Ontario Genealogical Society Conference 2010: Breaking News

Posted by conference on February 16, 2010 under Blog: New Postings, Marketplace, Pre-Conference Events, Tours and Events, Visiting Toronto | Comments are off for this article

Hands-on Research Excursion: One venue at capacity

Registrants have been eager to add an extra day of research to their Conference 2010 experience by signing up for the Hands-on Research Excursion on Thursday, May 13. “Excursionists” selected from a choice of four wonderful archives and libraries.

One of the four venues—the Archives of Ontario—is now at capacity.

But don’t let that discourage you from joining the Excursion!

The City of Toronto Archives is a great choice if your ancestors lived in Toronto or the former municipalities of Scarborough, East York, North York, York or Etobicoke. The two reference libraries are some of the finest in North America for genealogy. The Toronto Reference Library has a collection of books and maps built over the past 115 years and an extensive manuscript collection only accessible on site. The North York Library’s Canadiana Department has an emphasis on Canadian genealogical resources in print and microform, and provides a home for unique deposit collections from genealogical partners.

To register for the Hands-on Research Excursion, select that option on the online registration form, and then e-mail us to choose your venue.

Marketplace and Sponsors pages updated

If you haven’t explored the Conference 2010 website lately, be sure to check the Marketplace and Sponsors pages to see the treats that lie ahead for attendees at Conference 2010. Most Marketplace exhibitors include a link to a website, so you can do some “window shopping” in advance.

Doubletree restaurant praised

Restaurant reviewer Joanne Kates in The Globe and Mail has named the Chinese restaurant (Grand Chinese Cuisine) at the Conference hotel as one of the best in the city. Mmmm…

Toronto is built of bricks.

Posted by conference on September 28, 2009 under Blog: New Postings, Tours and Events, Visiting Toronto | Comments are off for this article

Dempseystore blog

Built of red brick with buff brick accents, Dempsey's store stood for more than 130 years on Yonge Street at Sheppard Avenue. It was moved in 1997 to nearby Beecroft Avenue.

We hope when you come to the Ontario Genealogical Society Conference 2010 that you’ll spend a few extra days getting to know our city.

One thing you’ll notice, in contrast to many other North American cities, is the predominance of brick as a building material.

The earliest buildings in Toronto (then known as the Town of York) were built of wood—first rough-hewn logs, then squared timbers, then later frame and clapboard. Only a few of those wooden buildings have survived—most notably Fort York and Scadding Cabin.

As early as the first decades of the 19th century, brick was used for some public buildings and fine residences, and its popularity as a fire-resistant and fashionable building material continued to grow as bricks were manufactured locally.

Glacial action had resulted in plentiful deposits of shale and clay in many areas of Toronto. Small family-run brickyards clustered where these materials were close to the surface, in Yorkville, along Davenport Road, which ran below an escarpment (the shoreline of the prehistoric glacial Lake Iroquois), in the Don River valley and other ravines.

Might Directories Ltd. The Toronto City Directory 1901, p923 (www.archives.org)

The craft of brick making was frequently a family business as shown in this listing of brick manufacturers in Might's The Toronto City Directory 1901, p. 923. (www.archives.org)

Some Toronto brickyards made several colours of brick. The most common were red and buff. The buff bricks (called “white” by Victorian builders) were used for St. James Cathedral (built 1832), and some grand “Cabbagetown” homes that you’ll see on our “Toronto’s Irish Heritage” bus tour. Many of these buff brick houses use red bricks as accents, sometimes in quite complex patterns.

Red brick was lower in cost, and much more common for residential use, sometimes with the pricier buff as an accent colour. However, there are some wonderful examples of superb red brick construction, including the 1892 Gooderham Building that combined high-quality pressed brick with terracotta ornamentation.

While Toronto’s brickyards have long since closed or left the city, the site of the Don Valley Brickworks which closed in 1984, has been turned into a treasured 16-hectare public park which preserves and repurposes a number of the industrial buildings.

Conference 2010 to be held on what was Robert Harris’ Etobicoke farm

Posted by conference on September 14, 2009 under Blog: New Postings, Visiting Toronto | Comments are off for this article

It is easy to forget that 655 Dixon Road was not always a stone’s throw from Pearson International Airport and Highway 401. Until it became part of Toronto in 1998, the land where the Doubletree now stands was part of Etobicoke, one of the original townships of York County surveyed in 1791. (Don’t pronounce that “k” in Etobicoke.) You’ll find a wonderful 1878 map of the Township of Etobicoke in McGill University’s Digital Library.

