101136-Index.Pdf

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

101136-Index.Pdf For more information about the book: Valley of The Humber, 1615-1913 See: www.globalgenealogy.com/countries/canada/ontario/central-ontario/resources/images/101136.jpg Index Compiled and added to original work in 2010 by Lauren M. Coules Beadle, Chaunsey, 52 ct for the Preservation of A Beaten Road, 16 Salmon, 115, 118 Bell, 160 Adair, James, 95, 105 Belleville, 104 Adamson, Alfred, 123 Belt Line, 140, 141, 159, 162 Adamson, Dr. William Beyard, Col., 23 Agar, 121, 123, 124, 126 Birch, Mr., 73 Aikenshaw, 160 Black Creek, the, 1, 85-87, 158 Aitken, W., 39, 41-43, 147 Blank, 77, 156 Albany, 108 Blome, Richard, 14 Alexander, Sir James E., 120, Bloor Street, 158, 163 121, 126 Blue Bell, 92 Algonquins, 4-6, 12, 21, Board of Trade, 78 Allan, William, 154 Bond Head, 121, 158 Ancaster, 62 Bond Head, Sir Francis, 53, 54, Astor, J.J., 36 96, 138, 151, 153, 154 Athol, Blair, 35 Bonnycastle Map, 51, 119, 127, Auchinleck, 109 154 Bonnycastle, Sir Richard, 17 Botanical Gardens of the Bab Ballads, 152 Humber, 142 Bâby Bluffs, 106 botany, 138, 139 Bâby Estate, 112 Bouchette, Joseph, 64, 73, 74, Bâby Vale, 87, 140 83, 84, 94 Bâby, Francis, 60 Brainerd, David (the Saintly), Bâby, James, 87 101 Bâby's Point, 103, 110, 140 Brébeuf, 8, 12 Bain, Dr. James, iv Bressani, 13 Bain, Prof. Watson, iv Bridge End, 162, 163 Bartram, John, 13 bridges, 50-53, 56-61, 64, 79, Bates, William, 71 80, 82, 161, 162 Bathurst Street, 154 Britain, 118, 153, 160 Battle of Windsor, 77 British, the, 94, 109, 119, 143, Bay of Quinté, 62, 100, 126 149, 151, 153 Bay of Toronto, 30, 31, 59, British Columbia, 124 129, 133 British Navy, 84 Brock's Land, 53 © GlobalGenealogy.com Inc. For more information about the book: Valley of The Humber, 1615-1913 See: www.globalgenealogy.com/countries/canada/ontario/central-ontario/resources/images/101136.jpg Brodhead’s History, 13 Christ Church- Mimico, 143, Broken Front, 163 145, 146, Brulé, Etienne, 1, 2, 4-10, 20, Church of England, 109-111 27, 28, 105, 163 Clarke, Major General, 61 Brulé's Pathway/Trail, v, 27 Clark, John, 85 Brulé's Point, 25, 61, 79, 112, Clark, L.J., 130 Bryce, Dr. P.H., 131 Claus, Col. Daniel, 38, 98, 108 burial ground, 112 Coffin, Col., 109 Burlington, 108 Colborne, Sir John, 100, 101 Burlington Bay, 18, 51, 122, 162 Coleman, Dr. A.P., 127, 129, 131- Burlington Beach, 131 133 Burr, Rowland, 73, 74, 76 Collins, 147 Burwash, Dr., v Colquhoun, Dr. A.H.U., v Butler, Col., 107 Company of Associates, v Butterfield, Mr., 2, 4, 5 Company of Enthusiasts, 155 Conant, Roger, 114 Cook, Captain, 44, 45, 50 Cook, Toby, 161 abot, John, 20 C Cooper, Reverend H.C., 144, 145 Caldwell, the (ship), 99 Cooper, Thomas, 68, 74, 162 Cambridge, 144 Cooper's Mills, 65, 66, 74, 80, Cameron, Duncan, 153 81, 152 Canadian Institute, 139, 142 corduroy road, 56, 64 Carantouannais (Andastes), 8 Cornell's Road, 62 Carhagouha (in township of Cornwall, 49 Tiny), 6 Coronelli, 15 Carillon, 38 Cosens, Dr. A., v Carlton, 64, 128 Coteau du Lac, 49 carriages, 52, 56, 59, 64, 90, 109, cottages, 83 Cartier, Jacques, 3-5, 11, 20, 105 County of York, 150 Cartography (also see Courcelles, 13 ‘Mapping’), 11-18, 31, 33, Coureurs de Bois, 15 47, 51 Cousins, the, 154 Castle Frank, 63 