In the news: Future of The Guild property

13-C-2.1 Guild Inn / Bickford house

*Excerpt from The Scarborough Mirror, Thursday, April 4, 2013
Article by Mike Adler

Group Holds meeting on Guild’s future
‘Whole park thinking’ sought by Friends of the Guild Park and Gardens

“Realizing the potential of Guild Park requires a new vision for the entire Guild property, says a group hosting a meeting on the subject next week.

Friends of the Guild Park and Gardens wants to use “whole park thinking” to enhance the park, 88 acres on the Scarborough Bluffs once owned by the Toronto and Region Conservation Authority but managed by the City of Toronto.

ARCHITECTURAL HISTORY

The land contains architectural fragments of Toronto buildings which can claim national importance, but the park itself has no drinking fountain or permanent public washroom, said John Mason, a Friends member.

Remnants of the 1919 Bank of Toronto building (left) were saved by Spencer Clark when demolished in 1966. The parts were reconstructed in 1981 as a Greek Theatre, one of the several architectural remnants that populate the Guild gardens.

Remnants of the 1919 Bank of Toronto building (left) were saved by Spencer Clark when demolished in 1966. The parts were integrated in 1981 to form a classic Greek Theatre, one of many architectural salvage pieces that still populate the beautiful Guild gardens.

The Guild Inn, formerly a private home and centre of an arts colony, has been shuttered for more than a decade, though the city is making a third attempt at finding a private partner who will restore or replace the building.

The new Friends group can meanwhile start working on ideas for the property that can complement work other local organizations, the Guildwood Village Community Association and Guild Renaissance Group, have done on the park’s behalf, Mason said. “It’s got to be used more effectively than it’s being used now.”

QUESTIONS, COMMENTS

The Friends are asking residents to bring questions and comments about the park to Guildwood Community Presbyterian Church at Guildwood Parkway and Livingston Road for the meeting at 7 p.m. next Thursday, April 11. Speakers will include Dave Harvey, founder and executive director of Park People, an alliance of volunteers with similar groups who “work cooperatively together to make our parks the best they can possibly be.”

The Guild, still the annual site of performances and an annual arts festival, may see a variety of improvements if the city decides this summer to partner with Dynamic Hospitality and Entertainment Group, a company expected to bid next month to operate a restaurant where the Inn now stands.

The city has for years planned additional investments in the park’s “cultural precinct” which are worth millions, and Paul Ainslie, the local city councillor, has also proposed replacing the Toronto Public Library’s Guildwood branch with a new library building at the park.

Residents of the surrounding Guildwood subdivision are applying to have the Guild recognized as a national historic site and students from nearby Sir Wilfred Laurier Collegiate almost finished supporting research for Heritage Canada, Mason said.

More about the group is posted on www.facebook.com/GuildPark…”

Bell house restoration begins this year

Bell Estate heritage home condominiums illustration.

Bell Estate heritage home condominiums illustration. – c/o Stafford Homes.

Thanks to lobbying by Scarborough and Toronto Preservation groups and support from Scarborough Community Council, the former Bell family house will be restored, its exterior intact, and once again serve as a dwelling.

A restoration agreement is in place, but the historically designated Bell house has remained untouched for a year. Since Stafford Homes purchased the house and surrounding property in 2011, various planning approval delays have halted the restoration process. Most of Stafford’s “Bell Estate” housing development has been constructed and many residents occupy the new residences south of the old home.

Proposed carports, to be located north of the former Bell family house.

Proposed car ports, to be located north of the former Bell family house. – c/o Stafford Homes.

Updated site plans for land use immediately surrounding the house are now approved by the Scarborough Community Preservation Panel and Toronto Preservation Services. Car ports for the house and nearby townhomes are a part of the plan. The ports will be constructed in a modern style, yet are to be made of wood and stone, to not clash with the character of the historic home.

Now that all planning is approved, Stafford Homes hopes to complete the Bell house renovation this year. The interior will be renovated, with new interior walls installed to divide the structure into two Heritage Home condominiums, part of Stafford’s “Elite Collection”, each measuring over 2,400 square feet in area. The original cooking fireplace and built-in bake oven in the basement kitchen stone wall will be retained in the basement of Unit 1, in accordance with the building’s heritage easement agreement.

Map of the property section featuring the former Bell family home.

Property map featuring the former Bell family home. – c/o Stafford Homes.

A short history of the Bell Estate home, by Rick Schofield:

In 1828, 100 acres of land on the east side of what is now Warden Avenue, south of St. Clair, was first inhabited by Richard and John Thornbeck.

