HomeMy WebLinkAbout2004-00015"PICKERING TOWNSHIP HISTORICAL SOCIETY • AUTUMN EDITION • VOLUME 1 NUMBER 1 •
Aims and objectives of the Pickering Township Historical Society, as embodied in its Constitution:
(a) To promote public interest in the history of Pickering and vicinity.
(b) To research, record, preserve, and publish the history of the Pickering area.
(c) To work with other heritage organizations in the Pickering area to identify and investigate
historic and archaeological sites and to arrange to have them suitably marked when
appropriate.
(d) To work with other heritage organizations in the Pickering area to identify structures of
historical significance or of outstanding architectural merit.
(e) To publish and reprint historical documents and papers as may from time to time be
decided upon by the directors and to arrange distribution of the same.
(f) To act as consultants to any interested parties on matters relating to the history of the
Pickering area.
(g) To serve as an historical resource for the local boards of education, public libraries,
and other appropriate educational bodies.
(h) To maintain relationships, as appropriate, with other heritage organizations within the
former Pickering Township, and with other historical societies outside of the Township.
(i) To promote good stewardship in the treatment of our cultural heritage sites, artifacts,
and documents; and to be advocates for the preservation of the same.
In the Beginning
by Tom Mohr, President of the Pickering Township Historical Society
Welcome to the premiere edition of Pathmaster, the newsletter of the Pickering Township
Historical Society. I would like to take this opportunity to introduce the organization—to
describe some of our philosophy, aims, and objectives.
In these hectic days, it is easy to lose touch with our past. Our cultural heritage seems to pale
behind the many problems we face as a modern society. Yet, to a large extent it is our past
that defines us. To a family newly arrived in Ajax/ Pickering, it may seem that our local history
has little relevance to their lives. Consider, though, that these towns did not just appear out of
thin air; that which draws newcomers, the present Towns of Pickering and Ajax, is the product
of two centuries of growth.
The old Township of Pickering (which incorporated the present Towns of Pickering and Ajax,
as well as a part of the Village of Port Union) has gone through many changes in its long
history, and each era has left its mark on us. Though we may see little of our Native heritage,
it remains reflected in the numerous archaeological sites which dot the countryside, as well as
in the name by which one significant early Iroquoian group is known— Pickering Branch.
Nor do we see much evidence of the French missionaries, fur traders, and explorers who
were the first Europeans to visit these parts, but their presence is echoed in the names Rouge,
Petticoat (Petite Cote), and of course, Frenchman's Bay.
This township was first settled by Loyalists, Quakers, Mennonites, many different folk who saw
opportunity in the virgin forests of this new land. Some fought and died in struggles against the
new republic to the south; some gave their lives in rebellion against an autocratic colonial
government. It was through their original patterns of settlement, in the agrarian countryside,
as well as in the thriving villages, that the Township of Pickering gained the dual nature it
boasts today.
At present most of us live in the urban south of the towns. Our perspective seems defined by
subdivisions that were named after whatever was bulldozed to make way for houses.
That is the price of growth. But in this rush towards the millennium, we should not forget that
which went before. We need to expand our personal horizons beyond our neighbourhoods
and to include the rest of the (old) township in our definition of where we live. As residents,
we now share a common heritage no matter where we were born. With that realization comes
an enhanced sense of place. Ajax/ Pickering is our home.
We, the Pickering Township Historical Society, see a role for ourselves in that process.
We are not the first historical society to be active here. In fact before their dissolution some
twenty years ago, our predecessors published a fine history of the Township of Pickering and
established the institution which now exists as the Pickering Museum Village.
They left a formidable legacy. The municipalities have also done a commendable job of
observing our heritage, but with the absence of an organized group, a generation has been
deprived of active participation in our past.
This society hopes to offer those interested an opportunity to indulge their own particular
heritage-oriented passions. We wish to educate our young in the rich history of their home.
We will research; we will publish—starting with Pathmaster, then a journal, and perhaps a new
local history that reflects new knowledge and fresh interpretation of the information at hand.
We want to entertain with monthly programming, informative speakers, and trips afield.
We want to be recognized as stewards of Pickering's collective past, and to take on the
role of advocate if need be.
We need active participation to achieve these goals, and I encourage one and all to offer
their support as we begin our membership drive. Our regular programming will remain free of
charge and all are invited to join us, but the funds raised through a low annual fee will enable
us to function as a serious heritage organization for the benefit of all residents.
There are opportunities for everyone to take part in the Pickering Township Historical Society
and I hope all of those reading will join in the adventure.
To conclude, I would like to offer personal thanks to those who have supported us in our
formative stage, as well as those who have come out to the meetings and offered
encouragement. We have a hard-working Board of Directors and Publishing Committee.
Some of the results of their efforts appear before you in this newsletter.
To those who signed up for other committee work, thank you, and we will be putting you to
work soon, too."
"Women's Institutes of Ontario Celebrate 100 years
By: Judith Goulin
Adelaide Hunter Hoodless (1857-1910) was no ordinary housewife, nor was she only
regarded as ""wife of"" by all who knew her around the turn of the century.
She was a woman of considerable intelligence and education who, after life dealt her the
bitterest of lemons, made lemonade by founding the Women's Institute.
Adelaide Hoodless lost a child at 14 months after she gave him unsterilized milk according to
the common practice of the time. When the doctor told her that this death could have been
prevented, she felt she was to blame because she should have known more about child care.
Whether this was the case or not is a moot point. What is important is what resulted from the
tragedy.
She resolved that she would do everything in her power to ""bring within the reach of all
women the education necessary to prevent similar tragedies.""1 Leading a campaign for
clean milk in Hamilton was only the first of many achievements for her in advancing the cause
of women's education as informed homemakers.
At a meeting of the Ontario Farmers Experimental Union, in autumn 1896, Hoodless gave a
stirring speech. In part, she said: ""Girls should be educated to fit them properly for the sphere
of life for which they were destined, that of homemaking, and this should be done by teaching
domestic science in the public schools.""2 She felt that the curriculum was all wrong,
that boys and girls in elementary school should be learning different things, and was not
hesitant to voice her criticism in this matter. Erland Lee, who heard her that night, was so
impressed that he asked her to speak to the women of Saltfleet Township during an
upcoming farmers' meeting when their wives were going to be present. Her message to the
Saltfleet women encouraged them to form an organization for themselves, similar to the
Farmers' Institute for the men.
A week later at yet another talk, this time in Stoney Creek, she said: ""If men felt the need of
an organization which enabled them to grow better crops of hay, grain and fruit, and produce
better livestock, then indeed a similar group for women was much more necessary, since
women's work — homecraft and mothercraft, was much more important — since it concerned
the home and the care of the loved ones who dwelt therein.""3 Erland Lee and his wife Janet,
who were instrumental in getting the first W.I. started, are now considered as co-founders,
along with Adelaide Hoodless.