Coyne, Dr. J.H., v Caswell, Mr. E.S., v Cramahé, Honourable Hector, Cathay, 4, 11, 20 37 Chamberlin, Mrs., 88, 139, 140 Credit Indians, 100, 106, 112 Chambers, William, 137 Credit Mission, 111 Chapman, Prof., 128 Credit River, the (Credai, Credit, Champlain, Samuel de, 1-8, 12- la Credit), 18, 40, 47, 50, 56, 14, 20, 21 46, 138 60, 63, 67, 78, 99, 100, 102- Charlevoix, 27 105, 110, 111, 113, 115, 116, Chateaubriand, 27 118, 120-122, 125, 126, 136 Chaumonot, 12 Creighton, Mrs., 52 Chippewas (-ys), 94, 96 cricket, 86 © GlobalGenealogy.com Inc. For more information about the book: Valley of The Humber, 1615-1913 See: www.globalgenealogy.com/countries/canada/ontario/central-ontario/resources/images/101136.jpg Crookshank, George, 153 Don, the (Tanaouate, the), 5, 17, Cumberland, Barlow, 16 18, 52, 57, 74, 92, 123, 128, 132, Cuthbertson, Mr., 42 153, 155, 156, 158, 162 Don Valley, 131, 156 Dorchester, Lord, 67 Doughty, Dr., iv ade, Dr. Reverend Charles, D Doyle, Martin, 117 144 Drunken Creek, 41 Danforth Road, 62, 163 dry rot, 84 Danforth, Asa, 62 Du Creux, 13, 14 Danger Row, 159 Dublin, Township of, 67, 147, D'Arcy Boulton, Mr,. iii, 55 149, 155, 161 Darling, Lieut., 41, 42 Dufferin Street, 51 Darlington, 114 Duke de la Rochefoucauld Davenport Ridge, 132 Liancourt, 114 Davenport Road, 64, 129 Dundas, 64 Davis, Benjamin, 149 Dundas Street, 53, 59, 61-65, 74, Davis, Thomas, 71 80, 82, 84, 86, 87, 129, 158, 160- de la Sale, Monsieur., 13, 21 163 De Long, Jacob, 149 Dunlop, Dr. William, 136, 142 Denison, Maj. G.T., 63, 85, 136 Dennis, 82 Dennis, John, 68, 69 Elizabeth Street, 159 Dennis, Joseph, 47, 85 Elliott, 74 Denonville, 29 emigrants, 64, 75, 142, 151 DeNoyelle, 95 England, 20, 33, 46, 57, 78, 89, 11 DeRoos, 65 3, 114, 135, 152 156 Detroit/River, 30, 37, 49, 53, 59, 6 English, the, 8-10, 15, 16, 20, 2, 65, 94, 97, 106 22, 30, 32, 33, 83, 96, 97, Devans, Abraham (also see 106-108, 115, 138, 140, 144, ‘Devins’), 148, 149 153, 156 Devans, Isaac, 148, 158 epidemic (see ‘Illness’) Devans, Levy/Levi, 148, 149 Erindale, 123, 124 Devans/Devins/Devaynes, 148, 14 Esplanade, 154 9, 151 Estiaghics, 95 Devins, Abraham, 68 Etobicoke, 40, 52, 63, 79-81, 87, Deyonguhokrawen (Simcoe), 90, 99, 149, 150, 158, 160 107 Exhibition Park, 50, 112 disease (see ‘Illness’) distillery, 77, 81, 85 Dollier de alls of Chaudiere, 77 Casson, 14, 21, 22 F Dominion Fisheries Farmers' Arms, 163 Department, 125 Farr's Brewery, 53 © GlobalGenealogy.com Inc. For more information about the book: Valley of The Humber, 1615-1913 See: www.globalgenealogy.com/countries/canada/ontario/central-ontario/resources/images/101136.jpg Fénelon, Archbishop of Cambrai, 82, 143, 144, 157, 160 14, 29, 105 Gambles, 146 Ferry, 52 Gamble's Mills, 122 Fisher Flats, 75 Garden of Eden, 76, 78, 79, 163, Fisher Lane, 75 Garnier, 12 Fisher, Thomas, 68, 74-76, 80, Garrison 121, 122, 126, 146 Common, 63, 85, 108, 115, 130, 1 Fisher, Thomas- Grandson, 137 36 Fisher's Mills, 81 Garrison Creek, 51, 53, 160 Fitzpatrick, 160 Gazette, The, 47, 62, 72, 123 Five Nations, 23, 108, 127 Gazette and Oracle, The, 63 Flagg, A. C., 19 Gazetteer, 75, 94 Flatheads, 96 Georgian Bay, 5-7, 15, 17, 40, Fleming, Sir Sandford, 128 73, 132, 151 Forfar, William, 72 Gilbert and Tucker, 132 Fort Erie, 49 Giles, the, 146 Fort Toronto/Rouillé, 18, 