Monthly Archives: March 2012

Help run YOUR community centre!

You’re invited to the S.H. Armstrong Advisory Council Annual General Meeting next Tuesday, April 3, from 7:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.  at the centre, 56 Woodfield Road.

A new executive will be nominated and elected that evening.  The available positions are: Chair, Vice Chair, Secretary and Treasurer.  Be part of our community centre!

If you are looking for a way to help create an inclusive, welcoming community centre, with programs that meet the needs of the local residents, this is your opportunity to make a difference!

Child care will be available.

Please RSVP at SH-Meeting@gmail.com or at the Front Desk.

– Ann McKechnie, S.H. Armstrong Advisory Council

Ashbridge’s neighbourhood timeline

Here are some of the key milestones in our neighbourhood’s history.  If you have more to add (or correct), please comment below.  I will be updating this page as I uncover more material; over time I plan to add links to source material.

6000 B.C.
Native peoples were living on the site of the Ashbridge Estate, as shown by archaeological digs carried out in the late 1980s and late 1990s, including a possible late Paleo-Indian point dating to approximately 6000 B.C.

500  A.D. to 1400 A.D.
More evidence of Native inhabitants – other archaeological finds include various ground stone tools, several projectile points ranging from c. 500 A.D. and distinctive Pickering Tradition ceramics from around 1300 to 1400.

1793
Ashbridge family arrives in York from Pennsylvania – widow Sarah Ashbridge with two sons and three daughters.  It’s believed they scout the Ashbridge site in 1793 but spend the winter of 1793-94 living in York (which at the time was the area around present-day King Street East and Jarvis/ Sherbourne.)

1794
According to Ashbridge family history, a member of the family blows a conch shell as they enter the bay which came to be known as Ashbridge’s Bay.  The family starts to clear land and build a log cabin on the Ashbridge site.  The cabin is built on the east side of Ashbridge’s Creek, which is now underground but where the hollow is on the Ashbridge Estate property. Lady Elizabeth Simcoe, wife of Lieutenant Governor Simcoe, in her diary writes of “Pennsylvanians” living beyond the Don River.

1796
In her diary, Lady Simcoe describes visiting Mrs. Ashbridge at the “Settlement below the Town.” The Ashbridges, among the first settlers east of the Don River, are pathmasters of the Bay Road beyond the Don.  (This rough path later became Kingston Road from the Don eastward, then later still was renamed Queen Street East.) Ashbridge farm lane follows the route of the current Woodfield Road.  The family continues to clear the land and develop their farm.

1790s to 1860s
The area is known as Ashport; the bay, much larger then, becomes known as Ashbridge’s Bay.  The bay has a small cove where boats put in, hence Ashport (where the TTC streetcar yard is now).  Ashport is a stop on the carriage route along Kingston Road to points east.

1809
Ashbridges build a frame house on the east side of Ashbridge’s Creek, immediately south of log cabin – foundation still exists, currently a rock garden.  Ashbridge’s Creek flows from north to south on the Ashbridge farmland (the creek flows from north of present-day Danforth, south through present-day Monarch Park, to Ashbridge Estate).

1834
City of Toronto is incorporated.  East of the Don River the city includes the Liberties, south of Queen (at the time still known as Kingston Road).

1854
New one-storey brick house built in Regency style (second floor added in 1899).  This is the existing Ashbridge house at 1444 Queen Street East.

1856
Grand Trunk Railway opens, cutting across the north end of the Ashbridge farm (railway still there)

1860
Ashport post office opens at Queen and Curzon.  Postmaster is  William Lambert, who had married Amy Ashbridge in 1854.  Renamed Leslie Post Office  in 1862 after George Leslie took over as postmaster.  1866 Globe newspaper has first reference to Leslieville – Queen in the area near Jones and Leslie.

1860s
Thomas Beatty house built, still at 6 CherryNook Gardens.  Thomas Beatty worked for the Ashbridges as their farm manager.

1884
Riverside and Leslieville annexed to the City of Toronto (area west of Greenwood Avenue to the Don River).  The term Riverdale starts to be used for the area from the Don to Greenwood, the term Midway for the area between Greenwood and Kew Beach/Norway. Kingston Road renamed Queen Street East, keeping Kingston Road name north from Queen Street, as today.

1899
Ashbridges add second floor to their home (current house at 1444 Queen Street East)

1906
Photos taken by W.T. Ashbridge show the Ashbridge area is still farmland.  The family continued to farm as well as operating brickyards.  Greenwood Avenue had 10 or more brickyards between the 1860s and the 1920s.  For example, 100 Greenwood Avenue was a Price home – the Price family being one of the local brickmaking families.  One of the Price clan married a woman named Kerr — Kerr Road is named after her.