A lovely, cut fieldstone house standing one and a half storeys in height was erected about 1830 to house the Thornbeck family. The 1861 Census verifies the occupancy of the property by Richard Thornbeck, his wife, six children and his widowed mother. The four bedroom home was also equipped with a cooking fireplace and built-in bake oven in the basement kitchen stone wall.

The house and property were sold to William Bell in 1882 for $11,800 and later passed on to his son George. However, a massive fire gutted the interior shortly thereafter and the Bell family set about rebuilding the interior around the surviving, massive stone walls, which measured about two feet in thickness. To provide more headroom on the second floor, the walls were raised and the house became a full two storeys in height.

In 1931, John H. Bell and his brothers: Joseph, Robert and William established a dairy known as Bell’s Scarboro dairy, which flourished on the property until 1943 when it was sold to Donland’s Dairy. At one time, Bell’s Scarboro Dairy had their own embossed milk bottles and was one of the largest dairies serving rural Scarborough.

The farm was eventually subdivided and rezoned industrial, but even though John Bell passed away in 1954, two years after his brother Joseph. The remaining family members decided to keep the stone farmhouse and a small area of surrounding land. Ironically, the area to the south of the stone house became the Becker’s Milk plant, keeping the dairy theme for the property. However, the house was hidden from public view, surrounded by trees and behind the plant’s parking lot.

Ella and Ethel Bell, surviving spinster sisters remained in the house until they, too, passed away. Determined to have the 150 year old stone dwelling survive, Ethel Bell’s will included a clause that the building not be demolished for at least 25 years after her death (1988) and the proceeds of any sale of the property be given to charity. The house was later renovated and served as a seniors’ drop in centre for a short time.

“History of Old Malvern” – A new ebook for Society members

History of Old Malvern

In honour of Heritage Week 2013, members of the Scarborough Historical Society now have access to a rare (and out of print) book, available as a free download in the Members Area of our website as a PDF ebook file.

The password to access the members area has not changed from last year, but a reminder will be published in the next Society newsletter.

Only 500 copies of “History of Old Malvern” were printed in 1973, published on the occasion of the 116th year since the founding of Malvern.
The 56 page book was compiled and edited by Robert H. Eadie and the “Malvern Committee” of Mrs. Phyllis Busato, Mr. Wm. Robbins, and Mrs. Jamie McCowan.
This publication chronicles a first-hand glimpse into the everyday lives of the people of Old Malvern, and the places they frequented.

Residents of the modern Scarborough community know Malvern to be an immense neighbourhood centered near the intersection of Neilson Rd. & Tapscott Rd., but the name first thrived as a farming community centered further south west, at the crossroads village of Malvern, located at Sheppard Ave. & Markham Rd.

Old Malvern had changed from its rural farming roots when the book was published in 1973, and since then it has changed drastically, to the point where very little exists of the original settlement.

*If you are not a member of the Scarborough Historical Society, any browser of the S.H.S. website may view selected images of Malvern, click here to view the S.H.S. Malvern village image gallery.

Heritage Showcase 2013 at Scarborough Town Centre

Scarborough Town Centre

Scarborough Town Centre.     Photo: Jeremy Hopkin

Heritage Week Display – February 22-24

On Family Day, the third Monday of February, we began what was formally known as “Heritage Week”. To mark the occasion, the annual Scarborough Archives heritage display was set up at the Scarborough Town Centre by the Scarborough Historical Society.

Scarborough’s heritage is barely 200 years old if we set aside the early Native People who once inhabited the area. Yet local heritage is something on which we can all reflect, regardless of our ancestral roots.

Scarborough remained a purely rural community until about 1910 when suburban development then began at Birch Cliff. Electricity first arrived in the township in 1912, a water works in 1921 and high schools in 1922 and 1929. By 1940 the population reached 23,274.

During the post war boom, subdividers quickly transformed open farmland into streets of closely packed houses, commercial buildings and industry. By 1955 the population had surpassed 100,000 and Scarborough had become one of the federated municipalities of Metropolitan Toronto. During the next 45 years, families from all parts of the world came to make a new home in Scarborough. In 1998, with a population of over half a million, Scarborough’s municipal government, along with the rest of Metro, was amalgamated into one municipal government, a new City of Toronto. Community names such as Scarborough, Agincourt, Highland Creek and West Hill are still recognized and Scarborough had retained its own Community Council to deal with local issues.

As we celebrated Heritage Week 2013, the Scarborough Archives and Historical Society set up its annual display at Sears Court in the Scarborough Town Centre, during regular mall hours from Friday, February 22nd to Sunday the 24th.

This columnist and a host of volunteers were on hand to meet Scarborough Mirror readers and the general public, answer questions about our heritage and display the Archives’ extensive photo collection for all to view. Included in the photo collection were hundreds of aerial photographs showing the development of the communities during the boom years 1950-1975…

– Rick Schofield.