30-32, Givens, Lieutenant, Col., 37, 98, 105 Superintendent of Indian Fothergill, 142 Affairs, 41-43, 110, 111 Four Alls, the, 93 Givins, Lt-Col., 53, 84, 108, 109 Foxwell, 85 Glebe, 141, 143, 162, 163 France, 16, 22, 30, 33, 34 Glengarry Fencibles, 109 Franquelin, J. B. L., 13, 16, 17 Globe, The, 58, 140 Fraser, Dr., iv Goldie of Ayrshire, John, Fraser, the (river), 1 87, 138 Frémin, 29 Gourlay, Robert, 18, 56, 143, French, the, 95-97, 99-101, 106- 150, 151 109 Governor, 110 French Fort, 50 Grand Portage, 34 Frobisher, Benjamin, 39 Grand River, 103 Frontenac/ Fort Frontenac, 23- Grand Trunk, 49 26, 28, 97, 98 Grandmaison, 26 Fry/Frey, Mr. Philip- Deputy Great Tail, 107 Surveyor, 147 Great Trail, 42-44 funerals, 86 Great Turtle, 99 fur trade, 12, 16, 20, 24, 28- Great Western Crossing, 60 30, 32, 34, 36-38, 40, 42, 48, Great Western Railways, 49, 52 50 Grenadier's Pond (Lake Naff), 128 Griffon, the (ship), 25, 26 Groseilliers, 36 alinée, 14, 21-23 G Grubbe, W.C., 122, 123 Galt, John, 152 Guedreville, 27 Gamble, Mrs., 144 Gamble, William J., 68, 74, 76- © GlobalGenealogy.com Inc. For more information about the book: Valley of The Humber, 1615-1913 See: www.globalgenealogy.com/countries/canada/ontario/central-ontario/resources/images/101136.jpg Hudson, 11 aggard, Col. Andrew, 120 H Hudson's Bay Company, 36 Haine, 122 Huguenots, 28 Haine's Hill, 58 Humber Bay, 33, 40, 50, 130, Haldimand, Governor, 38 131 Halifax, 108 Humber Bill, 79 Halley, Dr. Edmund, 15 Humber Flats, 1, 85, 87 Halton, 125 Humber Mills, 50 Hamilton, 15, 52, 59, 64, 159, 160 Humber Plains, 138, 159 Harbour Board, 51, 58, 153, Humber Road, 149 154, 156 Humber Viaduct, 60 Harbour Commission, 154 hunting, 89, 97, 98, 102 Harbour Commissioners, 58 Hurlbert, Dr. J.B., 121 Haussmann, Baron, 155 Huron Tract, 145 Hawkins, William, 68, 154 Hurons, 5-9, 12, 13, 15-17, 29- Head of the Lake, 38 31, 73, 105 Heights of Abraham, 45 Hennepin, Father Louis, 4, 13, 17, 21, 22, 24, 25, Illinois, 25 27-29, 54, 95 Illness, 10, 38, 55, 105 Henry, Alexander, 34-36, 38, 95 Inches, James, 117 Herefordshire, 145 Indian Dam, 123 Heriot, 95 Indian Department, 108 Hille, 108 Indian Express, 49, 61, 113 Hinde, G. Jennings, 129, 133 Indian Superintendent, 98 Hochelaga, 3 Indian Wedding, 156 Hodder, Dr. E.M., 141 Interalia, 58 Holdmen, Mr. .R,. iv Iredell, 147 Holland, Major, 73, 74 Ireland, 89, 116 Holland, the (river), 7, 28, 31, Irish, the, 83, 119, 126 73, 75 Iroquois, 5, 7, 8, 12, 21, 14-16, Home District, 88, 115, 116, 25, 29-32, 73, 95, 98, 107, 132 119, 149, 150, 151 Islington Road, 65, 143, 144 Hope, Township of (Toronto), 18, 62 Hotel, 92 acques Cartier Howards, J.G., 54, 60 J Howe, Sir William, 46 River, 120 Howland and Elliott's, 81, 160 Jameson, Mrs., 57-59, 65, 123, Howland, William P., 74, 80, 81, 124, 138, 154 160 Jane Street, 158, 159, 163 Howlands, the, 146 Jesuits, 2, 12, 16, 20, 21, 23, 28, 2 Howland's Mill, 81 9, 32, 102 Hudson River Group, 128, 129 Jogues, 12 Hudson Shale, 132, 133 Johnson, Sir William, 34, 37, 96, 97 © GlobalGenealogy.com Inc.
Recommended publications
  • Excavating the Past