The 101 women who showed up in Stoney Creek heard the clarion call. They quickly formed
the first Women's Institute on 19 February 1897, electing Mrs. E.D. Smith as their first
president. Originally the Women's Institute was affiliated with the provincial government.
In time there were W.I. chapters in virtually every rural community in Ontario,
throughout Canada, eventually becoming a global organization.
A page from one of the early minute books of the Stoney Creek W.I. indicates their resolve.
It reads: ""A nation cannot rise above the level of its homes, therefore we women must work
and study together to raise our homes to the highest possible level.""4
The Women's Institute in Ontario celebrates its 100th anniversary this year. In the early years
the local W.I. served a very important and very basic necessity for women isolated on farms —
that of getting together and learning from one another how to do their jobs better. In this way,
the importance of women's work was elevated. Early meetings included topics such as child
care, nutrition, first aid, diseases, and home sanitation. As time went on, they broadened their
aims to reach outside their homes.
Just a few of the accomplishments of W.I.'s across Canada illustrate the scope of their work.
They had an influence on many things which we now take for granted: a law making it
mandatory for bread to be wrapped, stop signs at railroad crossings, pasteurized milk,
hot school lunches, TB testing for food handlers, clearly marked poison containers,
sex education in schools, and a law which requires cars to stop when a school bus is stopped.
In today's world, it is not surprising to discover that many branches of the Women's Institute
have disbanded, since the need which the W.I. once filled for rural women can now be met in
myriad ways. There are two still-active local W.I.'s: Claremont and Altona.
The Claremont Women's Institute, founded in 1909, currently has about fifteen members.
Earlier this year they celebrated the W.I. centennial with the women of Altona.
They dressed in 1897 costume, watched a play about the history of their organization,
and enjoyed one another's company.
Those of us interested in history appreciate the immeasurable contribution that the Women's
Institutes of Ontario have made to historical research through their Tweedsmuir scrapbooks.
When Lord Tweedsmuir, John Buchan, served as Governor General of Canada,
from 1935 to 1940, Lady Tweedsmuir took great interest in the work of the Women's Institutes.
When she heard that the W.I.'s were planning on compiling history scrapbooks,
she was most enthusiastic about this project. In her visits to many branches,
she said to the members: ""I am very glad to hear that Women's Institutes are going to
compile village history books. Events move very fast nowadays, houses are pulled down,
new roads are made, and the aspect of the countryside changes completely in a short time.
It is a most useful and satisfying task for W.I. members to see that nothing valuable is lost or
forgotten.""5 This quotation appears on the first page of every Tweedsmuir scrapbook.
Federated Women's Institutes of Ontario decided to act upon her suggestion, and thus a
history scrap-book, named after Lady Tweedsmuir, became the project for each branch of the
institute.
The parent organization laid out guidelines which determined that these history scrapbooks
should include a history of the local W.I., general community history, and histories of individual
families and their homes, schools and education, churches and their organizations,
industries past and present, libraries, municipal government, recreation, and war records.
Today innumerable libraries have photocopies, if not the originals, of this most useful
secondary source material.
Another legacy from the Women's Institutes is their minute books. Each branch of the
Women's Institute kept minutes of all their meetings in lined, hard-cover notebooks which
were provided free by the Women's Institute Branch and Home Economics Service,
Ontario Department of Agriculture. Each book was expected to last three years.
At the front of each minute book are instructions which state that: ""Minutes should be a clear,
concise record of the proceedings, written legibly.""6 It is because the women kept detailed
minutes of their meetings including dates, members' names, activities, and financial records,
that today they provide us with an excellent primary historical reference source.
It is the practice of each Women's Institute branch to retain its minute books and Tweedsmuir
scrapbooks until the group disbands, then to turn them over to libraries and museums
2"
"for safekeeping. The Local History Room of the Pickering Public Library which is open
Thursday 5-9, Friday 1-5, and Saturday 9-12, has a fairly extensive collection of
Women's Institute materials.
Three histories of the Women's Institutes in Ontario which mark the 40th, 50th, and now the
100th anniversaries are available in the Local History Room. The latest book: For Home and
Country the Centennial History of the Women's Institutes in Ontario, is also available on the
main floor as a circulating copy.
For history buffs who like to travel in search of historic sites, the Addie Hunter Hoodless
homestead still stands near the intersection of Highways 5 and 24, in the municipality of
St. George, not far from Brantford.
Would Adelaide Hoodless or Erland and Janet Lee recognize the W.I. in 1997? Hardly!
Would they approve? Absolutely! They could reflect on one hundred years of education,
community action, and personal development which the Institute has provided to the women of
Ontario. They could still recite the same familiar motto, ""For Home and Country!'
the ode, and some of the Institute songs. Unrecognizable would be the computers in their
offices, the websites, the urbanization of Ontario society, lack of government involvement,
and the changes in homemaking, agriculture, and family life.
According to the 1997 convention their work is not done yet. To the women of Ontario —
Well done! Here's to the next hundred years!
****** Endnotes
1. Walker, Annie, et al, Fifty Years of Achievement, (Toronto: Federated Women's Institutes of
Ontario, 1948), p.3.
2. Ibid.p.3.
3. Ibid.,p.4.
4. Ibid.,p.4.
5. Tweedsmuir History Scrapbook, Pickering, Pickering Women's Institute (undated), p. 1.
6. Minute Book Tablet, Women's Institute Branch and Home Economics Service,
Ontario Department of Agriculture.
********
Judith Goulin is a librarian at the Pickering Central Library, often to be found in the
Local History Room
Reading List
* Ambrose, Linda M. For Home and Country:
The Centenial History of the Women's Institutes in Ontario. Guelph: Federated Women's
Institutes of Ontario, 1996
* Powell, M. Viola. Forty Years Agowing: A History of Ontario Women's Institutes. Port Perry:
Port Perry Star, 1941 Walker, Annie, Edith M. Collins & M. Mclntyre Hood. Fifty Years of
Achievement. Toronto: Federated Women's Institutes of Ontario, 1948. • Women's Institute
Minute Books. Ajax, Pickering Tweedsmuir Scrapbooks for Brougham, Claremont,
Greenwood, Kinsale, and Pickering Village.
Making Our Own History
The inaugural meeting of the PTHS was held at the historic Old Liverpool House, 7 May 1997.
The 55 attendees heard guest speaker, Dorothy Duncan, Executive Director of the Ontario
Historical Society, explain what an historical society can accomplish in the community.
She also showed slides that illustrated what other historical societies have achieved.
