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Showing posts with label history of etobicoke. Show all posts
Showing posts with label history of etobicoke. Show all posts

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Montgomery's Inn, among other Toronto museums, are slated for closure...

Hume: City museum closures loom
November 12, 2011

In a city consumed by the cost of things, it’s easy to lose sight of the value of things.
Torontonians will be reminded of the difference later this month when Mayor Rob Ford unveils the city budget.
Among the measures included will be the closure of four of the city’s 10 museums. Sources tell the Star that those chosen to be shut are the Market Gallery, Gibson House, Montgomery’s Inn and Zion Schoolhouse.

The justification will be the nearly $1 million in savings, a tiny fraction of a city budget that in 2010 stood at $9.2 billion.
For thousands of residents who visit and use these facilities, the impact will be more about the quality of their lives than the depth of their pockets.
The 10 museums operated by the City of Toronto Culture Division cost taxpayers about $5.3 million yearly. The institutions themselves raise $1.3 million through rentals, admissions and gift shop sales.
Annual attendance is about 250,000.
Except for the Market Gallery, located downtown in the St. Lawrence Market, the venues slated for closure are in the former North York and Etobicoke.
Montgomery’s Inn has been a landmark in Etobicoke since the 1840s, when the current building was constructed. It is one of the former borough’s few surviving links to its past.
Zion Schoolhouse, which was built just two years after Confederation, remained in service until 1955. The modest but elegant structure on Finch St. E. was built by families in what was then the farming community of L’Amoreaux.
Gibson House, an impressive 1850s Georgian mansion west of Yonge St., north of Park Home Ave., is also in the former North York.
Though shuttering these attractions is unlikely to stir up the same sort of outrage as did Ford’s threats to close Toronto public libraries, it will inflict further damage on a sector already under pressure.
“Heritage is not gravy,” insists Councillor Joe Mihevc (Ward 21). “These museums are local community hubs. . . the unsung gems of our city. They offer vigorous programs for school kids. But this administration has made it clear it wants some very, very deep cuts to arts and heritage.”
As Mihevc also points out, the city has no plans yet about what to do with these historic buildings once they’re closed. Unless they are to be abandoned and left to fall apart, they will have to be sold to the private sector or maintained by the city, which costs money.
“I think the city will try to sell them,” says Mihevc. “But no one wants to see these iconic buildings turned into bars or restaurants. That would be disastrous.”
In the case of the Market Gallery, founded in 1979 as “the official exhibition space and storage of the city’s permanent art collection,” closure would mean significantly reduced public access to Toronto’s material history.
However, unless Ford is prepared to put city-owned artworks on the block, killing the gallery won’t leave the city with any saleable assets.
Culture has never figured prominently in official Toronto; the major arts institutions in this city depend on federal and provincial funding as well as private philanthropy and the box-office. Even the city’s museums receive $430,000 from Queen’s Park every year.
Perhaps the most serious long-term threat of closing these civic institutions is that Torontonians will lose faith in the city’s cultural sector, and stop contributing the cash and artifacts on which museums depend.
“It will breach the integrity of the city museums system,” Mihevc charges, “leading to a lack of trust among potential donors, funders and partners across the 10 sites.”

- Toronto Star, November 12, 2011

Library Closures: Action Needed!

Dear members of ABAC
Library and Archives Canada has now had no budget for the ten months, and been under a self imposed moratorium or has been reviewing its acquisitions policies since 2009, and more cuts are coming!
In the past few weeks this issue has been covered by CBC, CTV, The Globe and Mail and the National Post.  The issue is building momentum, but we need to keep pushing!
If your interested in helping save Library and Archives Canada, please visit the website www.savelibraryarchives.ca
On this website you can send an email to your member of parliament, download emails you can forward to customers, print off posters, and become more informed.
If you'd be willing to hand out bookmarks, or know of other stores who would be willing, please contact me directly.
Thank you,
Liam McGahern
President - ABAC

