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Saturday, December 23, 2017

Black Creek Pioneer Village: Useful Information

Black Creek Pioneer Village: Useful Information


This village is Toronto’s largest outdoor history site. It’s part of a rich network of recreational areas across Toronto. It’s great for families to just get outside and explore the Black Creek Pioneer Village together.

Useful information:

Washrooms are located in the Visitor’s Centre, Event Pavilion and in the Half Way House (downstairs).

Baby Change Stations are available in the Visitors’ Centre and Event Pavilion washrooms.

Strollers rental is available (inquire at admissions desk). Wheelchairs are available free of charge (subject to availability, require at admission desk).


A ghost from ancient times is walking through a street in the village. Photo by Elena

Exhibit Gallery is located in the Visitors’ Centre. Historic displays & artifacts.

Gift Shop: Souvenirs, gifts & snacks. Located in the Visitors’ Centre.

Visitors are welcome to use photo and video cameras on-site for non-commercial purposes. Tripods are prohibited inside the buildings and commercial shoots must be arranged in advance.

For your safety and enjoyment at the Village:

Please observe these guidance and policies to ensure the well-being and safety of all visitors and preservation of the historical collections:

Smoking is not permitted anywhere at Black Creek Pioneer Village except in the designated smoking area outside the Visitors’ Centre.

Mackenzie House and a ghost from the XIXs century. Photo by Elena

Seeing eye and hearing aid dogs are welcome. All other pets must be kept on a leash, accompanied at all time, and may not enter historic buildings or food areas.

Picking of flowers, crops or fruits in the Village is not permitted.

Climbing walls, fences or trees is not permitted.

For their own well-being, the Village doesn’t permit the feeding of farm animals.

Some historic buildings are not accessible by wheelchair, or access is through an alternative entrance nearby.

Rollerblades, skateboards and bicycles are not permitted in the village.

Wear outdoor footwear appropriate for an outdoor setting. You’ll be walking on wooden boardwalks and dirt country roads.

Black Creek Pioneer Village is operated by Toronto and Region Conservation Authority (TRCA), which offers parks, campgrounds, a golf course and more. TRCA works every day to protect our heritage, both natural and historical. Families can get outside with their kids and play, cycle, hike, swim, camp, explore nature… Adults can teach the children seasons and show them where maple syrup comes from. They can follow the flow of the rivers, explore the winter wonderland which is there, close at hand, waiting for you to discover.

Men & Women wanted to pick apples. High Wages 10 cents a bushel. September 20th. Pine Springs Farm. Laskay C. W. John Wood. Black Creek Printing Office. Photo by Elena

Mackenzie House. The Mackenzie House was built in 1837, and was originally located in Woodbridge, Ontario. First built as a one-storey log cabin, it was later expanded to a one-and-a-half storey structure. At Black Creek Pioneer Village it is the home of the clockmaker and the dressmaker. By the middle of the nineteenth century sewing machines were commonly used in factories but were also available for women to have in their own homes. Although a dressmaker still did much of the detailed and decorative stitching on a dress by hand, a sewing machine helped her save time with the other stitching and allowed her to complete orders more quickly. Photo: Megan Jorgensen

Black Creek Village. Cabinet Maker’s Shop: This building originally housed the Dominion Carriage Works in Sebringville, Ontario and was built there around 1867. At Black Creek Pioneer Village it houses the Cabinet Maker`s shop where furniture can be both maid and repaired. In this shop there are a number of tools that operate with the use of a pedal or hand-crank. Cabinet Making is a trade that developed quickly and successfully in Ontario in the earliest half of the nineteenth century because many of the first settlers arrived with very little furniture. In addition to producing everyday furniture, nineteenth century Cabinet Makers sometimes made coffins and acted as the local undertakers. Photo: Megan Jorgensen

Big Turtle

Big Turtle


Many years ago the world had two parts. Animals lived in the lower part, which was completely covered in water and had no land or soil. Above was the Sky World, where the sky people lived. The Sky World had lots of soil, with beautiful mountains and valleys. One day a girl from the Sky World went for a long walk and became very tired.

“I’m so tired, I need to rest,” she said. She sat down under the spreading branches of an apple tree and quickly fell asleep. Suddenly, there was a rumbling sound like thunder and the ground began to crack. A big hole opened up next to the apple tree.

“What’s happening?” screamed the frightened girl. She tried to move but it was too late. She and the tree slid through the hole and tumbled over and over towards the watery world below.