    What Lies .28 10 Beneath 01 01/ Early hunters in the Toronto region would have sought high vantage points, such as shoreline cliffs, to track herds of caribou and other large game. IMAGE/ Shelley Huson, Archaeological Services Inc. 02/ 11,000-year-old stone points IMAGE/ Museum of Ontario Archaeology, Wilfrid Jury Collection 03/ A 500-year-old human effigy that adorned a ceramic pipe IMAGE/ Andrea Carnevale, Archaeological Services Inc. 04/ A 2,500-year-old artifact made of banded slate IMAGE/ Museum of Ontario Archaeology, Wilfrid Jury Collection Excavating the past TEXT BY RONALD F. WILLIAMSON AND SUSAN HUGHES What Lies .28 11 Beneath For more than 13,000 years, southern in Ontario require archaeological assess - planning guidelines for their management. Ontario has been home to indigenous ments, which are mandated by the Many regional municipalities, such as populations. These indigenous peoples Provincial Policy Statement, for projects Ottawa, Durham, York, and Halton, and once occupied thousands of encampments within their jurisdictions. cities such as Kingston, Toronto, Brantford, and temporary villages. They left no written London, and Windsor, among others, have record of their lives, and their legacy Some projects, however, may not undertaken archaeological management consists of the oral histories and traditions “trigger” a permit requirement. In these plans. In these municipalities, planners passed on to their descendants, as well instances, due diligence is critical, because use the potential mapping to decide which as the archaeological traces of their settle - encountering an archaeological feature projects require assessments. ments. These traces are fragile: whenever during project work can result in costly you dig in the ground, you could be delays.
    [Show full text]
  • A Review of Northern Iroquoian Decorated Bone and Antler Artifacts: a Search for Meaning
    Williamson and Veilleux Iroquoian Decorated Bone and Antler Artifacts 3 A Review of Northern Iroquoian Decorated Bone and Antler Artifacts: A Search for Meaning Ronald F. Williamson and Annie Veilleux The Northern Iroquoian practice of producing finely etched designs on bone and antler tools is examined in the context of conveying symbolic messages, some of which were communicated both privately and pub- licly. This paper presents the results of a review of the archaeological literature, which focused on both the symbolism inherent in the designs and the ideological roles in society of the animals from which the arti- facts were produced. Tables of provenience and descriptive attribute data are provided for each class of arti- fact as well as a summary of the highlights and trends in decoration for each. Introduction Trigger 1976:73), it has been suggested that their disc-shape may have been intended to represent In the winter of 1623-1624, Gabriel Sagard, a the sun and that patterns such as the one in Recollet friar, visited the country of the Huron in Figure 1, found on a late fifteenth or early six- what is now southern Ontario and, based on a teenth century Iroquoian site in southwestern series of encounters the Huron had with their ene- Ontario, represent sunbursts, similar to those mies, he noted that after having clubbed their ene- that are common in the art and cosmology of the mies or shot them dead with arrows, the Huron contemporaneous Southeastern Ceremonial carried away their heads (Wrong 1939:152-153). Complex (Cooper 1984:44; Jamieson1983:166).