Dr. Martha Latta, Professor of Anthropology at Scarborough College, University of Toronto,
was the guest speaker for our second general meeting held at the Pickering Central Library
auditorium, 4 June 1997.
Dr. Latta defined for us the role of the archaeologist, showed slides of last year's dig at the
Guild log cabin in Scarborough, and, in a question period, explained how we can get involved
in an archaeological dig. In attendance at this meeting was Ross Pake, who lives in California,
but is a 5th generation descendant of William and Margaret Peak, Pickering's earliest
permanent settlers.
Pathmaster
The Pathmaster, an early official in the Township of Pickering, was in charge of the roads.
Since roads were essential as lines of communication, the Pathmaster was responsible for
establishing and maintaining the only inland lines of communication available to the settlers.
The earliest form of government in Pickering Township was the town-meeting (as provided by
an Act of the Parliament of Upper Canada in 1793). The town meeting did not give the town
ship any independent power of regulating its own affairs, it simply provided a number of
officers whose duties were to carry out the orders of the central government.
The officers allowed by the Act were: Town Clerk, Assessor, Collector, Pathmaster,
Fence Viewer, Poundkeeper, and Warden.
The role of the Pathmaster, or overseer of highways, was to build, improve, and maintain the
roads. Every man in the township was required to spend a certain number of days each year
working on road building and repairing. The Pathmaster decided what type of road should be
built, what work each man should do, and when the work should be done.
William Peak, who, along with his wife Margaret, was the earliest permanent settler in
Pickering Township (about 1799-1800), was one of the first Pathmasters, having been
appointed with four others at the first town-meeting in the area, held on 4 June 1803,
a joint meeting of Pickering and Whitby Townships.
The Bentley House
Commentary on the Bentley House, Brougham, from Jane Buckles, Historic Pickering, n.p.,
[1972], [p. 2-3].
This exquisite home, located at the corner of the Brock Road and Highway 7, was originally
built in 1852 by Dr. Lafayette Bentley. It remains today an outstanding example of 19th century
architecture. There were no brick kilns in the area at that time, so the bricks for this house
were probably brought from Toronto. Old photographs of the
house show an extremely ornate white wooden fence around the property,
with similar fencing adorning the top of the front porch. Across the road, where the church
now stands, Dr. Bentley originally had a pill factory. This house is presently owned by
Mr. & Mrs. Gibson, to whom much of the credit must go for restoring it to its original splendour.
3"
"1997
Worth Celebrating: MILESTONES IN THE LIVES OF EDGE AND BETTY PEGG
by John W. Sabean
Edge and Betty Pegg passed some milestones this spring. Edge celebrated his 85th birthday
on the 10th of May, and the couple celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary on the 21st of
June. On both occasions large gatherings of family and friends were there to
congratulate them. [The actual anniversary dates are 8 May and 27 June.]
Over the years the Peggs have contributed much to the communities of Claremont and G
reenwood and. indeed, to the whole of Pickering Township. Edge, short for Edgerton,
was born here, in the house which still stands at the south-east corner of Claremont
Conservation Area. At one time most of the eastern half of the conservation area was the
Pegg family farm, where Edge and his four brothers and four sisters were raised. About 1960.
after the Pegg children had moved out onto their own farms, the 150 acre property was sold
to the Metropolitan Toronto and Region Conservation Authority. The MTRCA has since
expanded it to its present 400 acres which encompasses the whole block.
After their marriage in 1947, Betty and Edge moved to a home-stead just across the street
(Concession 7) from the old family farm. The house which had been built on the property
some years before had burned to the ground and Edge had to completely rebuild.
Here Edge operated a 112-acre dairy farm. When Edge retired from farming they sold all but
4 ½ acres and built the house where they now reside. Betty herself planned the house which
was built from logs harvested in their own woodlot and sawed at the old mill in Tyrone.
Farming, of course, occupied much of Edge's time, but he enjoyed playing sports when he
could. He played both baseball and hockey in the local township leagues. He says that in
those days he had to pay 25¢ to get into the park in order to play ball. Often he would play in a
double-header which might not end until midnight. Before the games began, of course,
he would have to milk the cows and complete his other chores. And then it was up early the
next morning to start all over again. In spite of this he continued to play both baseball and
hockey well past the age of 40. As if these activities were not enough. Edge, along with Betty
and their two children, Kathy and Hal, formed a musical troupe which played at church garden
parties around the countryside. Betty played the piano, Edge the banjo, the ukulele,
the xylophone, and even a musical saw. They presented western and hillbilly shows which
Betty wrote and directed. This continued for years until the
children grew up. At Edge's birthday party in May this year, the family treated the
guests to a sampling of the music, stories, and jokes that were once part of their shows.
Edge even tuned up his old saw (and promises to teach me how to play it).
In more recent years Edge has become one of Pickering's foremost natural historians.
His knowledge of wildlife—largely self-taught— is deep and his enthusiasm boundless.
After pursuing his interest on his own in the 1950s, he and Betty joined the Durham Region
Field Naturalists in 1961. He learned much from his association with other members of the
organization. Later, he was to be one of the founders of the Pickering Naturalists.
He also has written numerous articles on nature for local newspapers,
including a series of articles he wrote for the Ajax Advertiser when R.D. Lawrence was its
editor. Over the years, Edge has met and shared his interest with some of the world's top
birders, including Roger Tory Peterson and Norm Chesterfield (for many years Canada's
foremost birder).
During the years when Edge was farming, Betty was teaching school along with raising her
family. In the beginning she taught music, then took time out to have her two children.
When she went back it was to teach kindergarten first at West Rouge, then at Bay View
Heights (in Bay Ridges), and finally at Claremont Public School. She retired from teaching
after twenty-two years.
Betty's retirement gave her the opportunity to learn a craft in which she had always had an
interest: weaving. She took courses, joined a guild, and developed into a creative and
talented weaver.
Weaving, however, is only one of Betty's interests. She is also a superb photographer.
At one time she took wedding pictures; then Edge suggested she try her hand at nature
photography, and she has never looked back. Her photographs have won prizes in
competition, have been published in newspapers, and hang on the walls of many who have
purchased them or received them as gifts. One of her present projects is to photograph old
barns.
Betty also continues the music tradition in the family. She was for many years the organist at
Greenwood United Church. She has also been active as a member of that church in other
capacities, such as serving as President of the United Church Women's group, and presently,
as an Elder.
Both Betty and Edge are collectors. They enjoy wildlife art and display a number of prints of
such well-known artists as Robert Bateman and Marc Barrie, both of whom they number
among their friends. They have exceptional collections of such things as barbed wire,
automobile licence plates, maple sap spigots, and bottles and jugs. Edge has also created a
series of model pioneer fences which he puts on display occasionally at the Pickering
Museum Village.
Congratulations Betty and Edge on achieving these milestones in your lives.
