From
MAPLE RIDGE BOOKS, UXBRIDGE, ON, Canada
Seller rating 5 out of 5 stars
AbeBooks Seller since May 12, 1999
pp: 108. The first edition signed by the author (and inscribed by him to a dear friend) on the dedication page. A history of the area that became the City of Toronto with a somewhat different focus than most accounts of 'Hogtown'. The author of this history credits William Berczy with establishing permanent settlement just north of Lake Ontario. And, it was these settlers who established a viable community, not the transplanted British 'leaders' whose object was to serve their time, and return home. The book is illustrated with maps, and drawings. It contains a reference for sources, a bibliography, and index. A very good copy with light signs of use. The text is clean and free of markings. Seller Inventory # 007783
Almost half the population of Toronto-immigrants and newcomers from elsewhere in Canada-has no cultural memory of our city's beginnings. In a bid to fill this gap, Earliest Toronto tells the city's story up to the War of 1812 and its aftermath. Beginning with the dramatic conflicts in the aboriginal communities around Lake Ontario before the coming of the Europeans in the early seventeenth century, followed by two centuries of French exploration and settlement, the city's early history will surprise many Torontonians. Simcoe, the founder of the village of York in 1793, is often presented as a great administrator and military leader. In fact he was a poor manager with no attachment to Canada, and a vigorous advocate of English snobbery and class distinction. His chief concern was to gain preferment in London and to transplant the values of the British class system to the forest frontier. Earliest Toronto makes a plausible case that the real founder of Toronto was William Berczy, a remarkably cultured and determined man who led an expedition of German immigrants to Markham in 1794, and who contributed significantly to the early development of the new settlement. Later chapters focus on the people and events that shaped the early years of a struggling frontier community. One of the stories is about the sinking of the Speedy on Lake Ontario, and how it led to the building of The Grange, today one of Toronto's oldest extant buildings and the birthplace of the Art Gallery of Ontario.
About the Author: Educated at McGill and Cambridge Universities, Robert MacIntosh has lived over fifty years in Toronto. After a brief career as an academic economist and long one as a banker, he wrote Different Drummers: Banking and Politics in Canada, published in 1991. A collector of books about Toronto, he decided to challenge the conventional wisdom about the real founders of the city.
Title: EARLIEST TORONTO **SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR**
Publisher: General Store Publishing House, Renfrew, ON
Publication Date: 2006
Binding: Soft cover
Condition: Very Good
Dust Jacket Condition: No Jacket, As Issued
Signed: Signed by Author(s)
Edition: 1st Edition
Seller: Summerhill Books, Toronto, ON, Canada
Trade Paperback. Condition: Very Good. Square 8vo. VII 107 pp., maps, notes, bibliography, index, colour and b/w illustrations, b/w photographs. Second printing. Cover shows rubbing, slight wear to one corner. Seller Inventory # 003228
Quantity: 1 available