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Expanding the narrative
This is part of a broader conversation about whose history is being told, about gender, people of colour and the economically disenfranchised, and others whose stories have been overlooked or intentionally omitted from the authorized discussion. - Food
- Francophone heritage
- Indigenous heritage
- Intangible heritage
Intangible heritage
Intangible cultural heritage includes language, traditions, music, food, special skills, etc. - Medical heritage
- Military heritage
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- Tools for conservation
- Women's heritage
The People’s park
Queen’s Park, Toronto, was officially opened by the Prince of Wales (later King Edward VII) in September 1860, and was a forerunner of the late-19thcentury public park movement in North America.
Parks created at this time were meant to provide people with respite from crowded urban conditions. Toronto’s Committee on Public Walks and Gardens gave “health and enjoyment” as its chief reason for approving the Queen’s Park proposal. Later, in 1884, historian C. Pelham Mulvany described Toronto’s parks and public gardens as “The Lungs of the City” and Queen’s Park as “… the people’s park of Toronto. It is the favourite resort of our city.”
The land now occupied by Queen’s Park was purchased by King’s College in 1829. The southern portion had been cleared for farming, but stands of white pine, maple, elm and oak trees populated the northern section. Taddle Creek ravine bisected the park from north to south, and the property was known as University or College Park.
In 1853, the Province of the United Canadas expropriated the eastern portion of University Park with a plan to construct new legislative buildings there, in anticipation of Toronto becoming the provincial capital once again. Although the province was unable to afford the new construction, it continued to hold the land.
In 1856, the University of Toronto senate was authorized to construct buildings on the western section of University Park. Negotiations began in 1857 between the city and the senate for the creation of a public park on the eastern section, and the architectural firm Cumberland & Storm was authorized to prepare a park plan. The city and the university committed that the lands would be “guaranteed as [a] public park forever.”
Queen’s Park followed a “picturesque” design, popular in Upper Canada at the time because of its romantic, idealized depiction of the British countryside. In Queen’s Park, the existing natural varieties of trees were left in clumps or placed along pathways. Beyond the construction of pathways and some garden beds, the parkland was left in a natural state. Visitors entered through two gated, tree-lined avenues, one leading west from what today is College Street and the other leading north from present-day University Avenue. At the opening ceremony in September 1860, the Prince of Wales laid the foundation stone for a statue of Queen Victoria that was eventually installed in 1871. Five hundred trees were planted along College Street to mark the occasion.
Originally, Queen’s Park was northwest of the city, but Toronto soon grew to the park’s boundaries and beyond. Despite this, the park remained a natural refuge, due to the city’s commitment to maintaining it and the university’s control over development of most of the surrounding land. Today, Queen’s Park remains a stately green space in Toronto’s core, and provides a fitting backdrop for Ontario’s legislative buildings and the monuments and statues located on the grounds.
During the Royal Tour of 2010, Queen Elizabeth II unveiled a provincial plaque commemorating the 150th anniversary of Queen’s Park, Toronto.
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- 01 Oct 2019
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How Doors Open Ontario activates the province’s communities
The Ontario Heritage Trust’s Doors Open Ontario program works with communities and partners to open the doors, gates and courtyards of Ontario’s most unique and...
- 01 Oct 2019
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Shaftesbury is the company behind the hit television series Murdoch Mysteries and Frankie Drake Mysteries, both of which air on CBC in Canada and are...
- 01 Oct 2019
- Economics of heritage
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Adaptive reuse - Author: Emily Sajdak,
The economic halo effect of sacred places: Measuring civic impact in an innovative new way
Nestled in the old city of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Old St. George’s United Methodist Church is a “mother church” of the denomination and the oldest Methodist...
- 01 Oct 2019
- Economics of heritage
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Community
Adaptive reuse - Author: Erin Semande,
Case study: Brockville Railway Tunnel
Location: 1 Block House Island Road, BrockvilleOwner: City of BrockvillePartners: Brockville Railway Tunnel Committee (plus countless generous donors)Original use: Canada’s first railway tunnel and part...