    [Show full text]
  • Toronto Has No History!’
    ‘TORONTO HAS NO HISTORY!’ INDIGENEITY, SETTLER COLONIALISM AND HISTORICAL MEMORY IN CANADA’S LARGEST CITY By Victoria Jane Freeman A thesis submitted in conformity with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Department of History University of Toronto ©Copyright by Victoria Jane Freeman 2010 ABSTRACT ‘TORONTO HAS NO HISTORY!’ ABSTRACT ‘TORONTO HAS NO HISTORY!’ INDIGENEITY, SETTLER COLONIALISM AND HISTORICAL MEMORY IN CANADA’S LARGEST CITY Doctor of Philosophy 2010 Victoria Jane Freeman Graduate Department of History University of Toronto The Indigenous past is largely absent from settler representations of the history of the city of Toronto, Canada. Nineteenth and twentieth century historical chroniclers often downplayed the historic presence of the Mississaugas and their Indigenous predecessors by drawing on doctrines of terra nullius , ignoring the significance of the Toronto Purchase, and changing the city’s foundational story from the establishment of York in 1793 to the incorporation of the City of Toronto in 1834. These chroniclers usually assumed that “real Indians” and urban life were inimical. Often their representations implied that local Indigenous peoples had no significant history and thus the region had little or no history before the arrival of Europeans. Alternatively, narratives of ethical settler indigenization positioned the Indigenous past as the uncivilized starting point in a monological European theory of historical development. i i iii In many civic discourses, the city stood in for the nation as a symbol of its future, and national history stood in for the region’s local history. The national replaced ‘the Indigenous’ in an ideological process that peaked between the 1880s and the 1930s.
    [Show full text]
  • York Online Undergraduate Research
    Revue YOUR Review Volume/Tome 3 (2016) York Online Undergraduate Research Intended to showcase York University (Toronto, Canada) student research, Revue YOUR Review is an annual, refereed e-journal offering an opportunity for York University students to prepare a paper for publication. The journal is multidisciplinary, open-access, and bilingual: articles are published in English or in French. Revue York Online Undergraduate Research Review is associated with York University’s annual, multidisciplinary Undergraduate Research Fair. Articles are revised from top essays submitted for York University credit courses and accepted as poster presentations at the juried Research Fair. Submissions are reviewed by an Editorial Board comprised of York University faculty members, writing instructors, librarians, and students, and may also be sent to expert readers within the discipline. Together, the Research Fair and its associated e-journal offer students an educational experience in researching, writing, preparing an abstract, designing and presenting a poster session, and revising a paper for publication—all components in the cycle of scholarly knowledge production and dissemination. Author rights are governed by Creative Commons licensing. La Revue YOUR Review se propose de mettre en valeur la recherche des étudiants de premier cycle et offre aux étudiants de l’Université York (Toronto, Canada) l’occasion de rédiger un article pour la publication. Cette revue annuelle à comité de lecture et à libre accès est pluridisciplinaire et bilingue (anglais/français). La Revue York Online Undergraduate Research Review est liée à la foire annuelle de recherche de l’Université York. Les articles ont été sélectionnés et révisés des meilleures dissertations soumises pour un cours de premier cycle à l’Université et acceptées comme présentation d’affiches à cette foire, elle-même sous la direction d’un jury.
