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Ossington Avenue

Ossington Avenue is a main or arterial street in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, west of downtown. While the northern 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) of Ossington Avenue is residential, its southern terminus is popularly known as the Ossington Strip, an area popular for its dining, nightlife and shopping establishments.

Ossington Avenue
Maintained byCity of Toronto government
Length3.5 km (2.2 mi)
South endQueen Street
Major
junctions
North endDavenport Road
Nearby arterial roads
← Dufferin Street
Ossington Avenue
Bathurst Street →
Ossington Ave at Dundas St West in 2022
Old house at Ossington Avenue

History edit

 
A TTC trolleybus on the Ossington route in 1987

Ossington Avenue is named after the ancestral Nottingham home of the Denison family (see Ossington), early land-owners around the street's southern terminus. (A number of area streets bear Denison-associated names: George Taylor Denison's 'Brookfield House' stood at the northwest corner of Ossington and Queen Street from around 1815 to 1876, giving its name to Brookfield Street;[1] Dover Court was the residence of nephew Richard Lippincott, initially accessed by Dover Court Road (roughly following the course of contemporary Dovercourt Road);[2] the Fennings and Taylor branches of the family have namesakes as Fennings and Rolyat Streets; Heydon Park and Rusholme were Denison manor houses, giving their names to other local streets.[3])

The origin of Ossington Avenue[4] lies in John Graves Simcoe's 1793 plan for a western military road from York, the new capital of Upper Canada. The initial conception of this road ran west down contemporary Queen Street West (then Lot Street), hugging the shore of Lake Ontario onward to Niagara. This road was to be named Dundas Street, in honor of Simcoe's friend Henry Dundas.

Following the War of 1812, this route was deemed too vulnerable to American invasion, and was destroyed. A more northerly route was substituted, and cut by the Queen's Rangers under the direction of Captain George Taylor Denison, completed by 1817. This route involved an unusual dogleg. Its first segment continued west along Queen Street West, crossing Garrison Creek, and running to the eastern edge of Park Lot 25 (purchased not long before by Denison himself); a short 560-metre (1,840 ft) segment then turned north, running between Denison's Park Lot 25 and the neighbouring Park Lot 24 of James Givins; upon meeting an ancient First Nations "desire path" trail following the high ground beneath the western fork of Garrison Creek, the route turned again west along this natural contour, forming the final segment of Dundas Street (and by far the longest, running approximately 70 kilometres (43 mi) west to the town of Dundas, Ontario, along the route of contemporary Dundas Street West).

The 560-metre (1,840 ft) north–south segment of Dundas Street would become the contemporary "Ossington Strip", and was developed as a mixed commercial and residential street beginning in the 1840s.[5] The Ontario Provincial Lunatic Asylum was opened at the foot of Dundas and Queen Street in 1850.[6] From the 1850s to around 1900, the area was a center of Toronto's meatpacking industry, with slaughterhouses and stockyards on the blocks and laneways just to the east.[7]

Nomenclature would be confusing until a late 1910s reform. By 1884, a street named "Ossington Avenue" had been constructed, running north from Dundas to Bloor Street,[8] and by 1890, as far as St. Clair[9] (though the section north of Davenport was eventually renamed to Winona Drive, and contemporary Ossington Avenue ends at Davenport). As of 1884, "Dundas Street" is a T-shaped entity comprising the Ossington Strip and contemporary Dundas Street West, west of the Garrison Creek bridge at contemporary Crawford Street. By 1894, the eastern spur of Dundas Street had been renamed, with "Arthur Street" consistently applied to contemporary Dundas Street West eastward from the Ossington Strip.[10] Finally, by 1923, contemporary naming is in place, with the Ossington Strip having been renamed "Ossington Avenue" (continuously with the segment running northward from contemporary Dundas and Ossington) and Arthur Street having been renamed "Dundas Street" (continuously with the segment running eastward from contemporary Dundas and Ossington).[11]

In 1968, after assassinating Martin Luther King Jr., James Earl Ray fled to Toronto and lived in a rooming house on Ossington Avenue. Ray would visit "a bar around the corner from Ossington St.", probably the Drake Hotel, where he would watch the news on the bar's television.[12]