- 01 Oct 2019
- Economics of heritage
Buildings and architecture
Community
Food
Adaptive reuse - Author: Erin Semande,
Case study: Mudtown Station Brewery and Restaurant (Owen Sound)
Location: 1198 1st Avenue East, Owen SoundOwner: City of Owen SoundPartners: Kloeze Family (Mudtown Station Inc.)Original use: Passenger train station (Owen Sound Canadian Pacific Railway...
- 01 Oct 2019
- Economics of heritage
Buildings and architecture
Community
Adaptive reuse - Author: John Coleman,
Learning from the past
Heritage has always been at the heart of the University of Windsor’s ambitious plan to preserve the century-old Windsor Armouries and transform the building into...
Museums and heritage: Building livable communities through soft power
Museums and heritage are engines of urban redesign and revitalization. Lord Cultural Resources has worked in 450 cities worldwide on some 2,600 museums, cultural plans...
- 01 Oct 2019
- Economics of heritage
Archaeology
Community - Author: Donovan Rypkema,
Nine ways that heritage conservation is good for the economy
Advocates for heritage conservation have traditionally made their case on the basis of architectural character, cultural significance, social relevance, esthetic quality and other values of...
- 01 Oct 2019
- Indigenous heritage
Community - Author: Kayleigh Speirs and Art Hunter,
Present. Preserve. Protect.
Kay-Nah-Chi-Wah-Nung Historical Centre, the Place of the Long Rapids, is a historically significant meeting place located along the banks of Manidoo Ziibi (Spirit River or...
- 01 Oct 2019
- Economics of heritage
Buildings and architecture
Community
Adaptive reuse - Author: Kiki Aravopoulos,
Case study: Thunder Bay District Courthouse
Location: 277 Camelot Street, Thunder BayOwner: David Sun, Business owner/InvestorPartners: Ascend HotelsOriginal use: CourthouseCurrent use: Hotel The former Thunder Bay District Courthouse sits perched atop...
- 01 Oct 2019
- Economics of heritage
Community - Author: Jan Hawley et Carolyn Parks Mintz,
From adversity to the stars
The rural Municipality of Huron East is a composite of rolling farmland and historical settlements dating back to the mid-1800s. Although agriculture, manufacturing and a...
- 01 Oct 2019
- Economics of heritage
Buildings and architecture
Community
Adaptive reuse - Author: Jennifer Campbell,
Heritage builds vibrant communities and cultural economies in Kingston
In 2010, the City of Kingston released its first Culture Plan – a document that shared a sustainable, authentic, longterm vision for cultural vitality in...
- 01 Oct 2019
- Economics of heritage
Buildings and architecture
Community
Adaptive reuse - Author: Paul Shaker,
The economic value of heritage districts: How assessment growth in heritage conservation districts compares with non-designated areas in Hamilton
There are competing views about the value of heritage properties. On the one hand, there is a growing consensus on the esthetic and economic development...
- 01 Oct 2019
- Economics of heritage
Buildings and architecture
Environment
Community
Adaptive reuse - Author: Clare Ronan,
Reside: When heritage preservation translates to affordable housing
Raising the Roof is a Canadian charity that provides national leadership in homelessness prevention through various initiatives. Reside is one such project that creates affordable...
- 01 Oct 2019
- Economics of heritage
Buildings and architecture
Community
Adaptive reuse - Author: Thompson M. Mayes,
Old places support a sound, sustainable and vibrant economy
In Why Old Places Matter, I wrote about the many reasons that old places help people flourish. Yet, I intentionally saved the discussion of how...
- 01 Oct 2019
- Economics of heritage
Buildings and architecture
Community
Adaptive reuse - Author: Beth Hanna,
Revitalizing communities – The power of conservation
Over the past few years, I’ve spoken and written extensively about value – exploring questions of what we protect, how we make those decisions, and...
