• Home
  • Start
    • Directory to Solo Traveler
    • Solo Travel Newbies Guide
    • Destinations for First Solo Trip
    • Get Past First Trip Fear
    • Why Travel Solo?
  • Tips
    • Tips for Solo Travel
    • Solo Female Travel
    • Plan a Solo Trip
    • Choose the Right Tour
    • Solo Travel Destinations
    • Solo Road Trips
    • Solo Travel Safety
    • Save Money Traveling
    • A Solo Point of View
  • Trips/Deals
    • Tours – Searchable
    • All Trips by Advertiser
  • Tracey’s List
  • Stats

Solo Traveler

Solo travel tips, destinations, stories... the source for those who travel alone.

  • Home
  • Start
    • Directory to Solo Traveler
    • Solo Travel Newbies Guide
    • Destinations for First Solo Trip
    • Get Past First Trip Fear
    • Why Travel Solo?
  • Tips
    • Tips for Solo Travel
    • Solo Female Travel
    • Plan a Solo Trip
    • Choose the Right Tour
    • Solo Travel Destinations
    • Solo Road Trips
    • Solo Travel Safety
    • Save Money Traveling
    • A Solo Point of View
  • Trips/Deals
    • Tours – Searchable
    • All Trips by Advertiser
  • Tracey’s List
  • Stats

Sign Up

You are here: Home / How to Travel Alone / Solo Travel Planning / Lucy Maud Montgomery Travel: Chasing Anne (with an e)

Lucy Maud Montgomery Travel: Chasing Anne (with an e)

Janice Waugh

August 24, 2020 by Janice Waugh

Lucy Maud Montgomery travel entrance to LMM House
Entrance to the Church Museum run by the Lucy Maud Montgomery Society of Ontario in Leaskdale, north of Toronto. Lucy Maud Montgomery House is across the road.

In a bookstore in Sydney Australia a clerk asked where I was from. “Canada! Oh, Lucy Maud Montgomery. I loved the Anne books!”

I did too.

On one of my day trips out of Toronto, driving north on the 404 to, well, nowhere in particular, actually, I noticed a highway sign for Lucy Maud Montgomery House.

That sounded like a perfect destination. I turned off the highway and drove 40 km, actually passing the church and house that celebrates one of Canada's most famous authors. I turned around and enjoyed the tour.

This post is about Lucy Maud Montgomery travel. She is a perfect theme for any eastern Canada trip.

Lucy Maud Montgomery travel life size bronze statue
There's a garden and life-size, bronze statue of L.M. Montgomery behind the church.

On the Trail of Lucy Maud Montgomery in Prince Edward Island

Anne of Green Gables, the story of an orphan girl adopted by an elderly couple in Cavendish, Prince Edward Island, was first published in 1908. It sold nineteen thousand copies in the first five months. It went into ten printings in its first year and has since been translated into more than a dozen languages.

Without Anne of Green Gables, Prince Edward Island would be unknown to almost anyone outside of Canada. But this book by Lucy Maud Montgomery not only inspired girls around the world for over a century, it created an entire tourism industry for the small province.

Over 125,000 people visit Green Gables in a typical year. The population of Prince Edward Island is only 157,000.

It has had an impact.

L.M. Montgomery birthplace in New London, PEI

There are many ways to explore L.M. Montgomery's beloved Prince Edward Island but I would start with Green Gables Heritage Place which includes a new interpretive center that places an emphasis on Montgomery herself, as well as the home that inspired the original Anne book, Green Gables House.

A 10-minute drive away is Lucy Maud's birthplace in New London. There's also the Bideford Parsonage Museum. But when you're in Cavendish it's not all Anne. Don't miss spending a day at the beach, deep sea fishing, or golf. Find more details on planning your tour of the area here.

There's more Anne to be found in Charlottetown, the provinces' capitol. Anne of Green Gables-The Musical has been running for decades. Check availability here.

Lucy Maud Montgomery travel home where she wrote 11 novels
This is the manse to which L.M. Montgomery moved as Mrs. Ewen MacDonald, wife to Rev. Ewen MacDonald, the Presbyterian Minister for the church across the road. She lived here for fifteen years during which time she wrote eleven of her twenty-two novels.

