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 Although
the history of London begins in 1793, when Lieutenant-Governor
John Graves Simcoe selected the Forks of the Thames as his
choice for the future site for the capital of the province,
the city itself was not founded until 1826. By that year the
provincial capital had long been located at Toronto. What
was needed in the southwestern peninsula was an administrative
seat for the vast London District which covered most of central
Western Ontario. Vittoria, a little village in Norfolk County
which had served as the district town for some years, by 1825
was too remote from many of the little clusters of settlements
which were spreading north from Lake Erie.
When the court house at Vittoria was ruined by fire the legislature
set up a committee to investigate the possibility of a new,
more convenient location, for the district town. A committee,
presided over by Colonel Mahlon Burwell, was appointed to
make the selection. Burwell was qualified to advise on the
region. He was the right hand man of Colonel Thomas Talbot,
the chief colonizer of the western peninsula, and had surveyed
much of the territory himself. The committee bypassed St.
Thomas, which was as close to Lake Erie as Vittoria, and eventually
decided on the Crown Reserve of land that Simcoe had, so many
years before, set aside at the Forks of the Thames. Their
choice was confirmed in a provincial statute which came into
force on January 30, 1826. Then a local committee of magistrates,
headed by Colonel Talbot himself, selected the present site
of the Old Court House as the location for the government
buildings.
Burwell surveyed the town site, which covered the area
now bounded on the south and west by the two branches of
the Thames, roughly by Queens Avenue on the north and by
Wellington Street on the east. A temporary court house was
erected for the administration of the London District and
work soon began on what is now the Old Court House. Gradually
and unwillingly, for the Forks area was a wilderness, officials
of the London District began to move to the new centre from
their comfortable homes in Norfolk County. With them came
merchants and hostel keepers, including Dennis O'Brien,
who was London's first storekeeper and George J. Goodhue,
the first "Millionaire" of the city.
A Community Takes Shape
Soon a cluster of buildings mushroomed around the court
house square and the streets, loyally named after officials
of the province and Great Britain, began to hum with life.
The Bank of Upper Canada opened an office in the town and
substantial brick stores began to make their appearance.
In 1834 the Treasurer of the District, John Harris, erected
the first elegant mansion, the nucleus of "Eldon House"
of today. By that year the settlement had the 1,000 people
needed to be made a separate parliamentary riding.
In 1836 Lieutenant-Governor Sir Francis Bond Head, infamous
for his part in the Mackenzie Rebellion, separated London
from Middlesex and gave it its own member. Naturally, London
voted Tory. When the Rebellion broke out in 1837, the local
division of the Family Compact, the group which administered
the province, held the town for the government without difficulty.
Shortly the new Court House was bursting at the seams with
the captured rebels.
The Rebellion was one of the greatest stimulants to the
evolution of London, for the British government decided
to locate a garrison in the peninsula, which had been shaken
by the Duncombe uprising and was threatened by invasion
from the United States. Again London was chosen over St.
Thomas, which was little eager to have an "unruly garrison".
In 1838 the soldiers moved in and from then until 1869 there
were generally troops stationed on what is now Victoria
Park. This was another major factor in the making of London.
While the choice as district town had meant administrative
influence, the garrison rapidly brought military spending
and a greatly increased population, both through the soldiers
and their dependants and also through the larger number
of civilians required to minister to their needs.
Incorporation as a Town
By 1840 London was large enough to become an incorporated
town (somewhat equal to a village today). The survey was
extended east to include all the land to Adelaide Street,
south to Trafalgar Street and north to Huron Street. The
first council was elected and George J. Goodhue was chosen
as first town president. Municipal services then began to
appear and Covent Garden Market was established at its present
location in 1845. By that time the advance of settlement
in Western Ontario had necessitated the establishment of
new administrative districts centred around Goderich, Woodstock
and Simcoe. Yet the reduction in its administrative territory
little affected the growth of London, for by the early 1840's
the town was already beginning to establish a firm economic
control over what is still today its hinterland.
In its spread of commercial domination London was greatly
aided by the efforts of its member of the Legislature, Hamilton
H. Killaly, who directed his attention particularly to the
improvement of the roads spreading out from his own riding.
Communication to the north, the only direction that he missed,
was quickly taken care of by the leading merchants, including
John Labatt and Thomas Carling, who in the late 1840's constructed
the Proof Line Road (now north Richmond Street and Highway
4) to connect London with its thirsty hinterland. Manufacturing
also began to spring up, under the leadership of such figures
as the tanners, Simeon Morrell and Ellis W. Hyman, and the
iron founders Elijah Leonard and the McClary brothers.
The prosperity of the town is well demonstrated by the
fact that when fire struck in 1844 and 1845, nearly destroying
its centre, rebuilding was instantaneous. In 1848 London
was reincorporated with strengthened municipal powers and
the population was shown by the census at 4,584. Following
the fires further evidences of elegance made their appearance.