- 20 Mar 2019
- Community
Communication - Author: Beth Hanna,
Communication – Forging community, building understanding, shaping society
Humans have always shared an interest in communicating with one another – to exchange stories, experiences, ideas, thoughts. To be in community with one another...
- 17 Feb 2017
- Community
- Author: The Honourable Elizabeth Dowdeswell,
The conscience of our province
Ontario’s Legislative Building, completed in 1893, is a magnificent structure filled with stories from the most significant moments in our province’s modern history. The place...
- 09 Sep 2016
- Cultural landscapes
- Author: Matthew Somerville,
The changing landscape of farming
Growing up on a small family farm, I have witnessed the benefit and impact of technology on agricultural landscapes. In the 1980s, our barn was...
- 09 Sep 2016
- Cultural landscapes
- Author: Paul General,
I’m not hunting on your farm … you’re farming on my hunting territory
My people – the Haudenosaunee – have been part of the land along the Grand River for millennia, while other cultures have been here since...
- 09 Sep 2016
- Cultural landscapes
- Author: Wendy Shearer,
Reading the landscape
An important value of learning to observe and understand the cultural landscape is to see how natural features and processes have been modified or enhanced...
- 09 Sep 2016
- Cultural landscapes
- Author: Christopher Andreae,
Industrial cultural landscapes: Fragile and fugitive
Appreciating industrial cultural landscapes can be challenging due to the diversity of industrial activities and locations. The variation between rural and urban landscapes described below...
- 09 Sep 2016
- Cultural landscapes
- Author: Gerald Hill,
Where is who we are
What might I mean by landscape holds us? When we open our eyes, we see light. We open our mouths, we breathe air. These are...
- 09 Sep 2016
- Cultural landscapes
- Author: Beth Hanna,
The cultural landscape – A framework for conservation
Heritage conservation is not about the past. It’s about the places that surround us and the diversity of our communities. It’s about ensuring that the...
- 09 Sep 2016
- Cultural landscapes
- Author: Anthony Chegahno,
Nochemowenaing: You don’t need to walk through here (An interview with Anthony Chegahno)
The Ontario Heritage Trust and the Chippewas of Nawash unceded First Nation co-steward lands in northern Bruce Peninsula that are part of an Indigenous cultural...
- 09 Sep 2016
- Cultural landscapes
- Author: Lisa Prosper,
Cultural landscapes: Challenges and new directions
Cultural landscapes were first introduced into the heritage lexicon in the early 1990s as a new type of cultural heritage resource. The typology was a...
- 09 Sep 2016
- Cultural landscapes
- Author: Bob Sutherland,
Reconnecting with Cree culture, language and land: An interview with Bob Sutherland
On July 20, 2016, Sean Fraser from the Ontario Heritage Trust interviewed Bob Sutherland about his experiences and travels reconnecting with Cree relations in the...
- 09 Sep 2016
- Cultural landscapes
- Author: Thomas Wicks,
Tools for conserving cultural landscapes
Landscapes may appear static but they are always changing. Whether by human or natural influences, the changes are constant and often important. So, how do...
- 09 Sep 2016
- Cultural landscapes
- Author: Sean Fraser,
Scotsdale Farm – An experience of interwoven landscapes
Dust stirs up behind the car, shaken by the audible crunch of rubber on gravel as we drive slowly along the fenced laneway leading east...
- 09 Sep 2016
- Cultural landscapes
- Author: Mike Fedyk,
Cultural landscapes, the Métis way of life and traditional knowledge
While the term cultural landscape is not commonly used when discussing Métis land use, it is a concept that Dr. Brian Tucker, who holds a...
- 05 Dec 2014
- Buildings and architecture
Community - Author: Valerie Verity,
A story of two families
What a story the Macdonell-Williamson House and property can tell! Its location – with a commanding view overlooking the Ottawa River (where goods and people...
