The Ward, Toronto

Coordinates: 43°39′22″N 79°23′02″W / 43.656°N 79.384°W / 43.656; -79.384
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Looking south from the centre of St. John's Ward at Albert Street (Dundas Street) and Elizabeth Street. c. 1930

The Ward (formally St. John's Ward) was a neighbourhood in central Toronto, Ontario, Canada, in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Many new immigrants first settled in the neighbourhood; it was at the time widely considered a slum.[1]

It was bounded by

Queen, and Yonge Streets and University Avenue, and was centred on the intersection of Terauley (now Bay
) and Albert Streets.

Population

Yiddish
butcher shop sign in the Ward, circa 1910

For several decades of the late 19th and early 20th century, it was a highly dense

Jewish community from the late 19th century until the 1920s when the Jewish community moved west to Spadina Avenue and Kensington Market and was also, until the late 1950s, the home of the city's original Chinatown, of many of the city's original Black residents centred on the British Methodist Episcopal Church, at 94 Chestnut Street, and of the city's Italian community until it moved west along College Street to Little Italy
. The city's Polish, Ukrainian, Lithuanian, and numerous other non-British immigrants first established themselves in The Ward.

Today, the area is considered a part of what the City of Toronto now calls the Discovery District, the area having been consumed by the central business district. The old neighbourhood has not wholly disappeared. The short restaurant strip on the south side of Dundas Street between University Avenue and Bay Street still retains many buildings which were part of the Ward. The building in the right of the lead photograph in this article is still standing at Dundas and Elizabeth (it is now home to a Japanese restaurant). The YWCA at 87 Elm Street was originally the Toronto House of Industry, a workhouse established in the centre of the Ward in 1848 to serve impoverished residents. Also, a small group of row houses still stands on Elm Street just west of Bay Street, on the south side - possibly the last surviving remnant of the ward's residential character. The area was officially known as St. John's Ward,[2] one of the municipal wards that the city was divided into in the 19th century, but it quickly became known simply as "The Ward".[3]

History

Pre-colonialism

The site where the Ward existed is the territory of the Huron-Wendat and Petun First Nations, the Seneca, and most recently, the Mississaugas of the Credit River (Ontario First Nations Maps, 2016).[4] The area was also home to the Taddle Creek. Now a buried lake, it would have been a significant gathering spot for Indigenous people.[5]

1800s

The first settler at the area was James Macaulay. He was granted 100 acres of land and divided up the land for houses. The area was named Macaulaytown in his honour. By 1834, the town was absorbed by the city and was renamed St. John's Ward. The house prices were fairly low and the town was considered a pleasant working-class neighbourhood.[5]

In the 1830s,

African American fugitive slave—began acquiring several properties in the neighbourhood.[2] Blackburn also provided recently arrived fugitive slaves with inexpensive housing. By 1850, many Black families settled in The Ward; five years later, the total Black population grew to 539.[6][7]

The earliest Jewish settlers in Toronto had come from Britain, the United States, or Western Europe. With only a few hundred Jewish citizens in the city, they settled in several neighbourhoods and mostly integrated with the rest of the city. In the 1890s, an influx of Jewish immigration from Eastern Europe began arriving in Toronto. For the several thousand new arrivals, mostly impoverished and unable to speak English, the densely packed houses of The Ward became their new community.

The Ward was also home to Toronto's first Chinatown as Chinese railway workers settled along York and Elizabeth Streets north of Union Station.

1900s

The Ward, 1910

The development of the neighbourhood caused much consternation in Toronto, including

settlement house
to assist new immigrants in the Ward.

In 1911, the City of Toronto's Department of Health began an investigation into the Ward. This was initially resisted by the Toronto City Hall, but was eventually overturned by then-newly appointed Medical Officer of Health, Dr. Charles Hastings who commissioned the in-depth study.[12] The 1911 report detailed over 5, 000 homes that contained various health risks, from leaky roofs and peeling wallpaper to overflowing outdoor privies. A section in the report described the severity of overcrowding, due to both a housing shortage and subdivisions by landlords to extract the most money. It was common for the houses in the Ward to have six or more people share a single, "filth-ridden" room, and for families to build houses in their backyard to fit more people.[5] The shocking report gave rise to various reforms for the Ward that can be seen as bitter sweet: While the response to the report birthed stricter housing regulations, food safety measures and education programs,[12] the report also resulted in the livelihoods of the individuals and the communities in the Ward to be dispersed.[4]

Jewish missionary Henry Singer in the Ward.

From the 1920s the Ward was slowly demolished as land was expropriated for office towers and hotels, and, most prominently, the first Chinatown, centred on Elizabeth Street, was expropriated in the 1950s to make way for Nathan Phillips Square, named after the first Jewish mayor of Toronto. Most businesses there moved West to establish what is now considered the "old" Chinatown, centred at Spadina Avenue and Dundas Street. For many decades, the area was almost wholly commercial and institutional, but recent years have seen a return of residents to what used to be the Ward, with multiple condominium towers being erected in the area.

Notable people

References

  1. ^ Bateman, Chris (June 30, 2012). "A brief history of The Ward, Toronto's notorious slum". BlogTO.
  2. ^ a b Escaped slaves helped build T.O.
  3. ^ Introduction
  4. ^ a b "About the Ward - The Ward Museum". Ward Museum. 2020.
  5. ^ a b c Sylvester, Erin (September 6, 2017). "Walking the Ward". Torontoist.
  6. ^ Underground Railroad Exhibit: Teacher Resources - Backgrounder to UGRR - Lesson Plan One Archived 2005-05-27 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ Reverend Mitchell Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine Harriet Tubman Institute. Accessed on February 28, 2016.
  8. ^ Zucchi, p. 36.
  9. ^ a b "Media legend Johnny Lombardi dies at 86". CTV News. 19 March 2002. Archived from the original on 2005-12-04. Retrieved 2010-04-11. Prime Minister Jean Chretien praised Lombardi's accomplishments upon hearing of his death. "I think he's done a lot to establish multiculturalism in Toronto and he will be missed by a lot of people," Chretien said.
  10. ^ a b "Johnny Lombardi". www.chinradio.com.
  11. .
  12. ^ a b Plummer, Kevin (March 3, 2013). "Toronto Feature: The Ward". The Canadian Encyclopedia.
  13. ^ Zettler, Melanie (February 26, 2020). "Black History Month: Thronton and Lucie Blackburn created Toronto's first taxi company". Global News.
  14. ^ Treleaven, Sarah (March 14, 2011). "The Making of a Judge: George Carter, the first Canadian-born black judge in the country, worked as train porter to pay his tuition". University of Toronto Magazine.
  15. ^ "Community: Safe, Supportive and Inclusive Spaces: The Life Story of Rev. Thomas Henry Jackson". Toronto Ward Museum. 2020.
  16. ^ Conliffe, Christopher; Hayes, Florence; Wardrop, Patricia (December 16, 2013). "Lye Organ Company". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved April 4, 2020.
  17. ^ Keung, Nicholas (December 5, 2016). "Pasquale Brothers immigrant family store to celebrate 100 years in Toronto". The Star.
  18. ^ "Citizenship & The Right To Belong: The Life Story of William C. Wong". Toronto Ward Museum. 2020. Retrieved April 4, 2020.

External links

43°39′22″N 79°23′02″W / 43.656°N 79.384°W / 43.656; -79.384