Название: Bowmanville
Автор: William Humber
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: История
isbn: 9781459713314
isbn:
The rise of important 19th century Ontario towns was furthered by the School Act in 1846 and then the Municipal Act in 1849 which replaced District government with that of counties. These acts led to a building boom of new courts, town halls and schools which were the necessary infrastructure, along with the first crude industrial buildings and stores, for the creation of town permanence.
Eventually money from wheat production in the rural hinterland brought builders, bricklayers and carpenters to small towns like Bowmanville and created the varied economy of rural Ontario. Wheat growing was in turn replaced by a more diversified farming economy as the century advanced. Ultimately small patchwork-like divisions of land into ten to twelve acres with hedgerows, treelines, and wooden snake fences created the distinctive appearance and pattern found in country areas.6
Most significantly in 1850, Northumberland and Durham Counties were united and assumed their legal place. Until 1974 Bowmanville’s important political ties would be with eastern neighbours. This orientation influenced the future development of the town which left the valley of the Bowmanville Creek and began to follow the Kingston Road on its march to Port Hope and Cobourg.
Notes
1 George W. Spragge, “The Districts of Upper Canada 1788-1849,” Ontario History XXXIX. (1947), pp. 91-400.
2 Don Thomson, Men and Meridians: History of Surveying and Mapping in Canada. (Ottawa: Queen’s Printer, 1966).
3 Edwin Guillet, The Story of Canadian Roads. (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1966), p. 51.
4 W.F. Weaver, Crown Surveys in Ontario. (Ontario Department of Lands and Forests, 1962, revised 1968).
5 John van Nostrand, “Roads and Planning: The settlement of Ontario’s Pickering Township, 1789-1975”, City Magazine, 1975.
6 Blake and Greenhill, Rural Ontario. (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1969).
Chapter Four
Few More Picturesque Spots in Ontario
“. . . there are very few, if any, more picturesque spots in the Province of Ontario. The principal part of the town is built upon a high ridge of land running north and south overlooking Lake Ontario and the lovely valley that intervenes. There are two streams—one to the east and one to the west thus affording good natural drainage.”
– J.B. Fairbairn, History and Reminiscences of Bowmanville
Lieutenant-Governor John Graves Simcoe first proclaimed the basis of survey, land ownership and purpose for Upper Canada on 7 February 1792. He desired the establishment of a landed aristocracy which would lead new settlement in the ways of loyalty to the institutions and ideals of Great Britain.
Squair says that while Simcoe’s immediate intention was not realized “. . . freemen have lived upon that land and eaten abundantly of its fruits in peace, have inhabited good houses, have chosen their own councils and parliaments with full powers to make and unmake laws, and still have not run riot in tearing down the old barriers of authority in religion and morals. They have not demanded to be detached from Britain and her monarchy. Simcoe would not have asked for a higher result, . . .”.1
The original settlers of the region about Bowmanville are celebrated rightly for their fortitude and imagination in choosing to relocate from the United States. But their long term role in the creation and evolution of the town are overrated dramatically in all local histories. Bowmanville’s physical growth is of greater significance to present day residents than even the role of first settlers, for it shapes not only memory but the everyday experience of the town.
The first settlers were a second generation of United Empire Loyalists,2 people as much concerned with acquiring virgin lands as with using them as collateral in their eventual assumption of a privileged position in what remained of British North America. They encountered hardship and strife, but in the main theirs was to be a life of advantage and opportunity in which the fortunes of the future community were of either limited or no import.
The Conants or Conats (the spelling depending on the source) and Trulls played only a minor role in Bowmanville’s eventual story. However, the Burks or Burkes were somewhat more significant assuming on 31 December 1798, after completion of survey, Lot 13 Concession 1 as well as Lot 13 Broken Front, an area totalling four-hundred acres.3 This contained within it the swift flowing creek on which a succession of mills most notably Vanstone’s would be built. A tannery, carding mill, and other businesses would appear below this site on the west bank of the creek marking it as the area’s first significantly settled and developed site.
The town, however, would not grow here despite the Belden Atlas’ designation in 1878 of several streets, Coleman, Chapel and Clinton, below the millpond.4 Today it is an uninhabited conservation area, but its westerly orientation is finally being realized in the strip highway development sprouting along Highway 2.
By 1820 John Burk had added a store to the grist mill and saw mill on his site. He sold the store about this time to a Lewis Lewis, a man of whom so little is known that it may be that his first or last name was used for both purposes.
In 1824 the business empire of Charles Bowman purchased the store. Bowman, a Scotsman based in Montreal, was an early dry goods entrepreneur and financier with interests throughout Ontario. Robert Fairbairn was sent to represent Bowman’s interest and a year later a teenager, John Simpson (1812-1885), was hired as clerk. Simpson may in fact have been Bowman’s illegitimate son. Bowmanville perhaps numbered about 118, but the personalities who would play key roles in its future were now in place.5 Fairbairn left Bowman’s employ to become Darlington’s postmaster in 1829, the office having been relocated to Bowmanville two years before. Simpson, despite his age, now assumed a leading role in protecting Bowman’s interests.
The small community which had begun life in the valley south of the present Vanstone Mill, was at first known simply as Darlington Mills. Here in the 1830s, according to Hamlyn, Lunney, and Morrison “. . . the settlement of Darlington and the adjoining townships got seriously underway, hundreds of immigrants coming in, mainly from the British Isles.”6 It was in this period that locals started to refer to the town by the name of the man whose store gave credit in times of need. Thomas Rolph’s Descriptive and Statistical Account of Canada (1841) refers to “Bowmansville . . . as likely to be a large place.”7 Squair suggests the spelling was in error, but it seems more likely that by the 1830s people were calling Darlington Mills by the informal title of Bowman’s village, and gradually over the next few years and with several interpretations, the more formal and present spelling was accepted as the preferred name.
Bowman himself had only limited contact with the village and eventually returned to England to pursue his interest in collecting European art. He died in the late 1840s, perhaps unaware of his legacy in the new world.
So homogeneous is the earliest European settlement of Bowmanville that Fairbairn devotes a paragraph to the first non-white, other than native, resident. “The first barber shop,” he says, “was opened in a little hole dug out under the first hotel, occupied by Hindes. The professor of the tonsorial art was a colored man named Smith. He was tall, straight and muscular, something of a pugilist, and up to all kinds of circus performances. He was here, off and on till well up in the sixties. The only other colored family resident at this time was called Campbell.”8 СКАЧАТЬ