- 14 Feb 2014
- Military heritage
Community - Author: Wayne Kelly,
On the eve of war: Ontario in 1914
What was life like in Ontario during those years before the First World War? Before the war that saw men leave their families and friends...
- 14 Feb 2014
- Military heritage
Community - Author: Jonathan F. Vance,
Fighting power: Ontario soldiers in the making
That Canadians are an unmilitary people has become something of a cliché. But a look back at Ontario in the summer of 1914 might leave...
- 14 Feb 2014
- Military heritage
Community - Author: Erin Semande,
The end of an era
The years before the Great War are often romanticized as a series of garden parties, Sunday afternoon strolls in the park, stopping everything for afternoon...
- 10 May 2013
- Community
Tools for conservation - Author: Robert Tremain,
Oil Springs Heritage District: Working from the ground up
In the mid-19th century, southwestern Ontario was Canada West’s last frontier, where lines of travel, civility and comfort faced the untamed. From these impassable wetlands...
- 10 May 2013
- Buildings and architecture
Community
Tools for conservation - Author: Jim Leonard,
Heritage conservation districts: The most popular tool in the heritage toolkit?
When the Ontario Heritage Act came into force in 1975, municipalities across the province suddenly had the authority to protect and enhance “groups of properties...
- 10 May 2013
- Buildings and architecture
Community
Tools for conservation - Author: Mark Warrack,
How districts change
Meadowvale Village – a once-small, rural village – is located on the Credit River at the north end of the City of Mississauga. In the...
- 10 May 2013
- Buildings and architecture
Community
Tools for conservation - Author: Joan Mason,
Grassroots heritage: The stewards of New Edinburgh
Located in the City of Ottawa at the confluence of the Rideau and Ottawa rivers is the historical community of New Edinburgh. With its roots...
- 10 May 2013
- Buildings and architecture
Community - Author: Stephen Ashton,
Heritage conservation people
Growing up in Port Hope fostered a belief that every community had an amazing main street. That ignorance was shaken when I returned from university...
- 12 Oct 2012
- Cultural landscapes
- Author: Ontario Heritage Trust,
Resources: Back to the land
What's on the shelf Canadians at Table: A Culinary History of Canada (by Dorothy Duncan) Dundurn Press, 2011. In Canadians at Table, we learn about...
- 12 Oct 2012
- Cultural landscapes
Food - Author: Wendy Shearer,
The evolution of the agricultural cultural landscape
The agricultural cultural landscape visible today is a comprehensive record of the small- and large-scale changes in the industry that at one time was a...
- 12 Oct 2012
- Community
Cultural landscapes - Author: Catharine A. Wilson,
Coming together
Neighbourliness has always been a part of Ontario’s rich agricultural heritage. Much of what we view in the rural landscape today was once created by...
- 12 Oct 2012
- Cultural landscapes
Food - Author: Kathryn McLeod,
Protecting Ontario's agricultural landscapes: Challenges and opportunities
Agriculture is an integral part of Ontario’s story. It has shaped and impacted the growth and development of communities since the province began. Although agriculture...
- 12 Oct 2012
- Cultural landscapes
- Author: Jim Miller and Christopher Miller,
Thistle Ha’: A national historic farm
Thistle Ha’, a farm in Pickering, was settled by Scottish immigrant John Miller in 1839. Miller and his family were renowned for their livestock importation...
- 10 Nov 2011
- Black heritage
Community - Author: Marie Carter,
Overcoming historical amnesia: Recognizing people of African descent as pioneers and community builders
Essential Canadian history often recognizes people of African descent solely through the heroic stories of the Underground Railroad. These stories alone, however, do not represent...
- 31 May 2011
- Buildings and architecture
Natural heritage
Community
Tools for conservation - Author: Sean Fraser, Erin Semande and Mike Sawchuck,
Investing in preservation
It is an unfortunate reality that the preservation of our heritage remains the exception rather than the norm. What is a common-sense approach to living...
