Milne Hollow

Coordinates: 43°44′21″N 79°20′04″W / 43.7391575°N 79.3344418°W / 43.7391575; -79.3344418
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Milne Hollow
Milne Hollow is located in Toronto
Milne Hollow
Location of the park in Toronto
TypePublic Park
LocationToronto, Ontario
Coordinates43°44′21″N 79°20′04″W / 43.7391575°N 79.3344418°W / 43.7391575; -79.3344418
Operated byCity of Toronto

Milne Hollow is a 50-hectare (120-acre) valley site in

City of Toronto government
and volunteer organizations, including the opening of the East Don Trail in 2012.

Description

Milne Hollow is a wide section of the valley of the East Don River. It was first inhabited by Europeans in the 19th century. The Milne family set up a pioneer farm and mill on the river. The river itself flows from the north-west to the south-east of the hollow. To the north-west and south-east, the river floodplains are forested. Along the south and west slopes of the hollow, the Canadian National rail line crosses the hollow, following the river valley. Along north-south lines, the Don Valley Parkway descends into the hollow where a large interchange exists for access to Lawrence Avenue, an arterial road crossing the hollow on an east-west direction.

Other than transportation uses, the hollow is in a natural state. In the south-east quadrant is Moccasin Creek Park. Along the river, and occupying the east bank of the river and the south-east quadrant of the valley is the Charles Sauriol Conservation Reserve, which continues to the south-east along the East Don River.

Milnesford Mills

The small village of Milneford Mills was located along Lawrence Avenue at its crossing of the river. The Milne family moved to the site in 1832, moving its mill operations from the Milne farm located further to the west (the property known as Edwards Gardens today), due to low flows of water.[1] In 1846, Milne built a woolen mill. In 1878, the entire mill village was swept away by a flood but the Milnes decided to rebuild.[1]

The woolen mill operated into the 20th century before being abandoned. The mill building was demolished years later in 1946 to re-use its bricks.[2] The floods of Hurricane Hazel in 1954 destroyed what was left of the mill site and buildings.[2] One house remained and it was used for the Civic Gardens Centre (today known as the Toronto Botanical Garden) until the 1960s.

Don Valley Parkway project

As the Greater Toronto Area grew in population after World War II, the Province of Ontario set up a special regional government in Toronto known as Metropolitan Toronto to build and manage the infrastructure for the growing suburbs. One of Metro's priority projects upon its founding in 1954, was the construction of the Don Valley Parkway expressway from downtown Toronto to the Ontario Highway 401. The route chosen followed the lower Don valley to the forks of the Don River, then proceeded north along the 'right-of-way' assigned to Woodbine Avenue in the grid layout of Toronto. This crossed the valley of the East Don at Lawrence, which was a dirt road at the time. As part of Metro's road-building project, Lawrence was expanded to a six-lane arterial road through Milne Hollow. A cloverleaf-style interchange with the DVP was constructed, the interchange necessitating the removal of the rest of the Milne buildings except for a house on the east bank of the river, south-east of the interchange. The East Don also crossed Lawrence at the same point as the interchange, and roadways were built around the existing path of the river. The river channel was itself 'channelized' using concrete and fill for flood control through the interchange. The river channel south-east of the parkway was mostly preserved, except for the use of concrete fill to curb erosion.

Don Valley Ski Centre

The eastern slope, just south of Lawrence Avenue, was used for downhill skiing. The facility was known as the Don Valley Ski Centre and was run by the Don Valley Ski Club. The centre featured three lifts - two rope and one Poma. When the snow was unreliable, the centre used its $70,000 artificial snow-making machine. Lift passes were between $3 and $5.[3] Opened in the 1950s, the facility closed in the 1970s. Some of the remains of the facility still exist.[4] It is located on the eastern slope

Today

In 2012, the East Don Trail was extended north through the Charles Sauriol Reserve along the east bank of the Don River up to Lawrence Avenue and Milne Hollow.[5] The Trail connects also to the Moccasin Creek Trail, which goes west to the neighbourhood of Don Mills. Along the south and western slopes, a rail line is used by the GO train commuter train. The rail line was originally built by the Canadian Northern Railway.

References

Bibliography
  • Brown, Ron (1997). Toronto's Lost Villages. Polar Bear Press. .
Notes
  1. ^ a b Brown 1997, p. 166.
  2. ^ a b Brown 1997, p. 167.
  3. ^ Bateman, Chris (February 23, 2013). "A brief history of skiing in the Don Valley". blogto.com.
  4. ^ "Don Valley Ski Club". Ontario Abandoned Places. Retrieved February 26, 2013.
  5. (Press release). Retrieved May 28, 2019 – via newswire.ca.

External links