You have made great contributions over the years to our community.
You have taught us to enjoy and to preserve our wildlife and natural areas,
to cherish our human heritage, and to appreciate our villages histories.
We are in your debt.
4"
"WHO CONTRIBUTES TO PATHMASTER?
YOU!
Calling for articles and photographs!
by Lys Laurence
The editorial committee hopes that you have enjoyed this first issue of Pathmaster.
The next issue is planned for December and contributions of all kinds are welcome.
Must all topics go far back into the past? No! Changes in your neighbourhood over the
past five years constitute history as much as something that happened in 1797.
The field is wide open and we want to hear from you.
Do you remember something about the first time you saw this area? Would it make an
interesting story? We want reminiscences of longtime residents, as well as those of recent
residents. Why did you move here? Did you emigrate from another country,
and is there a story associated with your decision to move to Pickering?
Family histories may be submitted, or biographies of well-known individuals in our area.
Articles about local cemeteries, roads, or schools are welcome. The history of a local
business could be interesting, either a former business, or one still in operation.
Many people would like to learn about the history of certain houses or other landmark
buildings. Photographs are actively sought in relation to the architectural history of Pickering.
There are numerous smaller villages and hamlets within the Pickering Township area.
In future issues, we could benefit from histories and photographic essays of
these settlements.
To submit materials to Pathmaster, please send to Michael Cummins, 1476 Fieldlight Blvd.,
Pickering, Ontario, L1V 2S4, or call Michael at 905-839-1557. Submissions may also be sent
via E-mail to cummins@total.net. Please include all pertinent information about yourself and
any documentation utilized in your article.
What's it?
by Dave Marlowe
Can you identify the object pictured here? It is about 10-12 cm in length, is made of iron,
and would usually be found around the barn. If you think you know what this item is send your
answer to Pathmaster. All will be revealed in the next issue of the newsletter,
along with the names of those who were able to correctly identify this month's ""What's it""
? ? ?
Dave Marlowe is Educational Officer of the Pickering Museum Village.
Attention Students!
By: Michael Cummins
History is fun, easy to get involved with, and interesting. It is as simple as talking with your
grandparents and listening to the stories they tell about what they have experienced.
This article is about the many ways in which you may become involved with history and the
Pickering Township Historical Society.
History is not just researched and written by professional historians.
Anyone may research and write about history, but what is considered history?
Well, this question does not have a simple answer. History involves what happened in the past,
but one intriguing part of history is the fact that what interests one person, may not interest
another. Therefore, everyone may pursue their very own subject.
Students are in a particularly good position to research topics which interest them,
while also fulfilling the requirements of their course. Whether you are an elementary,
high school, college, or university student, you will be able to pursue a subject which interests
you, and maybe one which has never been attempted before.
Researching a topic of interest is not difficult, but it may take some time to find all the
information you need. It is the research which can make history fun, because you will always
discover something new. Researching for a topic should begin with you, the researcher.
Once you have decided upon a subject which interests you, it is time to begin,
and the best place to begin is with a book which might give you an understanding of the topic,
a book which will give you the historical context of your area of interest, and possibly provide
you with a basis from which you may proceed further.
To continue your research, go to your local library or school library and ask for assistance;
the staff will be more than happy to aid you in your search. The librarians will be able to point
out other topics which relate to your topic, and where you should look for important information.
Gathering the necessary information is very important, because from these sources you will be
drawing a great deal of data, so you will want to make sure that your sources are accurate and
current.
Libraries are a good place to collect information, however, there are a number of other places
which you might want to consider once you have visited your library.
Other places which will be able to provide you with information are archives,
local history collections, businesses, schools, cemeteries, and community members.
These sources all can provide you with more information about your topic once you have
done some research and know what you are looking for. For instance, an archive may
provide you with original documents or pictures which relate to your topic.
Local history collections, like the one found in the Pickering Central Library,
offer information on your neighbourhood. Businesses which have been part of the
community or which deal in your area of interest, might provide you with information which is
not found in a library or archive. Schools are also a good source for information,
whether you speak to a teacher or look at the Year Books to see how the school changes,
as well as what the different fashions were over the years.
A cemetery is a place where history is on display for all respectful visitors to see. Reading
the headstones may reveal a great deal about what has occured in the community over the
years, such as when a disease may have swept through the area.
Last, but certainly not least are members of the community; if you are researching your
neighbourhood, chances are that there is someone close to you who has lived there for a
long time and may be able to tell you about all of the changes which have taken place since
they have been there. No matter which path you choose to take, the most important part of
your topic is to make sure that you are interested in it.
History can be anything you want it to be. You can study wars, politics, fashion, music,
or whatever else may be of interest to you. If you have any questions, or if you are interested in
starting some research and want some help, you can always contact the Pickering Township
Historical Society for more information.
5"
"The Hamlet of Whitevale
Photography by John W. Sabean.
Layout by John Cormier.
A hidden idyll on the outskirts of Toronto, Whitevale is an old milltown whose residents still
enjoy the rural life although close to the big city. The community of Whitevale has been
designated as a Heritage Conservation District, under the Ontario Heritage Act.
Whitevale Cemetery
The Whitevale Cemetery is the final resting place for the hamlet's name sake, Truman P. White.
Also located here are the graves of a number of the Major family, for whom the original name
Majorville was derived.
""Unknown Stranger, 1854""
This headstone commemorates an unidentified traveller who came to Whitevale sometime
during the year 1854, and died there in the Whitevale Hotel. No one ever claimed the body.
480 Concession 5.
460 Concession 5.
470 Concession 5.
565 Concession 5.
Gothic revival home dating from the 1890s, located on the hill east of the hamlet.
6"
"460,470, and 480 Concession 5
These 3 homes side by side in the centre of the hamlet are all Gothic revival townhomes dating
from about 1875.
Whitevale Mill
This is the only remaining mill of a number that were once clustered along the banks of West
Duffins Creek in the heart of the hamlet.
Whitevale United (Wesleyan Methodist) Church
The congregation dates from 1854, the church building from 1884. Note its distinctive features:
stepped brickwork (corbelling); stained-glass rose window in the gable; stained-glass lancet
windows on either side of the main entrance; steeply-pitched roof crowned with bell tower.
7"
"Names in the News: Fred and Bess Housser
******* An Artistic Note ********
by John W. Sabean
As far as I know, Lawren Stewart Harris, one of the leaders of the Group of Seven,
never painted any of his landscapes in Pickering Township; he did, however,
paint the portrait of one of Pickering's residents.
