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  1. The privately operated Site of Lucy Maud Montgomery's Cavendish Home is the farm property that belonged to L.M. Montgomery’s maternal grandparents, Lucy and Alexander Macneill. It was here that Montgomery was raised by her grandparents.

  2. Maud in the Garden. Here she will sit, hands outstretched and bronzed, no longer having to worry about them "being crushed by handshaking", all the while dressed appropriately to receive those coming to call. Our garden is always open for a photo-op with Maud's statue... Tours & Site Information.

  3. With the surmountable amount of time that has passed from the life and death of Lucy Maud Montgomery (1874 – 1942), what has happened to the houses Montgomery lived in? Do they still exist or have they moved or changed?

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  4. Bringing together the real and imaginary worlds of Lucy Maud Montgomery ( 1874 1942), this landscape is intimately associated with her formative years and prolific career as a writer. To the northeast are the ruins of the author's home from 1876 to 1911, the Cavendish farmhouse where she lived with her maternal grandparents, Lucy and Alexander ...

  5. Lucy Maud Montgomery’s home. Come uncover stories of a gifted story-teller. her dreams, her angst, her sensitivity.

  6. Site of Lucy Maud Montgomery's Cavendish Home is located 1/4 mile east of Anne of Green Gables on Rt.6 in the heart of Cavendish!

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  8. Leaskdale Manse National Historic Site of Canada is the former Presbyterian manse where Lucy Maud Montgomery lived with her husband and family from 1911-1926. It is a modest brick late 19th-century house set on a residential lot just north of St. Paul's Presbyterian Church on Durham Regional Rd. #1 in the hamlet of Leaskdale, Ontario, north of ...

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