Kenora District

It is geographically the largest division in Ontario: at 407,213.01 square kilometres (157,225.82 sq mi), it covers 38 percent of the province's area, making it larger than Newfoundland and Labrador, and slightly smaller than Sweden or roughly the land size of California.

Traditional native activities such as hunting and fishing dominate the north of the district outside of mining settlements.

The settlement of Gold Rock served 14 area mines, which included the Big Master, Laurentian, Detola and Elora.

The more successful mines included the Bully Boy, Cameron Island, Champion, Combined, Cornucopia, Gold Hill, Golden Horn, Kenricia, Mikado, Oliver, Olympia, Ophyr, Regina, Scramble, Severn, Stella, Sultana, Treasure and Wendigo.

A major mining exploration project is currently underway in the Ring of Fire region, centred on the district's isolated McFaulds Lake.

Year-round air and summertime river transport are the only means of reaching the most remote parts of the district.

Red Lake, Ontario
Provincial boundaries of Canada prior to 1912. The portion of Ontario's modern boundaries which is not represented as part of Ontario in this map constitutes the "Patricia Portion" of Kenora District.
Highway 599, longest secondary highway in Ontario