Bess Housser (1890-1969), nee Larkin, had married Frederick Broughton Housser
(1889-1936) in 1914. At the time of their marriage, Fred Housser was a clerk at the
Central Loan and Savings Company in Toronto, but in the 1920s he was to become the
financial editor of the Toronto Daily Star. In 1915, the Houssers purchased a home and
property on Lot 13, Concession 2 in Pickering Village (the house is now 456 Kingston Road
West). Whether the Houssers lived in the house year round or just in the summers is uncertain.
The Toronto Directories have no listings for the Houssers between 1916 and 1919,
but from 1920 on they again show a Toronto residence. It is known, however, that between 18
June l916 and 8 June 1919, the Houssers were visited in their Pickering home by their friends
Doris and Gordon Mills many times throughout the year. The Houssers did not sell the
Pickering residence until May 1922.
Sometime early in 1920, Lawren Harris painted Bess Housser's portrait. It was in that same
year that Harris and a number of his painter friends formed the Group of Seven and had their
first exhibition—in May at the Art Gallery of Toronto. Portrait of Bess (or ""The
Christian Scientist"") was one of three portraits he exhibited in that first show.
(The portrait is now in the collection of the Art Gallery of Ontario. A colour plate may be seen in
Peter Larisey, Light for a Cold Land: Lawren Harris's Work and Life—An Interpretation
(Toronto: Dundurn Press, 1993), plate 36.)
The Houssers had been long-time friends of Lawren Harris. Fred and Lawren had first met
when they were students together at St. Andrews College in the early years of the century,
and they would continue to meet at the Arts and Letters Club of which they were both members.
It was Fred Housser who was to write the first history of the Group of Seven:
A Canadian Art Movement: The Story of the Group of Seven
(Toronto: Macmillan of Canada, 1926).
In 1934, the relationship took an odd turn: Fred divorced Bess, and Harris divorced his wife
Trixie; Bess married Harris, and Fred married painter Yvonne McKague. They all remained
good friends, however, except for Trixie Harris, who was left empty-handed.
In Bess Housser, Pickering has another claim to artistic fame: she was one of four women
who initiated the practice of renting works of art. The real instigators were Group of Seven
artist J.E.H. MacDonald and Bess's best friend Doris Mills, who apparently both thought of
the idea at the same time. Mrs. Mills rented several paintings from MacDonald in the spring of
1919. When her friends learned of this they decided to follow suit, and thus was born in
November of that year the ""Circulating System"" of art rental, whereby Mills and Housser,
along with Lucile Taylor (whose portrait was also painted in 1920 by Lawren Harris) and
Mrs. Kenneth T. Young rented for a year 12 paintings from such artists as MacDonald, Harris,
Arthur Lismer, and A.Y. Jackson. Each would keep three paintings on their walls for three
months, then they would swap paintings until by the end of the year each had all 12 paintings in
their homes for a period. Then these paintings would be returned to the artists and 12 more
paintings rented. Note, too, that this was begun in the year before the Group of Seven was
formed.
Art rental seems like a good idea now, and it attracted many people by the mid-1920s,
but there was one journalist who was not greatly inspired by the idea. The Toronto Star Weekly
sent out a young reporter to see if there was a story. This was only the second assignment for
the reporter since he had come to Toronto and joined the newspaper staff and for the story he
wrote he earned $5. Sarcastically he wrote: ""After being asked by a writer for the Star Weekly
for a story on the new application of Harvey's principle of circulation,"" one of the renters ""
talked it over with the other circulatees and they decided that the publication of their names or
the names of the artists would give a taint of commercialism to the entire scheme which would
quite spoil it."" Renting art, he concluded, was just the silly idea of a few women who had too
much time on their hands. The young journalist was to spend the next three years writing for
the Star Weekly, then left to pursue his career in other ways in other places.
His name was Ernest Hemingway.
For two of the women, the rental scheme bore further fruit: they them selves learned to paint.
Again it was Doris Mills who led the way. Without any instruction, and with just enough help
from A.Y. Jackson to purchase the right materials, she went off by herself and started to paint.
Not content with that, she invited her friend Bess Housser to join her on painting excursions.
Within two years the two were invited to exhibit their work at the Women's Art Association.
In 1926, the two women became invited contributors to the Group of Seven exhibition,
and shortly thereafter each had had paintings chosen to travel abroad as part of Canadian
exhibitions at international shows. For several years in the 1920s Bess also conducted a
monthly column on art for the Canadian Bookman.
Doris Mills later married Murray Speirs and moved to Pickering in 1948 where she lived for
the next 40 years, until her death in 1989.
8"
"A Capsule History of the Township of Pickering
Prepared for the Inaugural Meeting of the Pickering Township Historical Society, 7 May 1997.
by John W. Sabean
What follows are a number of snapshots of Pickering Township at various times in its history.
Each snapshot introduces one aspect of our rich heritage.
I. 10 000 years ago: Lake Iroquois (Our Ecological Heritage)
The Town of Pickering exhibits some interesting physical features left to it by the glacial age.
Most significant is the Oak Ridges Moraine formed by the convergence of two ice lobes which
deposited glacial till between them. The Moraine marks the northern boundary of Pickering.
The area between the Oak Ridges Moraine and Lake Ontario is called a till plain.
Across the plain, west to east, the shoreline of the ancient Lake Iroquois can readily be
discerned through much of Pickering.
Dispersed throughout the plain are long ridges or oval-shaped hills formed by glacial drift
known as drumlins. A dozen drumlins are scattered through out the present township.
The Rouge and Petticoat Creek valleys are remnants of the Carolinian
(or Southern Deciduous) Forest. The western end of Frenchman's Bay marks the northern limit
(and in Ontario the eastern limit) of the Carolinian Forest. East and north of this is the
Great Lakes-St Lawrence Forest Region, a transition forest of mixed conifers and hardwoods.
At the boundary of these two forest regions, the Town of Pickering accommodates species of
both, therefore providing a unique diversity.
Frenchman's Bay is one of the most significant natural sites in the greater Toronto Area.
It is a highly-valued ecological community: with provincially-rare plants, regionally-rare
breeding birds, significant fish habitat, and an important stopover for migrating
'waterfowl and shorebirds.
The glacial, geological, and ecological heritage of Pickering is rich. It has provided an
abundance of forest, fertile soil for farming when cleared, a safe harbour for shipping,
and a great variety of wildlife.
II. 1630:Huronia (Our Indian heritage)
The archaeological evidence for the presence of humans in this area dates back at least
4000 years along Duffins Creek and the Rouge River. In more recent times,
the Rouge was the beginning of a major Indian portage between Lake Ontario and the
Holland River (with access to Lake Huron).