- 28 Jan 2011
- Buildings and architecture
Community - Author: Michael Eamon,
Into the Kawarthas
When visitors first enter Peterborough’s stately city hall, they should look down. Inspired by the City Beautiful Movement – active in Canada from 1893 to...
- 28 Jan 2011
- Expanding the narrative
Community - Author: James Raffan,
CCM 3.0: Reimagining the Canadian Canoe Museum
A decade has passed since the permanent exhibits at The Canadian Canoe Museum (CCM) were opened to great acclaim. Funded with help from the federal...
- 28 Jan 2011
- Buildings and architecture
Community
Adaptive reuse - Author: Barb McIntosh,
Peterborough’s Living History Museum
Hutchison House holds a special place in the social history of Peterborough. Local volunteers built the house in 1836 to persuade one of their first...
- 06 May 2010
- Buildings and architecture
Community - Author: Ontario Heritage Trust,
Resources: Finding our place in Ontario’s history
On the shelf Creating Memory, by John Warkentin Becker Associates, 2010. Toronto has over 6,000 public outdoor sculptures, works of art that provide a sense...
- 06 May 2010
- Buildings and architecture
Community - Author: Regan Hutcheson and Leah Wallace,
Designations in bulk
Understanding Unionville, by Regan Hutcheson A visit to Unionville is like a journey back in time. Located north of Toronto in the heart of Markham...
- 06 May 2010
- Buildings and architecture
Community - Author: Sally Coutts,
Leading by example
Ontario towns and cities have been designating properties under Part IV of the Ontario Heritage Act since the passage of the act in the 1970s...
- 06 May 2010
- Buildings and architecture
Community - Author: Dave Benson,
Cataloguing a community
The amalgamated municipality of Chatham-Kent includes a number of early settlements that encompass thousands of heritage buildings. Recently, Heritage Chatham-Kent (HC-K), our municipal heritage committee...
- 06 May 2010
- Community
- Author: Dr. Fraser Dunford,
Self-identifying
While we are all familiar with local archives, museums and libraries (and the materials they contain), you may be startled to discover what individual collections...
- 11 Feb 2010
- Buildings and architecture
Community - Author: Evelyn G. McLean,
Walkerville: The heritage of a company town
Among the shrinking number of 19th-century company towns, Walkerville – part of the City of Windsor since 1935 – remains an outstanding example of what...
- 11 Feb 2010
- Buildings and architecture
Community - Author: Kathryn McLeod,
Exploring Ontario’s southern peninsula
As you roam the highways and waterways of Ontario’s southern peninsula, a tapestry of stories unravels. These stories speak about settlement and growth, a testament...
- 11 Feb 2010
- Buildings and architecture
Community
Cultural landscapes - Author: Dave Benson,
The history of Chatham-Kent
Chatham-Kent’s rich cultural heritage began long before European settlement when large stockaded villages and Neutral Indians dominated the Thames River and the Lake Erie-Lake St...
- 10 Sep 2009
- Buildings and architecture
Community - Author: Alison Little,
A legacy of support: Faith-based community
Reaching out to those in need has long been a part of Ontario’s religious tradition. Faith-based groups offering medical and social assistance arrived with the...
- 10 Sep 2009
- Buildings and architecture
Community - Author: Jennifer Drinkwater,
Toronto’s synagogues: Keeping collective memories alive
Collective memory is cultural memory – what is remembered about an event by a social or cultural group that experienced it and by those to...
- 10 Sep 2009
- Buildings and architecture
Community - Author: David Cuming,
From Hamilton, a municipal perspective
Places of worship are often stunning buildings, constructed in forms and styles that have existed for thousands of years around the world, using specialized techniques...
- 10 Sep 2009
- Buildings and architecture
Community - Author: Vicki Bennett,
Form and function: The impact of liturgy, symbolism and use on design
During the 19th century, the location, physical condition and stylistic merit of churches were publicly discussed as reliable indicators of a community’s value, moral fabric...