IL FAUT SAUVER BIBLIOTHÈQUE ET ARCHIVES CANADA!!
Les Membres ALAC durent souffrir d’un moratoire de 10 mois de la part de Bibliothèque et Archives Canada; cette institution nationale affirmait que, par la suite, les acquisitions reprendraient, laissant même comprendre qu’une amélioration nous avantagerait. Nous avons maintenant compris qu’il s’agissait d’affirmations fallacieuses car, depuis la levée du moratoire, les acquisitions sont demeurées nulles ou presque.
Il faut donc agir et appuyer la campagne lancée par l’Association Canadienne des Professeures et Professeurs d’Université visant à sauver Bibliothèque et Archives Canada. Il est extrêmement important de consulter le site webwww.sauvonsbiblioarchives.ca , de bien absorber le contenu et d’engager le combat contre la dissolution du mandat de BAC.
Dans ce but il serait très utile d’utiliser le marque-page suivant sur vos sites web, vos Courriels avec la clientèle ou les demandeurs d’informations, placer ce marque-page au dos de vos catalogues, les imprimer et les remettre en boutique si possible.
De plus, vous pourrez aider la campagne en communiquant le lienwww.sauvonsbiblioarchives.ca à vos élus provinciaux, fédéraux et même municipaux. Nous ne pouvons laisser quelques dirigeants de BAC ridiculiser ainsi les canadiennes et canadiens en détruisant littéralement la collection nationale, mémoire collective dont le but est de conserver précieusement l’histoire de ce pays, depuis les fondateurs jusqu’aux jours actuels.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