On the eve of European arrival in the 15th & 16th centuries, there were two rival trading
alliances in Ontario & New York: the Huron Confederacy (Hurons, Petuns, Neutrals) and the
Iroquois (or 5 Nations) Confederacy (Mohawks, Oneidas, Onondagas, Cayugas, Senecas
([& Tuscaroras in 1720]). The Hurons were in possession when the Europeans arrived in the
17th century. The population of Huronia in 1630 was over 30, 000. In the mid-seventeenth
century the Five Nations Iroquois drove the Hurons out of the area and established a number
of villages along the north shore of Lake Ontario. One of these villages, Ganatsekwyagon,
established by the Senecas (Iroquois), was somewhere between the mouth of the Rouge and
Frenchman's Bay.
The French attempted to monopolize the fur trade and a rivalry developed between the
French and the Iroquois. Eventually the Iroquois retreated from southern Ontario,
and the void made by their departure was filled by the Mississaugas (Ojibway).
There is little evidence now of Indian presence, except in archaeological finds.
The nearest Mississaugas are on Scugog Island. The Indians, however,
have left us a great legacy, and during the early years of white settlement helped smooth the
way for the settlers.
III. 1669:Fenelon at Ganatsekwyagon (Our French Heritage)
To the Seneca village (Ganatsekwyagon) came many of the early French traders and
explorers, including Jean Pere and Adrien Jolliet (brother of the more famous Louis Jolliet),
who stopped here in the summer of 1669 on their way to Lake Superior in search of copper.
One Frenchman stayed for a season. Francois de Salignac de Fenelon,
a Sulpician missionary, spent the winter of 1669-70 with the Seneca of Ganatsekwyagon.
The traditional story is that the winter was an extremely harsh one, forcing the Indians to scatter
into the surrounding forests to hunt. Fenelon, who probably intended to establish a mission
school in the Indian village, had to go with them. He survived on the few squirrels and other
small animals he could find, and reportedly at times was reduced to eating the fungi that grew
at the base of the trees. In the spring he retreated to Quinte discouraged and in broken health.
In fact, there is little basis for this account (including the harsh winter) and strong evidence that
Fenelon was successful in his efforts, and because of his success was rewarded by being put
in charge of the mission school in Montreal. In any case, Fenelon's sojourn at
Frenchman's Bay is notable for two reasons: he was the first European resident in the
Toronto area, and he established the first school in the region.
The only reminder of the French presence in the area today is in a number of place names.
For example the Rouge River was so-named because of its red clay banks. Petticoat Creek
was originally Petite Cote [""little side""] Creek, a name derived probably from the fact that the
east bank of the creek is quite high, while the west bank is almost flat near its mouth.
And, of course. Frenchman's Bay commemorates the French presence,
and probably is named for Fenelon himself, as was Fenelon Falls
(although there is some dispute about both names).
IV. 1811: European Settlement (Our Loyalist Heritage)
The French never established permanent settlement in Pickering.
In 1759-60, with the fall of Quebec and Montreal, the whole country passed into the hands of
the British.
Settlement, however, still had to wait another 40 years, but during that time some
preparations were made. In 1787, the land was purchased from the Mississaugas.
Four years later (1791), what was eventually to become Ontario was named Canada West.
In the same year Augustus Jones surveyed Pickering, naming the township Edinburgh.
The first land grants were made under Lt-Gov. John Graves Simcoe.
The name Duffins came from an Irish trader who lived in the area of what is now Pickering
Village. He is a shadowy figure about whom little is known. He is reputed to have been a
""genial Irishman"" who opened his home to whatever travellers might be passing by.
According to tradition, one of these travellers, repaid his hospitality by murdering him.
His name appears attached to the creek as early as 1791.
The earliest known permanent European settlers of Pickering Township, apart from the
unfortunate Duffin, were fur trader and Indian interpreter William Peak and his wife
Margaret who came to the mouth of Duffins Creek about 1800. They cleared the land on the
west side of Duffins Creek (Simcoe Point).
By 1808 the population of Pickering had increased to 180 people. A year or two later a
considerable influx of settlers to Pickering Township occurred when Timothy Rogers,
a native of Vermont, brought in a number of Quaker families. Rogers also built the first grist
mill on Duffins Creek, and probably the first sawmill.
A Town meeting was held as early as 1803 in conjunction with Whitby Township,
but the first Town meeting for Pickering alone occurred in 1811. The officers elected were:
a Town Clerk, 2 Assessors, a Collector, 4 Pathfinders, 2 Poundkeepers,
and 2 Town Wardens.
The early settlers were all Loyalists who left the United States after the
American Revolutionary War and accepted the offer of land in Upper Canada.
9"
"V. 1850: Mid-century prosperity (Our British & Irish Heritage)
The first order of business for the settlers was the clearing of land to build homes and to plant
crops. The building of public buildings — schools, churches, court houses, and the like —
had to await a more established settlement. In the meanwhile grist and woollen mills,
breweries and tanneries were built, the first efforts at industrial life. In addition,
improvements were made in communications, first through the building of Kingston Road and
then toward the middle of the century, the upgrading of the port at Frenchman's Bay.
Frenchman's Bay, with its fine natural harbour, became increasingly important as a port for the
export of ship masts, pine logs, and squared timber. A wharf was built at the north end of the
bay (1850s?), and dredging, begun as early as 1843, cleared a channel large enough to admit
larger ships from Lake Ontario. It is reported that in the year 1845 alone, with 20 sawmills in
operation in the township, one million metres of lumber were exported through Frenchman's
Bay. By mid-century more than half of Pickering Township was cleared of its once abundant
trees.
Brock Road, the first north-south route, followed an old Indian trail, and was opened in 1808.
It connected the Quaker settlements in Pickering Village, Uxbridge, and Newmarket.
It also paved the way for the development of the Pickering hinterland. Several villages were
cited along the Brock Road, and on the concession road allowances: Whitevale, Brougham,
Claremont, Greenwood, Altona, Atha Road, Balsam, Kinsale, Brock Road, Cherrywood,
Cherrywood Station, Clarkes Hollow, Deckers Hill, Dixie, Green River, and Mount Zion.
Each of these villages has its own history.
Pickering residents took part in the War of 1812, and played a major role in both sides of the
Rebellion of 1837.
Administratively, from 1791 to the early 1850s, Pickering was part of the Home District,
then part of Ontario County. In 1841: Canada West became Upper Canada, and in 1867,
Upper Canada became Ontario.
After the War of 1812, immigration came primarily from Great Britain and Ireland,
and it is to these settlers as well as to the Loyalists that we owe the earliest elements of our
society.
VI. 1875: Growth and Decline (Our Agricultural Heritage)
When the Grand Trunk Railway (later the CNR) was opened through Pickering in 1856,
use of Frenchman's Bay as a port declined sharply. However, the provincial government
poured in money for an upgrading of the facilities. A new wharf replaced the old one, a
lighthouse was built, a new channel was dredged, and a 50 000 bushel elevator was
constructed. Once again the bay became a bustling port. This time it was barley that
became the chief export. Wagons would line the road all the way to Liverpool Road
waiting to unload their cargoes of barley which were destined for the breweries of the
United States. All this ended when an American duty on the importation of barley
closed the market and once again the port went into decline.