- 10 Sep 2009
- Buildings and architecture
Community - Author: Jane Burgess and Ann Link,
Enduring stewardship preserves a treasured heritage church
Located just east of Beaverton, the Old Stone Church, built in 1840 by a predominantly Scottish congregation, is a simple but handsomely proportioned small Georgian...
- 10 Sep 2009
- Buildings and architecture
Community - Author: Laura Hatcher,
The changing face of worship
The architectural style, massing, materials and date stones of a place of worship offer clues about the congregation’s history and values. Likewise, the building’s size...
Religious freedom in the promised land
Eli Johnson toiled on plantations in Virginia, Mississippi and Kentucky before making his bid for freedom in the “promised land” – the term used by...
- 10 Sep 2009
- Buildings and architecture
Community
Cultural landscapes - Author: Wendy Shearer,
Places of worship in Ontario’s rural cultural landscape
The cultural landscapes of rural southern Ontario contain a variety of heritage resources – land patterns and uses, built forms and natural features. Within these...
- 10 Sep 2009
- Indigenous heritage
Buildings and architecture
Community - Author: Yves Frenette,
Churches of “New Ontario”
In the middle of the 19th century, northern Ontario remained much as it had been under the French regime – a region of Catholic missions...
- 10 Sep 2009
- Indigenous heritage
Buildings and architecture
Francophone heritage
Community - Author: Wayne Kelly,
Ontario’s rich religious heritage
From the First People who for thousands of years conducted religious and cultural ceremonies at places they believed held spiritual significance, to subsequent arrivals who...
- 10 Sep 2009
- Indigenous heritage
Buildings and architecture
Community
Cultural objects - Author: Kathryn McLeod,
Christ Church and the Queen Anne Silver
Located in Tyendinaga Mohawk Territory on the Bay of Quinte, Christ Church houses a silver communion service dating to 1712. This remarkable service represents an...
- 10 Sep 2009
- Buildings and architecture
Cultural landscapes - Author: Marcus R. Létourneau,
Sacred landscapes in Ontario’s communities
While places of worship are a visible aspect of Ontario’s heritage, they are part of wider cultural landscapes that can include supporting structures, burial places...
- 10 Sep 2009
- Buildings and architecture
Community - Author: Richard Moorhouse,
Launching the Places of Worship Inventory
Survey, documentation and research – these are the first steps in the conservation process. How can decisions be made about our heritage without first acquiring...
- 28 May 2009
- Buildings and architecture
Community
Tools for conservation - Author: Sean Fraser,
Subsidizing demolition
In nature, there is no such thing as waste. Nature operates in an endless web of interconnected cycles of use, transformation and reuse. The concept...
- 28 May 2009
- Buildings and architecture
Natural heritage
Community - Author: Tamara Chipperfield and Kiki Aravopoulos,
Heritage in harmony: The integration of natural and cultural landscapes
Approximately 11,000 years of human culture are recorded in Ontario’s landscapes. Most existing natural landscapes in Ontario today have intrinsic cultural heritage meaning and significance...
- 28 May 2009
- Buildings and architecture
Community - Author: Erin Semande,
The sustainability of place
Located on the Lake Huron shore at the mouth of the Maitland River, Goderich is known as “Canada’s Prettiest Town.” It is situated in what...
- 12 Feb 2009
- Buildings and architecture
Community - Author: Kathryn McLeod,
Heritage off the 401
Highway 401, stretching from Windsor to the Quebec border, is one of the busiest highways in North America. Anyone who has journeyed east of Toronto...
- 12 Feb 2009
- Buildings and architecture
Community - Author: Romas Bubelis,
Building on the past
Eastern Ontario offers an array of impressive historic houses. Some of these houses – owned and operated by the Ontario Heritage Trust – are featured...
- 12 Feb 2009
- Buildings and architecture
Community
Adaptive reuse - Author: Glenda Jones,
From mill to museum
The big oak door of the Mississippi Valley Textile Museum in Almonte in eastern Ontario swings silently open as it has done for over 10...
