flashlight, because nothing was worse for us girls than stumbling around on the gravel path, trying to find our way to the washroom, on a dark, moonless night; especially right after watching a scary scene in a horror movie. That just didn’t work for us.  Sometimes we’d bring a roll of t.p. from home, in case they ran out, which happened once in a while during the all-night movie marathons.

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I still recall the crunch of the gravel, as we slowed down to enter through the gates, into the Drive-In, and began scouting for a good spot.  A good spot to us was front-row-centre, and enough space for the three cars to park side by side, so that we could socialize.  We also had to make sure that all three speakers worked, so we would pull into the spots and test the speakers, otherwise we’d have to move all three cars to a new location, maybe a row behind.  Of course every row farther back that you were you would have to contend with people getting in and out of their cars in front of you or turning on their cars to clear their windows because they were fogged up for some reason.  So, the best real estate in the lot was the front row, right in the center of the screen, and if we went early enough the best spots would be ours.

I think the lads liked having spots near the front, not just for the sake of the movie, but so that their cars were together, and very visible in the front row.  There’s no denying that they all had sweet cars.  Those three cars managed to get some looks, touring around town, and had been known to burn up more than a little rubber on the quarter mile runs down Roger’s Road.

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The warm summer air was filled with strains of Foreigner’s ‘Hot Blooded’, or Led Zeppelin’s ‘Stairway to Heaven’, and typically, a little bit of our favourite space-cowboy, Steve Miller, singing “The Joker’; a song that you could say became a symbol of  the times. Some have said that it was an era of music like no other, before or since, and the sounds of our generation could be heard throughout the parking lot of the Drive-In, on those sultry summer nights, in Port Elmsley.

Widge Williams projector

Widge Williams, Projectionist, son of owner, Bill Williams

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As the sun slid down lower in the sky, the horizon glowed, first in a dusty pink, then a soft purple. There was always one car that began honking their horn, because they believed that it was dark enough to see the movie.  After a minute or two, more people started to honk, and then shortly after that the show would begin.

One of the things that we enjoyed the most were the ‘Dusk to Dawn’ shows, where the first movie would begin at dusk, and the movies would continue all night, until the early morning, when it became too light to see the picture on the screen.  The movies were played back to back, and were often horror films like ‘The Exorcist’, or ‘The Omen’, or ‘Jaws’. I recall one night that my friend and myself, even after having consumed large quantities of pop, did not want to use the washroom, just in case that giant crazy shark ‘Jaws’ had somehow compromised the plumbing system out in Port Elmsley.  We just weren’t taking any chances.

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We saw many nights come and go in Port Elmsley.  There were some beautiful, sleek, muscle cars in those days, parked row after row, paint glistening in the moonlight.  We made numerous trips to the concession stand, in an attempt to fill our unquenchable teenage appetites.  We even had a few scary trips in the dark, giggling on our way to the washroom and back. We screamed a few blood-curdling screams, as did some of the folks in the neighboring vehicles one evening, I recall, as the character Jason appeared in his hockey mask in the thriller ‘Hallowe’en’.

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Today, the Port Elmsley Drive-In is one of a handful of drive-ins still operating in Ontario. Leave it to the folks in Lanark County to know a gem when they see one, and to continue to go out, and enjoy movies, under the stars.  I hope that in the future that the little kids in their p.j.s, young people, and not so young people, will take the time to visit the drive-in and have as much fun as we did.  Take a trip to Port Elmsley and make some of your own memories!

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In its heyday, Port Elmsley had many residents, and some of the family names that were common in that area were:  Armstrong, Taylor, Stone, Hunter, Weatherhead, Best, Couch, Wicklum, Weekes, VanDusen, Seabrook, Shaw, Sherwood, O’Hara, Moore, Dudgeon, Lavender, Findlay, McTavish, McVeety, Beveridge, and Clements.

…..

arlene-photos-for-new-book-2021

Arlene Stafford-Wilson

Member, Association of Professional Genealogists

Honorary Life Member, Lanark County Genealogical Society

Author of : “Lanark County Christmas”, “Lanark County Comfort”, “Lanark County Collection”, “Lanark County Calling”, “Lanark County Classics”, “Lanark County Connections”, “Lanark County Calendar”, “Lanark County Chronicle”, “Lanark County Kid”, & “Recipes & Recollections”

Stories about the Port Elmsley Drive In:

Spend a hot summer night at the Port Elmsley Drive-In, and meet some of the fascinating people, with memories from former owner, Jan Stepniak, and recollections from Laura Williams, daughter of founder and owner, Bill Williams. Read their accounts of those special nights under the stars, and what really happened behind the scenes of this beloved local gem, in “Lanark County Collection: Winding Our Way Down Memory Lane”

Lanark County Collection cover 20 02 21

…….

Available at:

The Book Nook, Perth, ON – https://thebooknookperth.com/

Spark Books and Curios, Perth, ON – https://sparkperth.ca/

Mill Street Books, Almonte, ON – https://millstreetbooks.com/

or at http://www.staffordwilson.com

Port Elmsley banner

The story “Dusk to Dawn in Port Elmsley” is part of a collection of stories in the book “Lanark County Chronicle”

lanark-county-chronicle-for-website

Available at The Book Nook, and  https://sparkperth.ca/,  in Perth, Mill St. Books in Almonte,

or on online

17 comments on “Port Elmsley – Drive-In Dreamin’

  1. Carol-Ann McDougall says:

    Arlene nice story. I drive bye Port Elmsley-Drive-In every day coming from Rideau Ferry. Drive-In is open tonight. I think I may just have to go!!!