The latter half of the 19th century saw many improvements in agriculture and in the breeding of
stock. Pickering farmers were very much in the forefront of these developments.
Although markets fluctuated and made life tough for farmers they continued to produce their
crops on some of the finest farmland around.
The population went through a period of steady decline which continued to the middle of the
next century.
VII. 1900: Resorting to Pickering (Our Recreational Heritage)
At the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century several cottage
communities were established in Pickering Township, and the area became a recreational
centre with Torontonian vacationers discovering the Bay. The cottage communities were
Rosebank, Fairport Village, and Fairport Beach (originally Dunbarton Shores) around the Bay,
and Squire's Beach in the Duffin's Creek area.
So popular was Rosebank as a summer resort that it eventually had its own train station and
was served by seven passenger trains as well as Picnic Specials. It also had its own post
office from 1916. In the 1920s, Cecil White, with a vision of creating the
""Venice of North America"", hired Italian architects to design canals and bridges modelled
after those in Venice. Some of the channels that were dredged in the Rouge are still visible,
but the bridge which was built to connect Woodgrange Avenue and Westpoint Avenue has
disappeared. The project itself collapsed after the stock market crash in 1929.
Early development on Frenchman's Bay began on the east side.
This was the economic centre of Pickering Township when the bay was a shipping port.
The village itself, as shown on the Ontario County Atlas in 1877, was limited to a very small
area around Front Road and Commerce Street, and apparently never expanded beyond these
limits. In the first half of the twentieth century, Fairport Village and its environs became a
cottage community.
During the summer, there was a mass movement out of the city of Toronto to Pickering's
cottage communities. In time the cottages were winterized and the number of residents
stabilized.
VIII. 1950: Mid-century Prosperity Again (Our Industrial Heritage)
In the first half of the 20th century, Pickering Township remained largely a rural,
farming community. Pickering residents fought in both world wars, and what was to become
the Town of Ajax was the site of a large munitions plant. After the Second World War,
Pickering saw increasing industrial growth.
Also in the boom years following WWII, subdivisions began to appear.
Bay Ridges was the first of these subdivisions to be built. It was begun in the early 1960s
on what was then farm land. Many of the original landowners and/or their descendants are
still living in the area. The community of West Shore soon followed.
IX. 1975: Ajax and Durham (Our Immigrant Heritage)
As a result of their effort during the war, the people of Ajax had gained a new sense of identity.
In 1954 they made a submission for town status, which they were awarded, and in 1955,
they became the Town of Ajax, the name being derived from the British warship HMS Ajax,
one of the ships in the fleet which defeated the German pocket battleship Graf Spee in the
Battle of the River Plate in 1939.
In its present form the Town of Pickering was established in 1975 as a result of the
reorganization of local government. It encompasses most of the older Township of Pickering,
except that Pickering Village was amalgamated with the Town of Ajax, and the West Rouge
Community was incorporated into the Borough (now City) of Scarborough.
Also in 1975, Petticoat Creek Conservation Area was created from grown-over farmland with
remnant areas of Carolinian Hardwood Forest. It is a 72-hectare park along the lakefront with
bluffs rising to 10 metres above the waterline. It is managed by the Metropolitan Toronto and
Region Conservation Authority (MTRCA), as are Greenwood and Claremont Conservation
Areas.
In recent years new waves of immigration have brought to Pickering a great diversity of culture.
People from all over the globe have come to reside in our towns and thereby have greatly
enriched our society.
X. 1997: Today and Tomorrow (Approaching 200 Years)
Today, Pickering is a prosperous town of almost 70 000 people on the eastern border of
Metropolitan Toronto. Most of its residents live in an urban area within five kilometres of the
Lake Ontario shoreline, but a rapidly increasing population is resulting in a northward
expansion.
The flow of traffic has been reversed from earlier in the century. Every weekday morning
hundreds of Pickering residents travel by rail and by car to offices in downtown Toronto.
Today, the lakeshore is being rediscovered. Petticoat Creek Conservation Area,
Frenchman's Bay, and the Waterfront Trail are providing many opportunities for recreation.
There is also an increasing interest in the environment. Pickering will not return to the
forested state of the pre-settlement years, nor will it maintain its rural character.
Change will come inevitably, but will it come at the expense of the best of our heritage,
or will we learn to accommodate our heritage with progress?
We are fast approaching the 200th anniversary of European Settlement (the year 2000), and,
in the established form of celebrating our past, the year 2011 will mark 200 years of civic
government.
Pickering has a history worth celebrating and a heritage worth preserving. We need to
work together to see that what the land and its people have given to us is not lost.
10"
"The Posts of Ajax/Pickering
By Pat McCauley
The presence of three venerable Post family homes in Pickering/Ajax
(Post Inn, Post Manor and Post Hill) can be traced back to one couple,
George Washington Post I and Elizabeth Anna Knowles. George, born in 1779,
was a son of Jordon Post and Abigail Loomis who came to York from Hebron,
Connecticut, about 1780.
George moved to Scarborough in the early nineteenth century and met Elizabeth
(born in 1786), eldest daughter of William and Mary Knowles who immigrated to
Highland Creek from New Jersey about 1802, and became one of the earliest families to
have settled in the area. George and Elizabeth were married in 1805, and were blessed only
one year later with their first child, Asa Post. George was the proprietor of a tavern in
Scarborough. A public spirited man, in 1806 he replaced William Knowles as overseer of
highways and fences, and in 1810 he served on a grand jury. He was also a member of the
Masonic Order. About 1813, George and Elizabeth moved with their young family to
Pickering, settling on Kingston Road about one mile west of the Whitby border.
They cleared and farmed their land until they were able to build an impressive,
two-storey brick inn, complete with an upper ballroom on Lot 5, Concession 1. in 1815.
At this time there were 378 people living in Pickering. Post Inn became an important
stopping place for coaches between Toronto and Kingston. Their nearby farm was also
the scene for pioneer ploughing matches, such as the one which took place in 1850,
which witnessed a match between Vaughan and Scarborough Townships,
with Scarborough carrying off the prize.
The Posts had ten children: Asa, Hiram, Jordan, George Washington II, John, Robert, Henry,
Sybil, Anna, and Sarah, The Posts employed household servants who lived with them,
one of whom, Ann O'Reilly, became the wife of Asa Post. Asa farmed two hundred acres
across the road from his parental home and achieved fame in his agricultural pursuits.
He was the father of Albert Asa Post who became the designated architect for Ontario County,
building homes, schools, and churches here and subsequently in
Buffalo, New York.
