The first European explorer to visit the region is Samuel de Champlain, in 1615, while exploring the area with the Huron natives. When settlers first started arriving in the area in the late 1790s and early 19th century, land areas were given to settlers by the Canadian Land and Emigration Company for settlement and farming. The soils of the area were not perfectly suited for farming, but small-scale agriculture was able to be conducted on the land. Today, the Opeongo Hills are crossed by many provincial highways, many of which still follow the original Historic Colonization Roads.
Municipalities located in the Opeongo Hills
Below is a list of communities and municipalities located in the Opeongo Hills, from west to east
Quadeville is home to a cottage once owned by famed gangsterAl Capone. It still stands to this day north of the hamlet near a ghost town called Letterkenny.
Near the intersection of Highways 41 and Highway 132 is a spot known as "Magnetic Hill", where the road slopes uphill but appears to be going downhill.