Annette Dionne visits house she was born in as significance of quintuplets noted
NORTH BAY, Ont. — History repeated itself on Sunday, as more than a thousand people stood outside of the Dionne quintuplets’ birth home in North Bay, Ont., hoping to see one of the two surviving identical sisters.
All were gathered for a ceremony during which a plaque was unveiled to commemorate the national historic significance of the quintuplets, who became international sensations after their birth on May 28, 1934.
“It brings the past back to life,” said Annette Dionne, who is now 84 years old. Cecile Dionne was supposed to attend the ceremony, but could not make it due to health issues.
The quintuplets were born near the village of Corbeil, Ont., just south of North Bay. Soon after their birth, the Ontario government placed the quintuplets under the control of a board of guardians and the girls spent their first nine years at “Quintland,” a speciality-built facility where they were featured as a tourist attraction.