Jordon Post built Post Manor about 1841. His brother George Washington Post II,
built Post Hill in 1856. Robert was managing the Inn during 1832 when cholera swept the
area and caused his death at 25. Henry was only 22 when he died in 1848, and his sisters
erected a headstone for him. Hiram and his family were proprietors of the Inn in 1851.
George Washington Post I died in 1828 and Elizabeth in 1833, neither having reached the
age of fifty. Their final resting place is in the Ley Family Cemetery on Mill Street in
Pickering Village, along with four of their sons and others of their family.
Amazingly, after over 180 years, the Post Inn still stands at 367 Kingston Road East in Ajax.
Today the red brick is covered by stucco on the sides and blue siding at the front and only
its conformation hints at its former grandeur. However, it must have been a wonderful
comfort to travellers in the nineteenth century, having lurched and jounced over the crest
sloping down to Carruther's Creek to see the light shining from the half moon window and
smoke rising from the double chimneys.
Post Hill, at 132 Kingston Road East, and Jordan Post's Post Manor, on the northwest
corner of Kingston Road and Brock Road, also survive thanks to some public-spirited
initiatives. We hope these treasures of the early history of Ajax/Pickering will always be with us.
Bibliography:
Bonis, Robert R. (ed). A History of Scarborough. Scarborough:
Scarborough Public Library, 1968.
Clarke, Kenneth H. Manuscript Collection in History Room,
Pickering Central Library.
1851 Census. Pickering Township.
Illustrated Historical Atlas of the County of Ontario, Ont
Toronto: J.H. Beers & Co., 1877.
Illustrated Historical Atlas of the County of York, and the
Township of West Gwillimbury and Town of Bradford in the
County of Simcoe, Ont. Toronto: Miles and Co., 1878.
Mosser, Christine M. (ed). York, Upper Canada Minutes of Town Meetings
and Lists of Inhabitants, 1797-1823
Toronto: Metropolitan Toronto Library Board, 1984.
Winter, Brian. Personal Communication.
Hole-in-the-wall
The Dunbarton Culvert
By Jerry Paris
What is this? Why was it here? Where did the road go?
The Baseline Road (now called Bayly Street in Pickering and Ajax, Victoria Street in Whitby,
and Bloor Street in Oshawa and Courtice) was the closest continuous road parallel to Lake
Ontario passing through Ontario County. When travellers went west on the Baseline,
they would get a relatively straight road until they reached Liverpool Road when they
were forced to turn north or south. A left turn would, in days past, take one south to the
port of Frenchman's Bay, with its grain elevators, fishing vessels, and cottages.
If you took a right turn you would go north only a short distance, then the Baseline
Road continued westward, down a steep hill into the creek valley, parallel to the
Grand Trunk Railway line leading to Toronto.
A little less than a kilometre west of Liverpool Road, the Baseline Road again was forced to
make a detour because of a marsh and swampy area which had a northern boundary of the
railway line during times of high water. Travellers turned right, avoiding this swampy area,
and went under the cut stone archway leading to the side road now known as Dixie Road,
or alternatively following another road which wound northwest into the village of Dunbarton to
Dunchurch Street. A connection was made to Kingston Road by either route.
11"
"NOW THAT WE HAVE A NEWSLETTER...
Coming soon, a journal for the Pickering Township Historical Society!
By: Lys Laurence
Pathmaster will publish short articles on the history of the Pickering
Township area, as well as news about the Historical Society itself. The forum for longer
articles and essays will be the proposed journal for the Pickering Township Historical Society.
Some of the topics may be similar to those suggested for the newsletter, but more elaborate
than those published in Pathmaster. In addition, the journal will publish original documents
such as old newspaper articles, business records, and diaries. Your submissions to this
proposed journal are welcome now.
Do you have any of these original documents? Is there a longtime
resident you could interview for an oral history? Do you have any interesting photographs of
people or places in the Pickering Township area?
Name the Journal Contest! Your suggestion could become the official name of the
new journal. Submit your suggested name(s) to Lys Laurence at
905-839-9837 or by E-mail at faithfinn@myna.com. Please include your name, phone number,
and complete address.
PICKERING TOWNSHIP HISTORICAL SOCIETY
Editor: Michael Cummins
Editorial Assistants:
John Cormier
Lys Laurence
Pat McCauley
Tom Mohr
Gayle Quintilian
John Sabean
Design: John Cormier
Hands On Art & Design
Pathmaster is the newsletter of the Pickering Township Historical Society and is issued
quarterly: September, December, March, and June. Address correspondence to PTHS,
c/o 842 Naroch Blvd., Pickering, Ontario, L1W 1S9.
Board of Directors:
President: Tom Mohr 839-1221
Vice President: John Sabean 831-3811
Recording & Corresponding Secretary: Lauri Towata-Roy 649-22 96
Membership Secretary: Anne Bridge 649-5473
Treasurer Tony Poirier 839-6885
Advocacy & Preservation Chain Jerry Paris 839-5474
Publications Chair. Michael Cummins 839-1557
THANKS!
The PTHS would like to acknowledge the following for their contributions to the
newsletter and to the foundation of our fledgling society:
Maria and Jim Skentzos, Old Liverpool House; Pickering Central Library; Pickering
East Shore Community Association; Sylvia Spencer; Jane Buckles; The Claremont
Lionesses; and Regional Councillors Maurice Brenner & Doug Dickerson.
Roy Robinson (left), President of the Pickering East Shore Community Association (PESCA)
presents PTHS President Tom Mohr with a cheque for start-up funds.
Coming events:
General Meetings of the Pickering Township Historical Society Day: Second Tuesday of the
month, September through June Time: 7:30 p.m. Place: Pickering Recreation Complex
FALL SCHEDULE:
Tuesday, 9 September 1997
Guest speaker: Allan McGillivray,
Curator of the Uxbridge-Scott Museum, will address ""Our Common Quaker Heritage""
Plans are also to honour Dr. William A. McKay, author of The Pickering Story, and Melba
McKay, compiler of the Tweedsmuir History of Pickering.
Tuesday, 14 October 1997
Guest speaker: William Parish,
former mayor of Ajax, will talk about ""A Shared History: Ajax and Pickering""
Tuesday, 11 November 1997
Guest speaker: Dorothy Britton,
President of the Claremont Women's Institute, and other members of the Claremont W.I. will
speak about the achievements of the local organization in this, the 100th anniversary of the
founding of the Women's Institutes.
Tuesday, 9 December 1997
Members night.
This is your night to display collections and items relating to the history of Pickering Township.
Or perhaps you have some photographs to exhibit or have identified, or slides to show.
Please contact Tom Mohr in advance to tell him what you're bringing.
"