Benjamin Cronyn, Anglican Rector of London since 1832, and
his building committee engaged William Thomas of Toronto,
one of Canada's greatest architects, to rebuild their church.
The St. Paul's as designed by Thomas forms the nucleus of
the Cathedral which still graces the city today.
Thus, as the era of the iron horse burst upon Upper Canada,
London was in an excellent position to ensure that the railway
network of Western Ontario radiated from the city. Guided
by the merchants the Great Western Railway line (now the
Canadian National) was run through the middle of town, whereupon
London entered into its liveliest period of expansion and
land speculation. From December 15, 1853, when the first
train steamed in from Hamilton, until the panic and depression
of 1857, the city underwent a boom of building and land
speculation. Such mansions as "Grosvenor Lodge"
and "Locust Mount" were built, while the commercial
interests could begin construction of the 'Tecumseh House",
the largest hotel in British North America. In 1857 the
Board of Trade, now the Chamber of Commerce, was established.
Incorporation as a City
The event which crowned London's prosperity was the incorporation
of the town as a city, effective January 1, 1855. Murray
Anderson, a tinsmith, was elected first mayor, and the council
included such leading business figures as Thomas Carling
and Elijah Leonard. The coat-of-arms, still the symbol of
the city today, appropriately was topped by a railway engine
belching smoke.
Then suddenly, in 1857 it seemed that London's prosperity
was to be wiped away by depression. But in 1861 London was
rescued by the American Civil War. Located in a rich agricultural
belt, the city was soon shipping the wheat of its hinterland
to supply the Northern Army. Depression was supplanted by
prosperity.
Civil War affluence was soon evident in London's physical
appearance. The erection of large downtown buildings began
again and by the mid-1870's the centre of the city had assumed
the shape it retained up until the 1960's. The decade of
the 1870's also saw lines of new mansions rising along Queens
and Grand Avenues, visible reflections of the city's new-found
wealth. New institutions, such as the London Psychiatric
Hospital and St. Joseph's Hospital came into being. Huron
College was established in 1863 and the University of Western
Ontario followed in 1878.
Local financial institutions were founded simultaneously.
By 1864 the merchants of the city were rich enough to form
their own trust company, the Huron & Erie; life insurance
companies followed with the founding of the London Life
Insurance Company in 1874. The communications of the city
were again being extended, both internally and externally.
The London Street Railway was begun in 1873 and the modernization
of the bridges began with the construction of the present
Blackfriars Bridge in 1875. The telephone exchange appeared
in 1879. Outside the city, the London, Huron & Bruce
Railway was constructed to Wingham during 1871-75 and the
present Canadian Pacific tracks followed across town a decade
later. All these were factors which helped to consolidate
the hold of the city over the region. 1.
From this prosperous period, until the end of the century,
London grew in size both geographically and demographically.
Several of London's adjacent suburbs were annexed - London
East in 1885, London South in 1890 and London West in 1898.
Pottersburg, Ealing and Chelsea Green followed in 1912.
In 1914, on the eve of World War I, London had reached a
population of approximately 55,000 people.
Change, Evolution and Progress
During the interwar period from 1918 to 1939, the city continued
to grow steadily, although it was badly affected by the
Great Depression. Several large buildings were constructed
in this period - the Dominion Public Building on Richmond
Street, the first buildings on the present campus of the
University of Western Ontario, the Bell Telephone Building
on Clarence Street and the London Life Insurance Company
offices on Dufferin Avenue. Many new homes were built in
London South and in the vicinity of Huron Street. A major
flood struck London West in April, 1937. The water rose
fifteen feet in only a few hours. Miraculously, only one
resident was killed, though hundreds were left homeless.
Since the end of World War II, London has experienced a
growth unprecedented in its history. With the major annexation
of 1961, which added 60,000 people to the city, London had
grown close to a quarter of a million people in 1976, the
one hundred and fiftieth anniversary of its founding. Major
physical changes in London's appearance have occurred. In
the old city core, many of the landmarks of the past have
gone to be replaced by modern developments - the McClary
factory was demolished for Wellington Square; the Hotel
London was replaced by the City Centre; the Covent Garden
Market was enclosed by the Market Garden Parking Building;
and a new Court House was finally constructed on a demolished
two block site.
New suburbs have appeared on the outskirts-Lockwood Park,
Sherwood Forest, Oakridge Acres. The old residential areas
became threatened by the overuse of the automobile on streets
meant only to accommodate horse and buggy. Recent planning
decisions have, however, been carefully made to ensure that
the character and integrity of the old city is maintained,
something which can only result in enhancing the urban environment
and in making London a pleasant place for its present and
future citizens.
1. Frederick H. Armstrong and Daniel J. Brock, "Reflections
on London's Past" (London, 1975), pp. 8-10
2. John H. Lutman, "The Historic Heart of London"
(London, 1977), pp. 8 & 9
Copyright © 1995-2002 City of London
We look forward to you making London your home also.
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