“Help me! Help me!” screamed the girl. Luckily two swans were swimming below and saw the girl tumbling down from the sky. “Come on!” yelled one swan. “Let’s catch her before she hits the water.” “Okay!” yelled the other. The swans spread their wings together and caught the girl on their soft feather backs. “Whew! That was lucky,” said the girl. “But what do I do now? I can’t get back up to the Sky World and I can’t stay on your backs forever.”

“We’ll take you to big turtle,” said the swans. “He knows everything.” After hearing what happened, the Big Turtle called all the animals in the water world to a meeting. He told them an old story about soil being found deep under the water. “If we can get some of that soil, we can build an island on my back for you to live on,” said the Big Turtle. “Sounds good to me,” said the young girl. The Otter, Beaver and Muskrat started arguing over whom would dive for the soil. “I’ll go,” said the sleek Otter, brushing his glossy fur. “No! I’ll go,” said Beaver, slapping the water with his big flat tail. “I’m the best swimmer,” said Muskrat “I’ll go.”

Jean-Drapeau Park, Montreal, photo by Elena

“Aachoo!” sneezed the young girl.” Guys, guys, would just one of you go. These swan feathers are getting up my nose and making me sneeze”. “Sorry” said the swans.

“That’s alright,” said the young Sky girl.

Then Toskwaye the little Toad popped up out of the water. “I’ll go. I can dive very deep,” she said. The other animals started laughing and pointing at Toskwaye. “You! You’re too small and ugly to help”. Cried the others, laughing.

“Be quite!” said Big Turtle in a loud, stern voice. “Everyone is equal and everyone will have a chance to try”. The sleek Otter smoothed his glossy fur, took a deep breath and slid into the water. He was gone for a long time before he came up gasping for air. “It was too deep,” he said. “I couldn’t dive that far.

“Now it’s my turn,” said Beaver. He slapped the water with his tail as he disappeared. After a long time he came to the surface again. “It’s too far” he gasped. “No one can dive that deep.” Muskrat tried next and failed. “Aachoo!” sneezed the young girl. “This is not looking good” “Now it’s my turn,” said little Toskwaye the Toad. She took a deep

Breathe and jumped into the water. She was gone a very long time and everyone thought they wouldn’t see her again.

Suddenly Otter pointed at the water, shouting, and “Look, look bubbles!” Toskwaye’s small, ugly face appeared through the water. She spat a few grains of soil onto the Big Turtle’s back, then fell back into the water – dead.

The Turtle ordered the others to rub the soil grains and spread them around on his shell. The grains grew and grew, until a large island was formed – big enough for the girl to live on. It grew into our world, as we know it today. And the descendents of the Sky girl became the Earth’s people.

Today, some people say the whole world still rests on Big Turtles back. When he gets tired and changes his position, we have earthquakes.

Toad has not been forgotten either. American native Indians call her “Mashutaha”, which means ‘Our Grandmother’. No one is allowed to harm her.

From the Archives of Blue Panther

Watchman’s Shanty

Watchman’s Shanty

(in the Railway Museum of Toronto, Roundhouse park)

This small building is typical of those that provided shelter for the gate tenders or watchmen who guarded the numerous grade crossings where city streets intersected with railway tracks. In an era before electronic signals and automatic crossing gates, the watchman manually lowered the gates whenever a train approached, preventing vehicles and pedestrians from approaching the tracks until the train had passed.

The men who were employed in this service were often railroaders who had been injured on the job and reassigned to a task requiring less physical dexterity. Many of these shanties were mounted on a tower fifteen feet above the ground and the ample windows provided a clear view in all directions.

This 1914 view looking west over the Bay Street crossing shows an elevated watchman’s shanty. By this time policement were also assigned to guard the crossing. Source of the image: trha.ca

The shanty would have been originally fitted with a stove and a bench and for many years was located where the lead tracks for the CPR King Street freight yard crossed over John Street. As the frequency of trains multiplied, level crossings at busy streets became increasingly dangerous and grade separated crossings or underpasses were built to carry railway tracks above the city streets. The first of these opened along Queen Street West in 1885. Early in the 20th century, several expensive grade separations were built throughout the city, culminating in the Union Station viaduct that opened in 1930.

The Lying Tomato

The Lying Tomato


Once upon a time in Veggieland there was a tomato, a very red one, that loved to lie. Everybody in Veggie town who lied, their cheeks turned bright red. But for the tomato -he’s already red, so nobody can tell if he’s lying. It’s the part that he likes about lying because nobody can tell if he’s lying.