    [Show full text]
  • History of Toronto from Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia the History of Toronto, Ontario, Canada Begins Several Millennia Ago
    History of Toronto From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia The history of Toronto, Ontario, Canada begins several millennia ago. Archaeological finds in the area have found artifacts of First Nations settlements dating back several thousand years. The Wyandot people were likely the first group to live in the area, followed by the Iroquois. When Europeans first came to Toronto, they found a small village known as Teiaiagon on the banks of the Humber River. Between visits by European explorers, the village was abandoned by the Iroquois, who moved south of Lake Ontario and the Mississaugas, a branch of the Ojibwa settled along the north shore of the lake. The French first set up trading posts in the area, including Fort Rouillé in 1750, which they abandoned as the British conquered French North America. In 1788, the British negotiated the first treaty to take possession of the Toronto area from the Mississaugas. After the United States War of Independence, the area north of Lake Ontario was held by the British who set up the province of Upper Canada in 1791. See also: Name of Toronto https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:DavenportBathurstSoutheast.jpg Davenport Road, as shown here in 1914, does not follow Toronto's standard street grid pattern, as it originated as a First Nations travel route between the Humber River and the Don Valley named Gete-Onigaming, Ojibwe for "at the old portage."[1] Toronto is located on the northern shore of Lake Ontario, and was originally a term of indeterminate geographical location, designating the approximate area of the future city of Toronto on maps dating to the late 17th and early 18th century.
    [Show full text]
  • THE SHARED PATH Foxwell St Terry Dr Symes Rd
    GETTING THERE AND BACK Follow the path of an ancient You can reach the suggested start and end point Aboriginal portage route. Discover 7 MARSHES AND OAK SAVANNAH on public transit by taking the BLOOR / DANFORTH panoramic views, river marshes, and The marsh at the mouth of the Humber River, dating subway to Old Mill station. Other TTC access is back 5,000 years, housed a wide range of plants, provided by a Dundas Street West Bus Route and the former sits of water-powered mills sh, waterfowl, and mammals which made it a vital The Queensway Streetcar. hunting, shing, and gathering site for Aboriginal THE ROUTES peoples. Further up the path, a black savannah tree is a rare remnant of an ecosystem that once ourished FOR MORE INFO SHARED PATH DISCOVERY WALK in the dry, sandy soils at the bottom of former Lake Discovery Walks is a program of self-guided walks Although you can begin this Discovery Walk Iroquois (now known as Lake Ontario). that links city ravines, parks, gardens, beaches and at any point along the route, a good starting neighbourhoods. For more information on Discovery point is at the base of the footbridge over the Walks, including brochures, please call customer Humber River where it enters Lake Ontario. You’ll visit The Shared 9 THE KING’S MILL service at 311, or 416-392-CITY (2489) from outside the beginning of an ancient portage route up the City limits. Information can also be found at toronto. Humber River Valley, sites of early fur trading posts, In 1793, the King’s Mills, the area’s rst water-powered ca/parks/trails/discover.htm.
    [Show full text]
  • Rouge River Rouge River
    Rouge River State of the Watershed Report Cultural Heritage Goal: Recognition, preservation, and celebration of cultural heritage in the Rouge River watershed to increase awareness and understanding of past human relationships with the environment . Cultural Heritage Key Findings: • For 10,000 years, the Rouge River Watershed has been used by humans in some way, beginning with aboriginal hunters and farmers, explorers, traders, men of God, soldiers, surveyors, and finally settlers. • Over 1,360 archaeological and heritage sites located in the Rouge River watershed and historical accounts reveal the watershed is rich in heritage value. Knowledge gained from these sites and many more potential sites can provide an appreciation of past human relationships with the environment. • Early aboriginal inhabitants were nomadic hunters and later farmers and villagers with the introduction of agriculture about AD 700. The 3 acre Milroy site, overlooking Little Rouge River, is an example of a Late Woodland Iroquoian longhouse village, and one of a dozen such sites in the watershed. • European settlement began in Markham Township in the eighteenth century with the German-speaking Berczy settlement. Settlement in other parts of the watershed was slower due to absentee owners. • By 1861 there were 54 mills on the River. • Over 22 architectural styles lend a unique identity to the 19 th century Rouge River landscape. This array of architecture has arisen due to the sophistication and complexity of its Euro-Canadian settlers. • The 2001 Canadian census showed that in the Rouge River watershed people of Canadian or British heritage make up 31% of the population, with the remainder being Chinese (21%), East Indian (9%) and over 35 other cultures.