As Toronto expanded west and other retail facilities opened, the Ossington Strip became an area of industrial uses, including automotive repairs and storage facilities. By 2003, this area became known for crime and the known presence of Vietnamese criminal gangs and street drug peddlers. A double murder in a karaoke bar that year sparked neighbourhood action in concert with the police to cut down on crime.[13]

By 2007, the low rents of stores along Ossington became attractive after rents along Queen Street West increased. This led to an influx of bars, restaurants, and stores. By 2009, the number of bars and restaurants created tension with residents of the surrounding neighbourhood, and licensing controls were imposed to stop the opening of more businesses of the same kind.[14] In 2010, the restrictions on new restaurants along Ossington were lifted, leading to the opening of several new establishments.[15]

Character edit

At its south end, Ossington starts at Queen Street and goes north, up a hill to Dundas Street. South of Queen is the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health's (CAMH) Queen Street Health Centre complex. From Shaw Street west to Dovercourt, the south side of Queen street is used for CAMH facilities. In summer 2012, Ossington was extended southward onto the CAMH campus and called Lower Ossington Avenue.

From this intersection north to Dundas, Ossington is largely lined with low-rise retail storefronts, typically with apartments on upper floors; other buildings house light industrial uses. Most buildings along this stretch date to the 19th century, and many have been restored in their conversion into restaurants and trendy stores, which have attracted visitors from around the Greater Toronto Area and made the area a magnet for international tourists visiting Toronto.

North of Dundas, the street changes to a primarily residential street. The road slopes down here as it goes into the Garrison Creek ravine, (the creek is buried nowadays) then starts a gradual slope up to its terminus at Davenport. The homes are typically two-story detached or semi-detached homes. This stretch has streetcar tracks and is used by the TTC often for short-turns by the 505 Dundas and 506 College streetcar routes.

North of College, on the west side is Dewson Street public school. One block east on Shaw Street is Central Commerce Collegiate high school. The next street to connect is Harbord Street which goes east from Ossington to Queen's Park Circle. The area is residential on both sides of the street.

North of Bloor Street, the street rises gently until just before Davenport where it reaches the old shoreline and the street rises rapidly to meet Davenport. Except for some businesses around the railway bridge north of Dupont, both sides of the street are two-storey residences.

Public transit edit

Ossington Avenue is served by the 63 Ossington TTC bus route. The bus route connects to the Toronto Transit Commission's Line 2 Bloor–Danforth Ossington subway station. Route 63 was a trolleybus route from December 1947 until 1992, but since then has been served by conventional buses.[16]

References edit

  1. ^ Hellie, pp. 47, 63
  2. ^ Hellie, p. 37
  3. ^ Wise/Gould, p. 46
  4. ^ Hellie, p. 30
  5. ^ Hellie, pp. 39--41
  6. ^ "History of the Queen Street Site". CAMH. Retrieved 2009-12-10.
  7. ^ Hellie, pp. 32, 42, sections 7.1, 9.1
  8. ^ "Goad's Fire Atlas 1884 Plate 22".
  9. ^ "Goad's Fire Atlas 1890 Plate 35".
  10. ^ "Goad's Fire Atlas 1894 Plate 22".
  11. ^ "Goad's Fire Atlas 1923 Plate 22".
  12. ^ Benzie, Robert (April 5, 2008). "How Toronto concealed King's killer". Toronto Star.
  13. ^ "Electric Avenue". Toronto Life. May 2008. Retrieved 2009-12-10.
  14. ^ "Ossington's high noon". Now Toronto. Retrieved 2009-12-10.
  15. ^ "The Ossington moratorium appears to have been lifted". blogTO. Retrieved February 3, 2012.
  16. ^ Sebree, Mac; and Ward, Paul (1974). The Trolley Coach in North America, p. 327. Los Angeles: Interurbans. LCCN 74-20367.
  • Wise Lenard; Gould, Allan (2000). Toronto street names: and illustrated guide to their origins. Willowdale, Ontario: Firefly Books. ISBN 1-55209-386-7.
  • Hellie, Benj (2015). On the Ossington Strip (PDF). Toronto, Ontario: Ossington Community Association.