    • You are lucky to live so close to the best Drive-Inn in the world. Lots of good times there! It’s a beautiful part of Lanark County.

      • David Bird says:

        Thanks for sharing this, and the kind words Arlene. We’ve enjoyed being the caretakers for “PEDI” for 10 seasons now and plan on doing so for many more. Enjoyed your memories of the drive-in, and you’ll be happy to know that most nights for our pre-show music, our satellite radio is locked on the 70’s, which somehow just “feels” right for those mellow drive-in nights!

      • Hi David – I’m glad you enjoyed the article. The full story is in my book “Lanark County Chronicle”. There are also a couple of stories that take place around Rideau Ferry and Smiths Falls that you might like as well. The Port Elmsley Drive-In was ‘the’ place to be on warm summer weekends when we were kids in the 1970s. I’m glad that you are still playing music from that era during the ‘pre-show’, and you’re right – it’s the type of music that just feels like it belongs at a Drive-In. Oh, the muscle car beauties we saw and drove back then! We would always try to get the front row at the Drive-In and we’d park the mustang, the camaro and the fury side by side, get out and shine up our windows, ready for the show. It’s funny, looking back now, the dusk ’til dawn shows had movies like ‘Jaws’ and ‘The Exorcist’ and we thought they were terrifying – I think even the guys found them quite unnerving. Now I see some of the horror movies advertised, and even the movie trailer is frightening! Times have changed. I believe our movies were a lot tamer in those days. We applaud you for having one of the few remaining Drive Ins! Operating a business is a challenge – especially a seasonal business. The memories and the experience that you are providing for people is priceless. Thank-you for keeping the ‘Drive-In’ experience alive, and close to our hearts!

    • Cathy polk says:

      I grew up in Port Elmsley ,,,born and rased. Went to the old two room school house and in grade 3 we were moved to the new school just up the road and just down from the drive-inn. My family home was just across from the new school. Parents were Russell and Joyce Polk. Had meny horses, bigs, and ducks. Best time of my life living there. Every kid should grow up like i did in Port Elmsley. Had the time of my life, me with my cousins and 4 sisters and one brother.

  2. I spent many a good night watching movies here in my youth.it was one of the best times in my life and I’m so glad I had the chance for spending a wonderful night out under the stars with all my close friends. Wish I could go back to those happy times right now…..and the snack bar was a great place to meet all the friends I had back then…Thanks for the memories

    • Hi Michael – You’re right about the snack bar being a great place to see friends. I remember the sharp looking sports cars and people honking their horns when the sun was going down. I think the times spent at the Port Elmsley Drive-In are among my favourites – especially the dusk ’til dawn shows. Thanks for sharing your memories!

  3. Al says:

    Spent many summer nights with ” Widge ” on the roof of the concession stand.

  4. Violet vandusen says:

    This is so very cool to find this story on Facebook and with the Vandusen name in it. Oh my gosh so many great memories, so many great stories. Yes we were some of those that snook in in the trunk of the car. It was there where all fifteen Vandusen kids worked at the drive-in, whether it be cooking, cleaning up garbage on the grounds or just having fun. I loved it all.

    • Hi Violet – Thanks for sharing your experiences at the Drive-In. I went to school with Susan Van Dusen. I’m glad to hear that my friends and I weren’t the only ones sneaking people in the trunk! Lots of great memories made in Port Elmsley!

  5. David Arcand says:

    Thank you for the article it was very nice to read. My father was WJ Williams or Bill as everyone called him, I grew up working there until the 80’s until I enlisted and it is very warming to my heart to see that people still remember my father and all the years of blood, sweat and tears it took to make this a successful bussiness…that is still running today. Next time I am home I will be stopping in to see a movie…will be the first time I will have to pay or wait in the line ups…lol.
    Thank you once again.

    • Hi David – Thank you so much for sharing that. You’re right – it’s not easy to keep a business running; especially a seasonal one! The efforts that your Dad put into the business will be remembered by many of us for years to come!

      • Christina Crewe says:

        I used to live in port elmsley as a kid . I went to the port elmsley public school . Lives beside Mrs Clement . I remember staying at home with my grandma while my parents went to the drive in . Billings / Crewe family

  6. Bob Bell says:

    Many good memories of movies there and it was the last time I saw the Northern lights this far south. They actually stopped the movie so people could watch. I was 6 or 7 at the time (69 now). My dad, John Bell from Newboro, grew up with Bill and they used to show movies in small halls and villages, Bill as the projectionist and my dad running the “floating” concession. On a good night the wicker basket with confections would be empty and so would the wash tub packed with ice and pop. Only floating ice would remain-hence the name. I live ow in Rideau Ferry and a pilgrimage to the Port Elmsley drive in is a ritual every year.

  7. Lad Murphy says:

    Lad Murphy sold tickets on the opening night of the Drive In

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