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The Old Garrison Burying Ground 1794-1863

Photos by Alan L Brown - Posted September, 2006

In Victoria Square, a block of land southeast of King and Bathurst streets, can be found this 2000 City of Toronto Culture Division plaque. Here's what it says:
Coordinates: 43.642714 -79.400119 |
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The Town of York's first burying ground lies within this park. Established by the British army, the cemetery occupies a 38 by 91 metre rectangle running at a diagonal across the centre of the park. The first known interment was that of Katherine Simcoe, the 15-month-old daughter of Lieutenant-Governor John Graves Simcoe and his wife Elizabeth. Many of the known burials were the wives and children of garrison soldiers. Notable interments include Christopher Robinson (d. 1798), father of Sir John Beverly Robinson; Captain Neal McNeale, killed in the Battle of York on 27 April 1813; and Lieutenant Zachariah Mudge (d. 1831), Private Secretary to Sir John Colborne, whose unexplained suicide shook the colonial community. The last known burial was that of Private James McQuarrick (d. 1863). Afterwards, an interim military cemetery opened at the foot of Dufferin Street, which was replaced with one on Garrison Common to the west of Fort York.
Related webpages
Town of York
York's first burying ground
Other plaques at this location
Victoria Memorial Square
Related Toronto plaques
Military Burial Ground
Strachan Avenue Military Burying Ground
The Battle of York 1813
Castle Frank
Church of St. John the Evangelist (The Garrison Church)
Colonel W.J. Stewart
The Defence of York
Elizabeth Posthuma Simcoe
Fort York
Fort York
Landing of American Troops at York
Lieutenant-Governor John Graves Simcoe
The Second Invasion of York
Victoria Memorial Square
The War of 1812 & the Siege of York
More
Cemeteries
Here are the visitors' comments for this page.
> Posted January 10, 2012
As a child I use to play in the cemetery. I remember the headstones leaning up against a fence on the west side of the park. I went to St. Johns and my mother was born on Draper St. My parents were married in St. Johns. In records of the area, you may find the name of Margorie Burgon, who ran the clinic in the church. I do remember Rev. Robbie Robertson. I believe he was, along with Rev. Bill Eby, the chaplain of the Irish Regiment of Canada. My mother often told me that John Simcoe's daughter is buried in the northwest corner of the cemetery, and my mother also told me that when they extended Wellington St. during WW2 they widened Druro Lane. I am pleased with the way the park is, and especially the section with the headstones.
Sincerely yours, David R. Burgon
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