This detail of the 1878 map predates Dixon Road, but you can see the path it will take starting with the diagonal Scarlett Road on the east side of the image, then west between the 200-acre farms of Peter Wardlaw and John Little, and a little further along between the farms of R. Dixon and John Dixon.

Detail of 1878 Etobicoke map

The Doubletree would be on the next farm, but there’s no sign today of the stream that meandered through the Robert Harris farm.

The Dixons you see on this little map (there are at least four) are likely all descendants of John Dixon, a native of Westmoreland, England, and one of the earliest settlers in Etobicoke. (See: Mulvany, Charles Pelham. History of Toronto and the County of York, Toronto: C. Blackett Robinson, 1885, volume 2, page 250-1.)

The settlement on the right side of the image on the Humber River is Weston, still proudly identifiable within Toronto.

If you have Etobicoke (or other Toronto) ancestry, plan a few extra days before or after OGS Conference 2010 to visit local historic sites, churches, cemeteries, and of course libraries and archives. Exploring the “Researching Toronto” pages at the Ontario Genealogical Society, Toronto Branch web site  is a great way to get started.

Toronto’s Irish Heritage: a bus tour

Posted by conference on September 5, 2009 under Blog: New Postings, Delights Stream, Tours and Events, Visiting Toronto | Comments are off for this article

Toronto was home to a vast number of Irish immigrants who settled here from the city’s beginnings as the Town of York in 1793. On Friday, May 14, you can join the Toronto’s Irish Heritage bus tour for a day exploring the Irish connections in Toronto.

The tour will begin at the Conference 2010 hotel. Participants will travel by chartered bus to Ireland Park on Toronto’s waterfront. The Park, opened in 2007, commemorates the arrival of some 38,000 Irish Famine refugees who inundated Toronto (population 20,000) in 1847.

We will continue on to the Corktown area of Toronto, named for settlers from County Cork, and explore various venues where they lived and worked, including Little Trinity Anglican Church. Participants will relax over lunch at Enoch Turner Schoolhouse, the oldest existing ‘free’ school in Canada.

In the afternoon we’ll visit the splendid St. Paul’s Basilica in Toronto’s first Roman Catholic parish, established in 1822.

We will continue our journey to the Necropolis Cemetery and the Cabbagetown neighbourhood of Toronto. Cabbagetown’s name has its roots from the cabbages and other vegetables that were grown by the thrifty Irish immigrants who settled in the area. Cabbages grew readily in the sandy soil and provided an excellent food source. The Necropolis was the second non-sectarian cemetery in Toronto. Opened in the 1850s, it provided the final resting place for a number of Irish immigrants who lived in the area and worked in the factories along the Don River. We will also visit the graves of other people who helped shape our history such as Thornton Blackburn, an escaped slave from Virginia who provided the impetus for the underground railway into Canada, William Lyon Mackenzie a leader of the 1837 Upper Canada Rebellion and Joseph Burr Tyrrell who found dinosaur bones in the Alberta Badlands.

Watch for more details about the Toronto’s Irish Heritage Bus Tour when registration opens this fall.

Add a day of research to your Conference 2010 experience

Posted by conference on July 11, 2009 under Blog: New Postings, Speakers and Program, Visiting Toronto | Comments are off for this article

Toronto is home to a wonderful cluster of archives and reference libraries for genealogical research—particularly if you have Ontario roots.

On Thursday, May 13, before Conference 2010 gets rolling, you can join the “Hands-on Research Tour” for a day of research with assistance from Toronto Branch volunteers.

The tour will begin at the Conference 2010 hotel. Participants will travel by chartered bus and public transit (with a volunteer guide) to one of four research facilities. There will be a tour—we’ll keep it brief to allow the maximum time for research. Local experts will be on hand to help you navigate finding aids and records.

At lunch time, participants will have the opportunity to switch to a new research facility.

Choose from the Toronto Reference Library, North York Central Library (and the OGS Library), the City of Toronto Archives, or the new facilities of the Archives of Ontario. For more information about the holdings of these institutions and links to their web sites, see <http://www.torontofamilyhistory.org/libraries.html>

Watch for more details about the “Hands-on Research Tour” when registration opens this fall.