Villages of Toronto: Fairbank's
Paul J. McGrath, OGS 23947
This article has been reproduced with permission from the estate of:
This is the second in a series
of articles on Lost Villages of Toronto. In the next issue: The Village
of Norway.
While it never actually achieved
“village” status, Fairbank’s is nevertheless an interesting
lost village of Toronto. Named for the farm of Matthew PARSONS, this village
was found in the area of Eglinton Avenue West and Dufferin Street. It
was called “Fairbank’s Farm”, but the people of the
area called it “Fairbank’s”. Today most people simply
refer to the area as “Fairbank”.
Matthew PARSONS was born on
May 23, 1816 in Wiltshire, England, the son of Jacob PARSONS (c.1774)
and Margaret ARCHER (c.1793). Jacob and family emigrated to Canada around
1820, settling in York West Township (York County).
In 1835, at age 19, Matthew left his father’s farm; he purchased
a large 200 acre parcel of land which had originally been deeded to Jacob
ANDERSON. The land was located on York West Concession III, Lot Nº.
3. Concession III ran between present-day Dufferin and Keele Streets.
Lot 3 was north of the present-day Eglinton Avenue West, half-way to Lawrence
Avenue West. Matthew named his new farm “Fairbank”, although
why he chose that name is lost to history.
Matthew then set about clearing
his land. In 1837, he was accused by the government of being a sympathizer
of McKenzie’s Rebels. He was arrested, but soon released when no
evidence could be found. Matthew married Elizabeth McKAY of York Township
on November 11, 1841; his brother Jacob and Elizabeth’s brother
William were the witnesses.
Others soon followed to the
new “village” of Fairbank. A list of residents in the 1860s
included Robert and William A. MOORE, Joseph WATSON, Alexander and James
GIBBS, Joseph and Jacob P. ROSS, James ANDERSON, and the DOLLERY brothers,
Isaac, William and Henry.
In 1874 a post office was opened
at the northwest corner of what is now Dufferin and Eglinton, the first
postmaster being William TODD (from 1874-1875). From 1876 to 1877 the
postmaster was R.D. MacPHERSON, while Francis McFARLANE held that office
from 1877 to 1894.
As with the rest of Toronto,
the 1870s saw the building of several hotels and taverns in Fairbank,
including one operated by Rodolphus WILSON and another by Francis McFARLANE
(who was also postmaster). New residents of the area included John THOMPSON,
Henry SANDERS, and James TYLER (butcher and drover), to name a few.
By the late 1880s land prices
and rents were high in the City of Toronto, so developers tried to entice
people to build homes in the suburbs (sound familiar?!). In 1889 the Toronto
Belt Line Company was formed by a group of prominent Torontonians to construct
and operate a radial railway around the City’s suburbs to provide
commuter service. Fairbank was chosen as one of the station stops on the
Beltway.
The real-estate arm of the
company had grandiose plans, promoting areas such as Fairbank as the “Highlands
of Toronto”. Construction of the Beltway began in 1890 using existing
Grand Truck lines. Their timing, however, could not have been worse. Excessive
promotional expenses, combined with a huge downturn in real estate values
caused by the recession of the early 1890s, meant that the line was in
trouble before it began operations. GTR had to step in to complete the
project which opened for operations in July of 1892. The fare was only
5 cents between stations, but ridership was not enough to keep the line
afloat. A rival line, the Toronto and Suburban Railway Company, provided
a more convenient schedule, and helped put the Beltway out of its misery;
it ceased operations after only 28 months. The only remnant of this once
grand transportation scheme is the Belt Way bridge which crosses Yonge
Street just south of Davisville.
Matthew and Margaret PARSONS
had several children, including Jacob (born c.1842), William (c.1844),
Hannah (c.1849), Mary (c.1851), and Amelia (c.1861). The family farm “Fairbank”
remained in the PARSONS family until as late as 1955.
In the 1860s, a one room school
was built for the “village” using bricks manufactured from
clay on the PARSONS farm. As well, in 1889 Matthew donated a small parcel
of land at the southeast corner of his lot to build the Fairbank Methodist
Church. Now known as the Fairbank United Church, it stands today on Dufferin
Street, just south of Wingold Av.
The “village,”
meanwhile, remained part of York West Township until it became part of
Metropolitan Toronto in 1953. An amendment to the Toronto Act in 1966
allowed York to become a Borough. It incorporated as a City in 1984, although
it was eventually amalgamated into the City of Toronto in 1998.
Although the real estate term
“Fairbank” now includes the area south of Eglinton, this whole
area did not see significant development until well into the 1920s, ‘30s
and ‘40s.
This is the second in a series
of Lost Villages of Toronto. In the next issue: The Village of Norway.
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