Discover Toronto's history as told through its plaques
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Welcome to Queen's Park

Photo and transcription by contributor Wayne Adam - Posted December, 2010

Photo by Alan L Brown - Posted February, 2012

Photo by Alan L Brown - Posted February, 2012
In Queen's Park, in the section north of the Ontario Legislature, beside a walkway which runs northwest from the corner of Wellesley Street West and Queen's Park Crescent East, is this green plaque. Here's what it says:
Coordinates: 43.664184 -79.391847 |
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Queen's Park - "The People's Park"
Previously known as University Park, Queen's Park was renamed in honour of Queen Victoria and officially opened by her son H.R.H. the Prince of Wales (later King Edward VII) on September 11, 1860. The Park was originally established as a gathering place for social activities and relaxation on what was then the outskirts of the City. Now nestled in the heart of downtown Toronto, Queen's Park has throughout its history been a focal point for the citizens of the City.
History of the Park
1828/1829 - Ontario's first university, King's College, purchases 168 acres (68 hectares) of land north of the Town of York for its campus.
1849 - King's College becomes the University of Toronto.
1859 - The University leases 49 acres (20 hectares) of its land to the City of Toronto for 999 years to create a public park. The original Park (outlined in red) includes the land where the Ontario Legislature now sits, portions of the modern-day University campus, and portions of College Street and University Avenue.
1860 - Queen's Park is officially opened, the first municipal park in British North America. 500 trees are planted along College Street to mark the occasion.
1870 - The Canadian Volunteers Memorial (commemorating the Battle of Ridgeway) is unveiled, inaugurating a series of statues in the Park. Most of these statues now lie outside the Park's boundary.
1886 - The southern portion of the Park is turned over to the Province of Ontario for construction of Ontario's Legislative Building.
1889 - A pavilion in the centre of the Park replaces the earlier bandstand.
1914-1918 - The Park serves as a gathering place for troops during World War I.
1923 - The 48th Highlander's War Memorial is erected at the north end of the Park.
1949 - A new road is constructed on the west side of the Park to carry southbound traffic (Queen's Park Crescent West).
1969 - The equestrian statue of King Edward VII from New Delhi, India, is brought to Toronto and installed in the centre of the Park.
Related webpages
Queen's Park
Queen Victoria
Prince of Wales
Edward VII
Ontario Legislative Building
48th Highlanders of Canada
statue of King Edward VII
Related Toronto plaques
Queen's Park, Toronto
Queen's Park
Queen's Park
King's College
More Plaques in Queen's Park
Honourable George Brown 1818-1880
King's College
Lieutenant-General John Graves Simcoe 1752-1806
Lieutenant-General John Graves Simcoe 1752-1806
The Loyalists in Upper Canada
The Mackenzie-Papineau Battalion (1937-1938)
Queen's Park
Queen's Park
Queen's Park, Toronto
Robert Baldwin 1804-1858
The Royal Tour of 1939
Sir Gordon Drummond 1771-1854
Sir James Pliny Whitney
Sir John A. Macdonald 1815-1891
Sir Oliver Mowat 1820-1903
William Lyon Mackenzie 1795-1861
Related Ontario plaque
Battle of Ridgeway
More
Parks and Recreation
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