One day a watermelon rolled into town. He was red on the inside and green on the outside. The tomato was very red and he thought that he is the only bright red one and the sneakiest one. So he took one of the watermelon’s black seeds. And then one day the watermelon came to the Tomato’s house and asked him, “Have you seen any of my black seeds?” But since tomatoes don’t last forever, he got rotten, grayish and whitish. He did not like it but still he wanted to lie, so he said, “No I haven’t.” But then his cheeks turned red, and it was not a pretty sight.

Orange flowers. Photo by Elena

The watermelon figured out that he was lying, so the Pomegranate Police came to his house and threw him in the recycling. The watermelon found his black seed. Everybody lived happily ever after except for the rotten tomato. The end.

 Story written and read by Masha, 9, source: The Stories for kids written by the kids

Stories from Canada

Stories from Canada


A mercurial money-market: During the early days of Alberta’s oil industry, every nock and cranny in downtown Calgary was adapted for office space for the sale of new stock issues. At the end of each booming business day money had to be carted to the banks in big cardboard boxes and garbage cans.

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An early snowmobile in Manitoba, a converted model “T” ran for a transportation company between-the pas and Flin Flon in 1928.

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Rural telephone systems on the Prairies were in operation years before radio and were used as a form of pastime. Being party lines it was taken for granted that everyone on the line listened in. They were invaluable as instruments of instant communication. One long extended ring was the signal for everyone to answer by the method news of public meetings, dances, auction sales, auction sales, deaths, fires, etc. was passed along.

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The sewing machine was the first labor-saving device to come into the home. A popular brand – Singer – came to Canada in 1867 and with it came the first installment buying. Its inventor startled the world by selling his machines for $5 down 3$ a month with very few losses.

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An eye for an eye and en ear for debt in the rough and tumble period between the American Revolution and the War of 1812: it was a custom to cut off an ear of a person who failed to honor a debt to another.

Canada’s History. Park in the Night. Photo by Elena


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Gasoline was, at one time, thrown away. Before the development of the internal combustion engine and the motor car there was no use for gasoline. You could have all the gas you wanted if you would haul it away from the refineries.

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In the early days, the motoring roads were bad, but they became deplorable in springtime. At one time all motor travel was banned for 40 days and 40 nights every spring in Nova Scotia – till the frost came out of the Ground.

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The Canadian chess association was formed in 1872 in Hamilton, Ontario.

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The Fathers of Confederation really wanted to call the nation they founded the Kingdom of Canada. But because the USA, nearly 100 years after their war against King George III, was still sensitive to the word kingdom the fathers substituted the word Dominion.

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The town that moved: In the 1940’s the town of Lynn Lake wasn’t. It was the town of Sherridon, 264 km to the South in the Frozen Muskeg land of Northernn Manitoba. Sherridon was a mining town, but the ore ran out. Lynn Lake had nickel ore – millions of tons of it, but no one to get it out. So they jacked up Sherridon, put in on sleds and winter-hauled it by tractor, the 264 km to Lynn Lake.

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Gold in Nova Scotia: Stories about the production of gold in Nova Scotia (first discovered the same year, 1849, as the famous California Gold Rush) are overshadowed by bigger strikes in other provinces and territories. A man named John Campbell was the first to pan gold along the shores of Halifax County. He and the hundreds of gold seekers who followed him never made fortunes. Yet Nova Scotia production per man and gold yield per ton was better than that of either California or Australia.

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No place for weaklings: Thousands of gold seekers sought to reach the Klondike during the Yukon gold rush. To climb the treacherous mountain passes was difficult enough. But to help ensure their survival, the mounted police wouldn’t allow them to cross the border unless each man transported a full ton of supplies.

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Vancouver  – previously called Gastown, was almost entirely levelled by fire the year it was incorporated, 1886.

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Huckleberry Finn, the hero of Mark Twain’s famous novel “The adventures of Huckleberry Finn” is one of the most beloved characters in American Folklore. U.S. publishers and reviewers rejected it outright, and it was only after it had been published in Canada that it was finally accepted in the USA.

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The Yukon Ice Worm cocktail: During the Yukon gold rush, and Greenhorn visiting the Malmute saloon, who bragged about his accomplishments as a sourdough was asking to be taken down a peg or two. This was done by having him drink a specially prepared cocktail, the chief ingredient of which was an Ice Worm. No Greenhorn was ever told the “worm” was a food-colored inch of spaghetti with ink dot eyes.