A Brief History of Etobicoke

By Paul Willoughby, President of the York Pioneer and Historical Society

On early maps of Canada the area we know as Etobicoke is shown as an insignificant part of a vast forest covered tract of land known as 'Indian Hunting Grounds'. The river flowing along its eastern boundary appears on Champlain maps as early as 1632. Originally called The Toronto River, it was renamed Humber by John Graves Simcoe, the first Lieutenant-Governor of Upper Canada.
The east bank of the Humber river, near its mouth, gave access to the Toronto Carrying Place, a 28 mile Indian foot path as old as human life in North America. Etienne Brulé, a young French protégé of Champlain, who traversed The Toronto Carrying Place in the early 1600's was probably the first white man to set foot in Etobicoke. Rene-Robert Cavalier, Sieur de la Salle, the great pathfinder in the New World, passed over The Toronto Carrying Place at least four times and often sheltered his boats in the Humber.
The first white settler in the area was Jean Baptiste Rosseau, a French trader. He was trading at the mouth of the Humber by 1791 and had a log home at the foot of The Carrying Place by 1798.
After the defeat of the French of the Plains of Abraham in 1759, the area came under British rule. On December 26, 1791 the British Parliament passed The Canada Act, providing for the establishment of Upper and Lower Canada, each with an Executive Council and Elected Assembly. Colonel John Graves Simcoe, a veteran of the American War of Independence was appointed Lieutenant Governor of Upper Canada. He soon recruited a new corps of Queen's Rangers, of which he had been a commander, for the colonization and defence of the Province. The corps was made up of half-pay officers and skilled artisans such as carpenters and blacksmiths. In 1793 Simcoe chose the site of Toronto, which he called York, as his capital.
In the fall of 1793 the Lieutenant Governor established on the west side of the Humber River the King's Saw Mill which has been recognized as Etobicoke's first industry. The location of this historic mill was a little south of the site of the Old Mill, the present ruins of William Gambles Stone Grist Mill.
In 1794 a road was surveyed west of York across Etobicoke. Built between 1795 and 1798, it parallelled an old Indian trail from the King's Saw Mill west to Etobicoke Creek. Almost a decade later this original Dundas Street was moved north to its present location.
In 1787 Lord Dorchester, the first Governor General of Canada executed the Toronto Purchase with the Mississauga Indians. This involved all the land from the Scarborough Bluffs to Etobicoke Creek and northerly for 28 miles. This encompassed all of present day Etobicoke. There was a dispute over whether the Humber River or Etobicoke Creek was the western boundary of the Toronto Purchase. Finally the Indians allowed Surveyor Alexander Atkins to survey as far west as Etobicoke Creek but insisted that the river be the eastern boundary. The government paid the Indians 10 Shillings to settle the dispute over ownership of the land from the Humber to Etobicoke Creek. All of this gives rise to the story that Etobicoke was once sold for 10 Shillings.
The Canada Act of 1791 allowed for the establishment of counties, towns and townships. York County was one of 19 counties. The area in the south-west corner of York County was surveyed into a Township. The boundaries were the Humber River, Lake Ontario, Etobicoke Creek, Toronto Township, the Gore of Toronto, and Vaughan Township. The area covered approximately 44 square miles. It had many names, the original "Wah-do-ge-kaug' being Ojibway for "Where the Black Alders Grow". Several interpretations of this were used including 'Ato-be-cooke' A-doo-be-keg, and Toby Creek'. Finally in 1795 Simcoe gave his blessing to the name Etobicoke.
In 1805 a census showed 84 persons residing in the Township. By the second census in 1809 this had risen to 137.
In 1793 the militia lands comprising 4,150 acres were laid out in Etobicoke. Of this number 1,530 acres were granted to Samuel Bois Smith, Major in Command of the Second Corps of the Queen's Rangers. Smith was a veteran of the Revolutionary War. This tract of land encompassed all the lake frontage from the Centre Road (Kipling Avenue) to the Etobicoke Creek and all the land along the east band almost to what is now Bloor Street. Samuel Bois Smith and Jane Isabella Gamble, daughter of Dr. John Gamble, Surgeon of the Queen's Rangers, were married in 1799. They built a substantial home south of the Lakeshore Road which although greatly altered over the years remained until 1955. This large almost undeveloped tract of land proved itself to be a hindrance in the early development of the Township.
The Lakeshore Road was first opened through the Township in 1804 but because of the few settlers and the large land grants, was poorly maintained.
Also around 1795 Simcoe granted land to half-pay officers and government officials. These 200 acre parcels were located along the lake and further north in the Township. Many of these people did not settle on the land so development was slow. Many soon sold this land. Some United Empire Loyalists came to Canada as well as some American citizens who came as a result of the promise of free land. This ended with the War of 1812. After the War of 1812 with the United States, discharged soldiers once again came to Etobicoke receiving their grants of land.
The Army Bill Act of 1812 enabled paper money to circulate in the province. This was needed for the payment of taxes. An 1821 memorandum shows taxes in Etobicoke were: 4 cents per annum per acre of usable land; 1 cent per acre of bushland; 32 cents for a horse; 16 cents for an ox; and 4 cents per head of livestock. A tax of 42 cents was levied on a vehicle kept for pleasure. Buildings were taxed based on the number of fireplaces and windows.
The early 1820's saw Britain experiencing very high unemployment. Within the first half of the the 19th Century, eight million people left Britain for Canada. Newcomers to Etobicoke who were entitled to grants of land from the Crown were given 'Tickets of Location' which authorized them to seek out and take possession of the land allocated to them. A Crown Deed was granted only after prescribed settlement duties had been performed. Being a small township the few land grants were soon taken up and many people had to buy their lands.
As early as 1806 William Cooper built grist and saw mills on the west side of the Humber just below Dundas Street. Settlers in Etobicoke on the west side soon began petitioning for a bridge over the Humber to reach these mills. The Dundas Street bridge was finally built in 1816.
The Silverthorn Family who were United Empire Loyalists came to Etobicoke just after the 1805 census and settled on the west side of the Township. They built large saw and grist mills on the east side of the upper reaches of Etobicoke Creek in 1807. They laid out a road from Dundas Street to Burnhamthorpe Road providing easy access to the mills. The old throughfare is still called Mill Road.
At first all local authorities was in the hands of the Justices of the Peace for each of Upper Canada's four judicial districts. Etobicoke was located in the Home District. In 1841, with the passage of the District Council Act, ratepayers were able to elect members of council. The Warden and Treasurer were still appointed by the Governor-in-Council. The Baldwin or Municipal Corporations Act of 1849 increased the authority of municipal councils making all positions elected. Etobiocke Township was divided into five wards and the first elections were held. The first council meeting was held at noon on Monday,January 21,1850. From this time on Etobicoke started to grow more rapidly.
At one time the Township of Etobicoke contained 18 communities ranging from small crossroads to villages and towns. Mimico, New Toronto, Long Branch, Humber Bay, Alderwood, The Queensway, Lambton Mills, Kingsway Park, Sunny Lea, Islington, Summerville, Eatonville, Richview, Westmount, Highfield, Thistletown, Smithfield & Claireville. As the township grew other communities evolved such as Rexdale and Markland Wood. In 1953 the Municipality of Metropolitan Toronto was formed (which included the Township of Etobicoke to the west and Scarborough to the east with York, North York, East York and Toronto in between.) In 1967 all the small communities which were previously separate within the Township of Etobicoke were amalgamated to form the Borough of Etobicoke within Metropolitan Toronto. In June 1983, the Borough of Etobicoke became a city.