- 12 Feb 2009
- Buildings and architecture
Community - Author: Wayne Kelly and Kathryn McLeod,
Ontario's eastern treasures
Inhabited by Aboriginal Peoples for 7,000 years, present-day eastern Ontario is rich with heritage. The area gradually transformed as French and later United Empire Loyalists...
- 12 Feb 2009
- Community
- Author: Liane Nowosielski,
Honouring Ontario’s premiers
The Ontario Heritage Trust launched the Premiers’ Gravesites Program at a memorable ceremony last November in Cornwall to commemorate the province’s first premier – The...
- 11 Sep 2008
- Buildings and architecture
Community
Adaptive reuse - Author: Erik R. Hanson,
Second chances for Peterborough’s priceless heritage
One of the greatest challenges to creating a healthy downtown is getting people to live there. While Peterborough’s historic centre is full of beautiful heritage...
- 11 Sep 2008
- Buildings and architecture
Community - Author: Marcus R. Létourneau,
Kingston’s heritage: Time and again
The City of Kingston sits at a strategic location, halfway between Montreal and Toronto, where Lake Ontario meets the western end of the St. Lawrence...
- 12 Jun 2008
- Buildings and architecture
Community - Author: Thomas Wicks,
A renaissance of northern heritage
After railway development connected this once-isolated area to the rest of the province at the end of the 19th century, the abundant natural resources attracted...
- 12 Jun 2008
- Community
- Author: Nicole Guertin and Andréanne Joly,
Northern Ontario: An authentic heritage
Heritage is often associated with the distant past and, for many, a dusty museum. Northern Ontario, however, is proposing a rejuvenation of its heritage by...
- 12 Jun 2008
- Expanding the narrative
Community - Author: Beth Anne Mendes,
Routes through the wilderness: The development of a transportation network in Northern Ontario
Isolation, great distances, demanding terrain and difficult weather conditions challenged the fortitude and perseverance of the people who forged water routes, roads, railways and air...
- 12 Jun 2008
- Buildings and architecture
Community - Author: Denis Héroux,
Adventurous workers wanted for remote locations – Housing provided
The exploration, settlement and development of northern Ontario were motivated by the exploitation of the region’s natural resources – primarily fur, timber, gold and silver...
- 12 Jun 2008
- Francophone heritage
Community - Author: Karen Bachmann,
Our Francophone heritage
Fauquier. Moonbeam. Kapuskasing. Hearst. Val Gagné. Belle Vallée. Sudbury. Timmins. Sturgeon Falls. The history of northern Ontario cannot be told without looking at the contributions...
- 12 Jun 2008
- Buildings and architecture
Community - Author: Romas Bubelis,
Northern icons
The towering McIntyre Mine Headframe in Timmins. The Clergue Block House and Powder Magazine in Sault Ste Marie. St. Francis of Assisi Anglican Church in...
- 12 Jun 2008
- Buildings and architecture
Community
Cultural landscapes - Author: Sean Fraser,
The historical Cobalt Mining District – A community resource
At the turn of the 20th century, Cobalt was a small and isolated lumber camp. In August 1903, two lumbermen – James McKinley and Ernest...
- 14 Feb 2008
- Community
Tools for conservation - Author: David Tremblay,
Community conservation: Ingredients for success
For the past seven years, a group called SOS-Églises has led the fight to preserve two century-old village churches in Essex County. Located in Pointe-aux-Roches...
- 14 Feb 2008
- Community
Tools for conservation - Author: Ontario Heritage Trust,
Resources: Engaging citizens in community conservation
What's on the shelf Old Canadian Cemeteries: Places of Memory, by Jane Irwin with photographs by John de Visser (2007) Firefly Books. Canada abounds in...
- 15 Nov 2007
- Buildings and architecture
Community - Author: Beth Anne Mendes,
Discovering the City Beautiful
On July 25, 2007, the Ontario Heritage Trust and the Town of Kapuskasing unveiled a provincial plaque to commemorate the town plan that helped shape...