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A copy of Dickens’ Pickwick Papers was found in a garbage dump, and returned to the Kingston, Ontario, Public Library 42 years overdue. The unpaid fine is calculated in 604.00$.

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In early Upper Canada theft of a Geranium plant was punishable by five years in prison.

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Amery Girod committed suicide in 1837. Until his death suicides were denied a Christian burial. And their ultimate fate was interment at a busy crossroads. Girod was the last recorded suicide to meet this fate, and he was buried at the now very busy corner of guy and Sherbrooke streets in Montreal.

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Fuel for the campfires of early travelers across the Canadian prairies was Buffalo manure. Buffalo chips or cow’s wood, as some called it, was often the only fuel available on the treeless plains.

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A dangerous occupation was that of fireman on the early trains, they had to frequently crawl along the running board as the engine thundered on its way, to place grease in all the bearings. The work was especially dangerous in freezing or other kinds of inclement weather.

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Goat Island which separates the Canadian and American falls at Niagara derived its name from the fact that its first owner John Stedman used it to pasture a goat.

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The luck of the draw: When the United Empire loyalists arrived in Upper Canada (Ontario) they were given land by a fair and democratic process. They drew their lot numbers from a hat held by a crown administrator.

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Lumbering got its start in 1765, when Mr. Davidson settled on the banks of the Miramichi River in New Brunswick. He sold masts to the Royal Navy, 30 m high, 1 m in diameter, at $680 each.

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Breakfast for a pioneer rural family in Upper Canada included pork, honey, chicken, salted salmon, gingerbread, pickled cabbage, pound cake and green tea.

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Sod houses were often the first homes of many early prairie settlers. A typical 500 home used 45 tonnes of sod in its construction.

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A black flag was raised on the dome of Montreal’s somber Bordeaux jail each time an execution took place.

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“Riding a man upon a rail” was a justice handed out by mid-19th century country people. It fell on those who infringed regional or moral laws. The culprit was stripped of clothing and covered with pine tar, rolled in feathers, then placed astride a fence rail. Thus, tarred and feathered it was understood he would now leave town.

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The world’s biggest cheese. Full scale production of dairy products – cheese and butter – began in the 1860’s. By 1880 an amusing development was the competition in making large cheeses. The grand champion was called the Canadian Mite, Made at Perth, Ontario, it weighed 9,9 tonnes and with a circumference of 8,4 metres it stood 1,8 metres in height.

Bois-de-Boulogne, Laval, Quebec, Canada. Photo : Elena


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Ancient seeds of the Arctic Lupin found in frozen silt at Miller Creek the Yukon Territory, in July 1954, were established to be over 10,000 years old.

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Paper work: The Festive season Canadians will use over 100 000 of wrapping paper.

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The North Pole has just one sunrise – March 21 and one sunset September 21 each year.

The first permanent white settlement in America, North of Mexico was Port Royal. Built in 1605 by Champlain.

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The first circus to tour areas of Canada that were populated was Ricketts’ of London, England (complete with Wild animals and clowns). It gave its premiere performance at Quebec in 1798.

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On Cristmas Day, 1856 The Simpson family of Toronto – grandparents, a bachelor son, two daughters with husbands and seven children waded through four times the amount of food that a like size family would consume today

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Northern floral abundance: Herschel  Island, off the Yukon coast, though only a silt deposit on a foundation of Glacial Age ice, has 370 varieties of wild flowers.

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The steam iron is not the modern invention many people think it to be. From 1860 on this kind of beauty was in use in Canada. It was charcoal-fired and worked on the same principle as its present day electric descendant.

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Itinerant shoemakers traveled from house to house before settlements were developed in Upper Canada (Ontario). Carrying the tools of their trade they boarded with a family until all its shoes were repaired or new ones made, and then moved on to the next house for a repeat performance.

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The manly art of self-defence: Fist fights occurred between individuals in all areas of Early Canada. Scores were settled by military personnel, voyageurs, lumberjacks, miners, etc. Occasionally a formal match was arranged and the participants were veritable gladiators. They fought without gloves in rounds of 3 minutes (some matches lasted for 72 rounds) and only a knockout ended a contest. The Marquis of Queensbury rules were introduced in 1867 – with a limit of 15 rounds.