1907
Ashdale Public School opens on Ashdale Avenue north of Gerrard (renamed Roden Public School in 1910).  Ashdale used to denote the back fields of the Ashbridge Estate.  Around this time, Vancouver Avenue becomes the new name for what had been Ashport Avenue.

1909
Midway district annexed by the City of Toronto, including the Ashbridge Estate (strips along Greenwood and Queen had been annexed earlier, and the area south of Queen had been part of the City’s Liberties since 1834).

1911-1912
The Ashbridge family sold the vast majority of their land — all but the current Ashbridge site along Queen, which they occupied until 1997.  They sold their orchard for the construction of Duke of Connaught School, and the Ashdale (back fields) for housing.  Dozens of the current houses were built in 1912 – 1914.  The area was marketed to potential homebuyers as the “Ashbridge Estate.”

November 30, 1911
The Duke of Connaught turned the sod on the site of Duke of Connaught School, then on Morley Avenue (later renamed Woodfield Road).  The Duke was the Governor-General of Canada, a son of Queen Victoria.

1912
Duke of Connaught school opens.  W.T. Ashbridge publishes family history which describes the sale of the land for construction of the school. To the west: Leslieville school;  to the east Norway school. Coxwell Avenue residents are listed in city directories under “Norway.”

c. 1912
Major changes in the east end – as well as housing developments on the Ashbridge Estate, much of Ashbridge’s Bay was filled in for industrial purposes (the two remaining water areas are the current Ashbridge’s Bay and the Ship Channel south of Comissioner’s Street).

1913
Streetcar yard opens at Queen East and Connaught Avenue — still there.  Known as the “car barns” or “Connaught Yard,” the official name is the Russell Yard.

1914
Autodrome opens at Queen Street west of Greenwood, featuring motorcycle, bicycle and auto racing.

1915
East Riverdale Recreation Centre opens at 1511 Queen Street East near Kent Road (in current Jonathan Ashbridge’s Park; the centre was a hub for the community until it was demolished in the 1950s and replaced by S.H. Armstrong Community Recreation Centre at 56 Woodfield Road).

1917
In a Star Weekly article, the principal of Duke of Connaught describes how he first had some trepidation about moving to a new school in the Midway district, which was considered to be in the middle of nowhere.  Other areas to the west and east were more built up while the Ashbridges had continued to farm for much longer.

1920
Greenwood Park opens on former brickyard site.

1920s
Small’s Pond on Queen Street east of Coxwell is drained and streets are extended across its ravines (Orchard Park area).

1925 to 1945
Ulster Stadium, south of Gerrard Street, north of Dundas, between Billings and Woodfield, is the site of soccer games (including a visit by the Glasgow Rangers).  The stadium is the home of the Toronto Ulster United soccer team, one of the top soccer teams in Canada.  It’s also the site of lacrosse games such as a 1928 game between the Canadian national team (on its way to the Olympics) vs. Toronto all-stars, attended by 5,000 fans.  After World War II the stadium is sold for housing development.

1927
Gerrard-Ashdale Library opens at Gerrard Street East and Ashdale

1929
Morley Avenue is now known as Woodfield Road

1950s
Roads are expanded in the area.  Dundas Street is made a through street east from Hastings past Greenwood to Kingston Road.  Formerly there was no east-west road along the south side of Greenwood Park.  Dundas follows the former Applegrove Avenue from Greenwood to Coxwell, and the former Ashbridge Avenue from Coxwell to Kingston Road. Coxwell Avenue, which had its southern end at Eastern Avenue, is extended south to Lakeshore Boulevard.  Lakeshore Boulevard is extended east, past the south end of Greenwood Raceway (originally Woodbine Raceway) to link with Woodbine Avenue. Metro Toronto plans an expressway in a route just to the east of  Coxwell Avenue to become a link to the Scarborough Expressway – this was never built.

1955
Mayor unveils historic plaque on Ashbridge Estate.  Elm trees on the Ashbridge Estate are featured in news reports – attempts to save 175-year-old elms from  Dutch elm disease, which is destroying thousands of elm trees in Ontario.

1959
Duke of Connaught School opens a new wing to house the “baby boomers” – with a gym, swimming pool, music room, workshop, etc.

1962
Duke of Connaught School’s 50th birthday celebration.

1966
Greenwood bus route starts.

1970s
Ashbridge family donates its remaining “estate” and land to the Ontario government (Ontario Heritage Foundation, now the Ontario Heritage Trust) in return for not having to pay taxes for the rest of their years.  Dorothy Bullen (nee Ashbridge) dies 1996, Betty Ashbridge dies 2002).

