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A
Short History of Toronto:
People have lived in the Toronto region on the north shore of Lake Ontario
for almost 11,000 years since the first indigenous people moved here
from the south after the ice age. Direct contact with Europeans occurred
in the 17th century, and the French built small trading posts here during
the 18th, but the birth of the urban community did not occur until the
British regime. In 1787, the Toronto area was purchased from the Mississaugas;
then in 1793, John Graves Simcoe, lieutenant-governor of Upper Canada,
established a military post and civilian town to improve the colony's
defences during a period of threatened American invasion. He named his
settlement ‘York' and moved the provincial capital here from the
vulnerable border village of Niagara.
York grew slowly to only 720 people by 1814 and faced numerous blows
in its early years, including American attacks and occupations during
the War of 1812. Nevertheless, the settlement expanded quickly after
1815 because of its importance as the colonial capital, which also attracted
institutions with province-wide interests, such as banks and schools.
Additionally, it was geographically well positioned to serve the commercial
needs of a newly-settling hinterland at a time of expanding trade and
improving transportation. When the province incorporated the town as
the City of Toronto in 1834 (to provide mechanisms to meet the needs
of an urbanizing population), the community was Upper Canada's largest
with 9,250 souls. This population continued to grow, reaching 30,775
in 1851 on the eve of the railway era. However, various tribulations
threatened the city: the economy suffered serious downturns at various
times, rebellion divided Toronto violently in 1837-8, cholera ravaged
the population in 1832, 1834, and 1849, and typhus struck in 1847-8.
Yet, b y 1853, the year the first trains pulled out of Toronto, a recognizably
modern city had taken shape, with distinct residential and commercial
neighbourhoods, gas lighting, piped water, and such notable public buildings
as St Lawrence Hall and St James' Cathedral.
Industrialization, beginning modestly in the mid-19th century, expanded
greatly after Confederation, and contributed significantly to shaping
the city's environment and prosperity. By 1901, the industrial, commercial,
financial, and institutional centre had a population of 208,000, which
rose to 667,500 by 1941. During these years, Toronto began to compete
with Montreal as the nation's premier centre, not only economically,
but also culturally, as exemplified by the founding of the Royal Ontario
Museum in 1912 and the Toronto Symphony in 1922. Toronto's population
eventually surpassed Montreal's in 1976, by which time the city had become
Canada's most important economic and cultural engine.
As late as the 1940s, Toronto's population was largely Protestant (72
per cent in 1941), and fundamentally British (78 per cent, but mainly
Canadian-born). As might be expected given these statistics, the world
wars saw Torontonians flock to the colours with particular fervour compared
to other parts of Canada. At the same time the great 20th-century conflicts
contributed to dramatic increases in the city's economic, industrial,
and technological enterprises as well as in breaking down social barriers
such as the presence of increasing numbers of women in the workforce.
Torontonians faced numerous other challenges during the 20th century,
ranging from the poverty suffered by many families across the generations
to the shorter-term disaster of the Great Depression.
A great shift in the spirit of the community began with the numerous
waves of immigrants after 1945. By 2001, Toronto had become one of the
most multicultural cities on the planet, where 152 languages and dialects
were spoken in an atmosphere of comparative harmony. According to that
year's census, more than half of Toronto's 2.5 million residents were
born outside Canada, and a million people belonged to visible minorities.
These post-war decades also saw the compact city of 1945 burst its boundaries
like other North American cities to consume some of Canada's best farmland,
both within Toronto's ultimate 632-square-kilometre boundary, and far
beyond into the bedroom communities of Ontario's ‘Golden Horseshoe.'
Today's Toronto is a large and complex urban centre. Like any similarly
large city it faces important challenges and competing opinions on how
to face them. At the same time, Toronto continues to flourish as a tremendously
exciting city, embracing a strong and prospering economy, rich cultural
underpinnings, and retaining its long heritage as a comparatively safe,
orderly, and inclusive community, where working and living conditions
are among the very best to be had on the planet.
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