External links edit

  • Ossington Community Association website
  • Ossington Village Blog

43°39′21″N 79°25′24″W / 43.65583°N 79.42325°W / 43.65583; -79.42325

ossington, avenue, main, arterial, street, toronto, ontario, canada, west, downtown, while, northern, kilometres, residential, southern, terminus, popularly, known, ossington, strip, area, popular, dining, nightlife, shopping, establishments, maintained, bycit. Ossington Avenue is a main or arterial street in Toronto Ontario Canada west of downtown While the northern 3 kilometres 1 9 mi of Ossington Avenue is residential its southern terminus is popularly known as the Ossington Strip an area popular for its dining nightlife and shopping establishments Ossington AvenueMaintained byCity of Toronto governmentLength3 5 km 2 2 mi South endQueen StreetMajorjunctionsDundas StreetBloor StreetDupont StreetNorth endDavenport RoadNearby arterial roads Dufferin Street Ossington Avenue Bathurst Street Ossington Ave at Dundas St West in 2022 Old house at Ossington Avenue Contents 1 History 2 Character 3 Public transit 4 References 5 External linksHistory edit nbsp A TTC trolleybus on the Ossington route in 1987 Ossington Avenue is named after the ancestral Nottingham home of the Denison family see Ossington early land owners around the street s southern terminus A number of area streets bear Denison associated names George Taylor Denison s Brookfield House stood at the northwest corner of Ossington and Queen Street from around 1815 to 1876 giving its name to Brookfield Street 1 Dover Court was the residence of nephew Richard Lippincott initially accessed by Dover Court Road roughly following the course of contemporary Dovercourt Road 2 the Fennings and Taylor branches of the family have namesakes as Fennings and Rolyat Streets Heydon Park and Rusholme were Denison manor houses giving their names to other local streets 3 The origin of Ossington Avenue 4 lies in John Graves Simcoe s 1793 plan for a western military road from York the new capital of Upper Canada The initial conception of this road ran west down contemporary Queen Street West then Lot Street hugging the shore of Lake Ontario onward to Niagara This road was to be named Dundas Street in honor of Simcoe s friend Henry Dundas Following the War of 1812 this route was deemed too vulnerable to American invasion and was destroyed A more northerly route was substituted and cut by the Queen s Rangers under the direction of Captain George Taylor Denison completed by 1817 This route involved an unusual dogleg Its first segment continued west along Queen Street West crossing Garrison Creek and running to the eastern edge of Park Lot 25 purchased not long before by Denison himself a short 560 metre 1 840 ft segment then turned north running between Denison s Park Lot 25 and the neighbouring Park Lot 24 of James Givins upon meeting an ancient First Nations desire path trail following the high ground beneath the western fork of Garrison Creek the route turned again west along this natural contour forming the final segment of Dundas Street and by far the longest running approximately 70 kilometres 43 mi west to the town of Dundas Ontario along the route of contemporary Dundas Street West The 560 metre 1 840 ft north south segment of Dundas Street would become the contemporary Ossington Strip and was developed as a mixed commercial and residential street beginning in the 1840s 5 The Ontario Provincial Lunatic Asylum was opened at the foot of Dundas and Queen Street in 1850 6 From the 1850s to around 1900 the area was a center of Toronto s meatpacking industry with slaughterhouses and stockyards on the blocks and laneways just to the east 7 Nomenclature would be confusing until a late 1910s reform By 1884 a street named Ossington Avenue had been constructed running north from Dundas to Bloor Street 8 and by 1890 as far as St Clair 9 though the section north of Davenport was eventually renamed to Winona Drive and contemporary Ossington Avenue ends at Davenport As of 1884 Dundas Street is a T shaped entity comprising the Ossington Strip and contemporary Dundas Street West west of the Garrison Creek bridge at contemporary Crawford Street By 1894 the eastern spur of Dundas Street had been renamed with Arthur Street consistently applied to contemporary Dundas Street West eastward from the Ossington Strip 10 Finally by 1923 contemporary naming is in place with the Ossington Strip having been renamed Ossington Avenue continuously with the segment running northward from contemporary Dundas and Ossington and Arthur Street having been renamed Dundas Street continuously with the segment running eastward