The Life of L.M. Montgomery in Ontario

Lucy Maud lived from 1874 to 1942. She published 20 novels, most of which were set in PEI. Her mother died when she was less than two years old. Her father was not able to care for her so she was raised by her grandparents in Cavendish.

She studied to be a teacher in Charlottetown and studied literature at Dalhousie University in Halifax. After returning to PEI and caring for her grandmother until her death, L.M. married Ewen Macdonald, a minister, in 1911. They moved to Leaskdale, Ontario and the parish of St. Paul's Presbyterian Church where she lived for 15 years, wrote 11 novels, and raised her two sons.

The Lucy Maud Montgomery Society of Ontario manages the Leaskdale Church and manse as a museum. When I arrived after that impromptu turn off the highway, I was the only one visiting and received a personal tour by a young woman with long red braids. They were natural red braids. So appropriate. She had been a guide there for three summers while she was completing her degree in history and literature.

The tour starts in the basement of the church where they also serve a high tea. There's a gift shop with books, new and old, as well as Anne dolls and the like. From there, you head upstairs to see the church but the manse, the home of the minister, is where Lucy Maud's life is truly revealed.

You enter into the foyer and on your left is the sitting room. Though the furniture is not that of Lucy Maud, it is accurate to the period and there are some unique pieces that are identical to what she owned. The Society knows this because, in addition to writing, L.M. was also an avid photographer. She documented her family's home and life in photos which she developed herself.

The dining room was, apparently, her most disliked room in the house. It's small, for sure. But to add to the problem of size for a minister's wife who is expected to entertain, there are six doors off the room, making it less functional than it might have been.

Off the dining room is the kitchen and upstairs there are four bedrooms including the one in which she had her sons.

After the tour, make sure you go to the garden behind the church where there is a pergola and a bronze statue of the author herself.

In 1916 Lucy Maud and family moved to Norval, where there is a museum in development, and nine years later to Toronto where she died in 1942. Lucy Maud Montgomery was awarded the O.B.E (Order of the British Empire) by King George V in 1935.

All this to say, there are many places to chase L.M. Montgomery and Anne with an E.

If you love literature, you may enjoy 16 Best Poems About Travel and Life.

Last updated: 16th July, 2021

Trips for Solo Travelers

Travel Insurance for Solo Travelers

Top Categories on Solo Traveler

Solo Female Travel

Road Trips

A Solo Point of View

All Articles

Destinations

Travel Money

Deals

  • Solo Female Travel: Advice from Women Who Know
  • Road Trips: Tips & Itineraries for Solo Travelers
  • Packing for Travel |
  • A Solo Point of View |
  • All Articles
  • Destinations
  • Travel Money

Contact Us

Publisher Janice: info @ solotravelerworld.com

Editor Tracey: tracey @ solotravelerworld.com

Sales Simon: simon @ solotravelerworld.com

Get Solo Travel News & Deals

  • Home
  • About
  • Advertise with Solo Traveler
    • Login to Your Advertiser Account
  • Deals
  • Solo Travel Statistics
  • Media & Speaking
  • Privacy Policy & Disclosure
  • Contact
A Proud Member of the Travel Media Association of Canada
RESULTS MAY VARY (THE DISCLAIMER)

The content of Solo Traveler and any resources published by Solo Traveler are meant for entertainment and inspiration only. Please note that while we have advertising clients promoting destinations, products, services, trips and tours on Solo Traveler and that we endeavour to only work with companies in which we have confidence, we are not responsible for the delivery or quality of their products or services. Every person and every travel situation is different. Your safety, satisfaction and fun traveling solo are your responsibility alone and not that of Solo Traveler, its publisher, editor and/or writers.

PRIVACY POLICY & DISCLOSURE: In accordance with FTC guidelines, I disclose that I may be compensated if consumers choose to utilize links located throughout the content on this site. Additionally, some posts might be sponsored to support this site. Please do the appropriate research before participating in any third party offers. All opinions are my own. Please read our full Privacy Policy here.

Copyright © 2025 · Solo Traveler · Site By RTW Labs