- 10 May 2007
- Buildings and architecture
Community
Tools for conservation - Author: Beth Hanna,
The R’s of conservation
An earlier generation spoke of the three R’s as “Reading, ‘riting and ‘rithmetic.” They were the fundamentals of education in the 19th century and considered...
- 10 May 2007
- Buildings and architecture
Community
Tools for conservation - Author: Sean Fraser,
Leading the way in municipal heritage planning
What’s happening in your community? With significant amendments to the Ontario Heritage Act in April 2005 and a strengthening of the Provincial Policy Statement (PPS)...
- 15 Feb 2007
- Community
- Author: The Honourable James K. Bartleman,
In the beginning . . . the first provincial plaque
Fifty years ago – on a fine fall afternoon, September 26, 1956 – I witnessed the unveiling of Ontario’s first provincial plaque in my hometown...
- 15 Feb 2007
- Buildings and architecture
Community - Author: Kiki Aravopoulos,
Exploring Country Heritage Park
In March 2006, the Ontario Heritage Trust acquired a cultural conservation easement on Country Heritage Park. Located in Milton, this designed heritage attraction was created...
- 07 Sep 2006
- Buildings and architecture
Community - Author: Louise Burchell,
Saving the Spencerville Mill – Preserving community heritage
The Spencerville Mill, a fine cut-stone flour and grist mill, is located on the bank of the South Nation River in the small rural village...
- 07 Sep 2006
- Community
Cultural landscapes - Author: Romas Bubelis,
Rush and remembrance
On a windswept summer day in 2005, a small congregation gathered beside a cloverleaf off-ramp at the western fringe of Toronto. In Richview-Willow Grove Cemetery...
- 07 Sep 2006
- Buildings and architecture
Community
Cultural objects - Author: Erin Semande,
The biography of a house: If these walls could speak
Researching family history is a popular pastime for many who want to uncover their family’s unique past and discover how they contributed to Ontario’s growth...
- 16 Feb 2006
- Buildings and architecture
Community
Tools for conservation - Author: Gordon Pim,
Winning the battle
There are countless examples across the province of successful restorations of Ontario’s treasured heritage sites. Although the challenges are great – funding being the primary...
- 16 Feb 2006
- Buildings and architecture
Community
Adaptive reuse - Author: Sean Fraser,
Our cultural heritage places: how heritage buildings adapt
Although heritage remains a year-round activity for many of us, Heritage Day is celebrated annually on the third Monday in February. This year’s theme speaks...
- 16 Feb 2006
- Buildings and architecture
Community - Author: Tim Mallon,
Small-town museums key to small-town success
For 18 years, my wife and I raised our two sons in the Town of Richmond Hill just north of Toronto. When we moved to...
- 08 Sep 2005
- Buildings and architecture
Community - Author: David Cuming,
Moving forward with heritage conservation
Thirty years ago, when the Ontario Heritage Act was new, I was a young planner with about a year’s experience working in London, England and...
- 08 Sep 2005
- Buildings and architecture
Natural heritage
Community
Cultural landscapes - Author: Richard Moorhouse and Beth Hanna,
The new Ontario Heritage Act: The evolution of heritage conservation
An important shift has occurred in Ontario’s legislative framework for heritage conservation. On April 28, 2005, the Ontario Heritage Amendment Act (Bill 60) received royal...
- 12 Feb 2005
- Natural heritage
Community - Author: Ontario Heritage Trust,
Hurricane Hazel 50 years later
There was little warning about Hurricane Hazel – one of the worst storms in Canada’s history. At the time, few Canadians paid attention to tropical...
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- © King's Printer for Ontario, 2023
- Photos © Ontario Heritage Trust, unless otherwise indicated.
- Accessibility
- Privacy statement
- Terms of use
- © King's Printer for Ontario, 2023
- Photos © Ontario Heritage Trust, unless otherwise indicated.