    [Show full text]
  • The People of Scarborough
    ~THE SCARf>OROUGH PuBLIC LIBF{\RY I BOARP THE PEOPLE OF SCARBOROUGH Map of Scarborough ,.; .; .,; ::. .,; .,; .,; "'""- :;, -< "" -< "" "" 'ti "" "" S.teele~ Ave. V IV Finch Avenue III Sileppail.d Ave. 11 D St. REFERENCE POINTS 1. Thomson Park Z. Bluffer's Park J 3. civic Centre 4. Kennedy Subway 5. Metro Zoo Ikml 6. Guild Inn 1 mile! Map of Scarborough courtesy of Rick Schofield, Heritage Scarborough THE PEOPLE OF SCARBOROUGH The City of Scarborough Public Library Board Copyright© The City of Scarborough Public Library Board 1997 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, by photocopying, recording or otherwise for purposes of resale. Published by The City of Scarborough Public Library Board Grenville Printing 25 Scarsdale Rd. Don Mills, Ontario M3B 2R2 Raku ceramic Bicentennial Collector Plate and cover photo by Tom McMaken, 1996. Courtesy of The City of Scarborough. Canadian Cataloguing in Publication Data Myrvold, Barbara The People of Scarborough: a history Includes index. ISBN 0-9683086-0-0 1. Scarborough (Ont.) - History. I. Fahey, Curtis, 1951- . II Scarborough Public Library Board. III. Title. FC3099.S33M97 1997 971.3'541 C97-932612-5 F1059.5.T686S35 1997 iv Greetings from the Mayor As Mayor of the City of Scarborough, and on behalf of Members of Council, I am pleased that The People of Scarborough: A History, has been produced. This book provides a chronological overview of the many diverse peoples and cultures that have contributed to the city's economic, cultural and social fabric.
    [Show full text]
  • Pathways to the Eighth Fire: Indigenous Knowledge and Storytelling in Toronto
    Pathways to the Eighth Fire: Indigenous Knowledge and Storytelling in Toronto Jon Johnson A dissertation submitted to the Faculty of Graduate Studies in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Graduate Program in Communication and Culture York University Toronto, Ontario July 2015 © Jon Johnson, 2015 Abstract A considerable body of scholarly research now accords with long-held Indigenous prophecy in affirming the ongoing importance of Indigenous knowledge for the health and wellness of contemporary Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples and their environments. Yet, while much research has examined Indigenous knowledge and traditions in more natural or rural contexts, there has been to date very little examination of the presence and character of Indigenous knowledge and traditions in more urban contexts. This dissertation redresses this gap in the research via an analysis of Indigenous knowledge, traditions, and storytelling in Toronto and their prophetic implications for contemporary Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples. The analysis is based on a comparative literature review of Indigenous knowledge, traditions, and community as they have been practiced in urban and non-urban locales, long-term participation within Toronto’s Indigenous community particularly as a tour guide for the highly-regarded community-based Great ‘Indian’ Bus Tour of Toronto, and in-depth semi-structured interviews with a small group of Anishinaabe Torontonians regarding their perceptions of the city and the practice of urban Indigenous knowledge and traditions. These lines of investigation revealed that land-based urban Indigenous knowledge and storytelling traditions are practiced in at least some cities like Toronto in ways that exhibit significant similarities and continuities with those practiced in non- urban locales.
    [Show full text]
  • Stage 2-3 Archaeological Assessments Report(PDF)
    Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Ministère du Tourisme, de la Culture et du Sport Sport Culture Programs Unit Unité des programmes culturels Programs and Services Branch Direction des programmes et des services Culture Division Division de culture 435 S. James Street, Suite 334 435, rue James sud, bureau 334 Thunder Bay ON P7E 6S7 Thunder Bay ON P7E 6S7 Tel.: 807-475-1628 Tél.: 807-475-1628 Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] February 1, 2013 Dr. Dean Knight Archaeological Research Associates Ltd. 154 Otonabee Drive Kitchener, ON N2C 1L7 Dear Dr. Knight, RE: Review and Entry into the Ontario Public Register of Archaeological Reports: Archaeological Assessment Report Entitled Stage 2 and 3 Archaeological Assessments Port Ryerse Wind Power Project (FIT F-001579-WIN-130-601) Part of Lots 3–5, Broken Front Geographic Township of Woodhouse Norfolk County, Ontario, Revised Report Dated January 14, 2013, Filed by MTCS Toronto Office January 16, 2013, MTCS Project Information Form Number P089-014-2012 & P089- 018-2012, MTCS File Number HD00097 This office has reviewed the above-mentioned report, which has been submitted to this ministry as a condition of licensing in accordance with Part VI of the Ontario Heritage Act, R.S.O. 1990, c 0.18.1 This review has been carried out in order to determine whether the licensed professional consultant archaeologist has met the terms and conditions of their licence, that the licensee assessed the property and documented archaeological resources using a process that accords with the 2011 Standards and Guidelines for Consultant Archaeologists set by the ministry, and that the archaeological fieldwork and report recommendations are consistent with the conservation, protection and preservation of the cultural heritage of Ontario.