1970s and 1980s
Little India develops on Gerrard Street East, including the Naaz Theatre showing Bollywood films.

1976
Ashbridge’s Bay Park opens on “new” land extended out into Lake Ontario.

1979
Applegrove Community Complex opens in Duke of Connaught School, serving neighbourhood children, families, people of all ages. Named after its location – the Ashbridge’s apple orchard.

1987
Duke of Connaught School’s 75th birthday celebration.

1995
S.H. Armstrong Community Recreation Centre has extensive renovations and is officially re-opened.

2000
Ashbridge history is featured at Market Gallery exhibit (St. Lawrence Market) in “Down by the Bay: the story of the Ashbridge family.”  To coincide with this exhibit, an Ashbridge family reunion takes place at the estate at 1444 Queen East. Ashbridge’s Bay Water Festival at Queen and Coxwell includes guest speaker Margaret Trudeau.  Ashbridge’s business strip is featured on maps, posters and on the etc. News website and community newspaper (operated by the Brackett family which revived the names of Leslieville and Ashbridge’s for the Queen East business districts).

c. 2004
Canada Blooms becomes tenant of Ashbridge Estate house.  Later (and contnuing to today) Ashbridge house becomes home of Ontario Archaeological Society, Ontario Society of Artists.

2007
Roden School celebrates 100th birthday.

2008
Ashbridge’s Bay Skatepark opens at Coxwell and Lakeshore.

November 30, 2011
Duke of Connaught students don top hats and tails to re-create the Duke’s sod-turning ceremony of exactly 100 years ago.

October 20, 2012
Duke of Connaught School 100th birthday party.

“The site was clearly occupied long before the Ashbridges arrived”

In fact, it was occupied waaay back – at least as far back as the year 6000 B.C.   Here is an excerpt from archaeologist Marti Latta’s Down by the Bay: Archeologists Discover Long History at Ashbridge’s Estate.

by Marti Latta

Although the homestead was gradually reduced, and later houses replaced the early log cabin, the property at 1444 Queen Street East remained the Ashbridge family residence for more than 200 years.

In addition to colonial remains, the excavation has uncovered Native Canadian artifacts.

These include distinctive Pickering Tradition ceramics (A.D. 1300-1400), various ground stone tools, and several projectile points ranging in age from A.D. 500 to a possible late Paleo-Indian point dating to approximately 6000 B.C.

The Pickering ceramics were associated with an undisturbed hearth. The site was clearly occupied long before the Ashbridges arrived.

Archaeology at the Ashbridge Estate

In the summers of 1998 and 1999, almost 200 young people participated in “hands-on” archaeology at the Ashbridge Estate as part of a Royal Ontario Museum summer camp experience.

See The Ashbridge Site, Toronto by Dena Doroszenko. This provides an excellent history of the Ashbridge Estate and a summary of the 1998-1999 digs.  It also mentions that in 1987 and 1988, public archaeology programs in partnership with the school board took place at the west end of the site, where a 20th century residence once stood (now the lawn on the west side of the estate’s driveway).
Excerpt from The Ashbridge Site, Toronto:

The location of this archaeological research was at 1444 Queen Street E., in Toronto’s east end, known as the Ashbridge Estate.  Most Torontonians are familiar with Ashbridge’s Bay, but are not aware of the history of the family for whom the Bay is named.

Sarah Ashbridge left Chester County, Pennsylvania with her adult children and their families to homestead in the new Canadian (then British) territory sometime in the fall of 1792/93…Sarah is recorded as already living on the Toronto property as early as 1794.  Elizabeth Simcoe, wife of Lieutenant-Governor John Graves Simcoe, mentions in her diary “some Pennsylvanians living near the Don” (a major river in the eastern part of Toronto) in 1794 and she also noted a visit to Sarah’s log cabin in 1796.  Five generations of Ashbridges have continued to live on the original homestead land up until 1997.  In fact, subdivision and sale of their original 200-acre farm lot did not truly begin until the 20th century.




You are invited to Applegrove’s annual meeting

You are invited to the Annual General Meeting of Applegrove Community Complex: Monday, March 26 – 6:15 to 8:30 p.m. in the S.H. Armstrong Recreation Centre, 56 Woodfield Road.

The evening starts with a complimentary light supper. A short business meeting
includes celebrating Applegrove’s partners and volunteers, before the evening
ends with door prizes, coffee and desserts.

For more information, to confirm your attendance, and to arrange for child care,
please contact Susan Fletcher, the Executive Director, at 416-461-8143 by
March 21.