from contemporary Dundas and Ossington 11 In 1968 after assassinating Martin Luther King Jr James Earl Ray fled to Toronto and lived in a rooming house on Ossington Avenue Ray would visit a bar around the corner from Ossington St probably the Drake Hotel where he would watch the news on the bar s television 12 As Toronto expanded west and other retail facilities opened the Ossington Strip became an area of industrial uses including automotive repairs and storage facilities By 2003 this area became known for crime and the known presence of Vietnamese criminal gangs and street drug peddlers A double murder in a karaoke bar that year sparked neighbourhood action in concert with the police to cut down on crime 13 By 2007 the low rents of stores along Ossington became attractive after rents along Queen Street West increased This led to an influx of bars restaurants and stores By 2009 the number of bars and restaurants created tension with residents of the surrounding neighbourhood and licensing controls were imposed to stop the opening of more businesses of the same kind 14 In 2010 the restrictions on new restaurants along Ossington were lifted leading to the opening of several new establishments 15 Character editAt its south end Ossington starts at Queen Street and goes north up a hill to Dundas Street South of Queen is the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health s CAMH Queen Street Health Centre complex From Shaw Street west to Dovercourt the south side of Queen street is used for CAMH facilities In summer 2012 Ossington was extended southward onto the CAMH campus and called Lower Ossington Avenue From this intersection north to Dundas Ossington is largely lined with low rise retail storefronts typically with apartments on upper floors other buildings house light industrial uses Most buildings along this stretch date to the 19th century and many have been restored in their conversion into restaurants and trendy stores which have attracted visitors from around the Greater Toronto Area and made the area a magnet for international tourists visiting Toronto North of Dundas the street changes to a primarily residential street The road slopes down here as it goes into the Garrison Creek ravine the creek is buried nowadays then starts a gradual slope up to its terminus at Davenport The homes are typically two story detached or semi detached homes This stretch has streetcar tracks and is used by the TTC often for short turns by the 505 Dundas and 506 College streetcar routes North of College on the west side is Dewson Street public school One block east on Shaw Street is Central Commerce Collegiate high school The next street to connect is Harbord Street which goes east from Ossington to Queen s Park Circle The area is residential on both sides of the street North of Bloor Street the street rises gently until just before Davenport where it reaches the old shoreline and the street rises rapidly to meet Davenport Except for some businesses around the railway bridge north of Dupont both sides of the street are two storey residences Public transit editOssington Avenue is served by the 63 Ossington TTC bus route The bus route connects to the Toronto Transit Commission s Line 2 Bloor Danforth Ossington subway station Route 63 was a trolleybus route from December 1947 until 1992 but since then has been served by conventional buses 16 References edit Hellie pp 47 63 Hellie p 37 Wise Gould p 46 Hellie p 30 Hellie pp 39 41 History of the Queen Street Site CAMH Retrieved 2009 12 10 Hellie pp 32 42 sections 7 1 9 1 Goad s Fire Atlas 1884 Plate 22 Goad s Fire Atlas 1890 Plate 35 Goad s Fire Atlas 1894 Plate 22 Goad s Fire Atlas 1923 Plate 22 Benzie Robert April 5 2008 How Toronto concealed King s killer Toronto Star Electric Avenue Toronto Life May 2008 Retrieved 2009 12 10 Ossington s high noon Now Toronto Retrieved 2009 12 10 The Ossington moratorium appears to have been lifted blogTO Retrieved February 3 2012 Sebree Mac and Ward Paul 1974 The Trolley Coach in North America p 327 Los Angeles Interurbans LCCN 74 20367 Wise Lenard Gould Allan 2000 Toronto street names and illustrated guide to their origins Willowdale Ontario Firefly Books ISBN 1 55209 386 7 Hellie Benj 2015 On the Ossington Strip PDF Toronto Ontario Ossington Community Association External links editOssington Community Association website Ossington Village Blog 43 39 21 N 79 25 24 W 43 65583 N 79 42325 W 43 65583 79 42325 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ossington Avenue amp oldid 1179646836, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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