    [Show full text]
  • Cultural Commotion at the Toronto Carrying Place Trail Diane Boyer
    Document generated on 09/27/2021 3:14 p.m. Muséologies Les cahiers d'études supérieures Cultural Commotion at the Toronto Carrying Place Trail Diane Boyer Volume 4, Number 2, Spring 2010 Article abstract Constatant que l’interprétation officielle d’un site historique naturel, soit le URI: https://id.erudit.org/iderudit/1033541ar Toronto Carrying Place Trail, ne tient pas compte de son évolution après les DOI: https://doi.org/10.7202/1033541ar XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles, Diane Boyer propose une réflexion sur les possibilités d’y rattacher une part d’histoire plus récente, marquée notamment par See table of contents l’industrialisation et l’immigration. Pour ce faire, l’auteure réfléchit aux possibilités qu’offre la nouvelle muséologie, en particulier l’approche communautaire et inclusive de Georges-Henri Rivière, dans l’actualisation et Publisher(s) l’appropriation d’un lieu en mutation. Association Québécoise de Promotion des Recherches Étudiantes en Muséologie (AQPREM) ISSN 1718-5181 (print) 1929-7815 (digital) Explore this journal Cite this article Boyer, D. (2010). Cultural Commotion at the Toronto Carrying Place Trail. Muséologies, 4(2), 88–111. https://doi.org/10.7202/1033541ar Tous droits réservés © muséologies Les cahiers d'études supérieures, 2010 This document is protected by copyright law. Use of the services of Érudit (including reproduction) is subject to its terms and conditions, which can be viewed online. https://apropos.erudit.org/en/users/policy-on-use/ This article is disseminated and preserved by Érudit. Érudit is a non-profit inter-university consortium of the Université de Montréal, Université Laval, and the Université du Québec à Montréal.
    [Show full text]
  • Toronto's Cartographic Birth Certificate
    Document generated on 09/26/2021 3:49 a.m. Ontario History Toronto’s Cartographic Birth Certificate Hiding in Plain Sight for 350 Years Rick Laprairie Volume 110, Number 2, Fall 2018 Article abstract This article posits that the earliest map to have ever used the name Toronto as a URI: https://id.erudit.org/iderudit/1053510ar place is uncovered. Previously unnoticed, the name “Tarontos Lac,” for today’s DOI: https://doi.org/10.7202/1053510ar Lake Simcoe, is on a 1678 map by Jean-Baptiste-Louis Franquelin. His map, “Carte pour servir a l’eclaircissement du Papier Terrier de la Nouvelle France,” is See table of contents now recognized as Toronto’s cartographic birth certificate. The article describes the map, discusses how the discovery came about and why the name may have gone unnoticed until now. This cartographic study is set in the history of the Publisher(s) exploration of the Great Lakes region and the Mississippi River. Three other unsigned and undated period maps, often claimed as “Toronto” firsts, are also The Ontario Historical Society examined. These claims are dismissed, as revised attributions show them to have been by different cartographers and dated later than originally thought, making ISSN Franquelin’s map the oldest. The cartographic genealogy of the name Toronto is traced back through three and a half centuries to its initial appearance on 0030-2953 (print) Franquelin’s map. 2371-4654 (digital) Explore this journal Cite this article Laprairie, R. (2018). Toronto’s Cartographic Birth Certificate: Hiding in Plain Sight for 350 Years. Ontario History, 110(2), 152–175.
    [Show full text]