Uncovering Brockton Village: A forgotten sketch of a Toronto village and the stories it holds

It’s not every day that you stumble upon something truly exciting while browsing the archives. But on a cold January evening in 2022, that’s exactly what happened.

I had been researching the history of Brockton – a lost Toronto village – since moving here in 2016. At the time, I was preparing for a Jane’s walk focused on the history of the neighbourhood, looking for more information about the Denison family, one of the area’s most influential landowners.

I was looking for diaries and court cases related to real estate deals. If there was one thing I felt I knew for certain, it was that no images existed of Brockton before the growing city consumed it in the 1880s. The sole exception was an 1893 sketch published in the Toronto Globe, where the artist did their best to depict Brockton has it had appeared four decades earlier.

A 1893 sketch of Brockton Village in the 1850s (Toronto Public Library)

Then, unexpectedly, I found something else.

Buried in the Denison family files at the Library and Archives Canada was a simple but intriguing entry: “View of Brockton, 1855.”

The item was described as “pencil on paper” by George Taylor Denison II, whose Rusholme estate once stood just east of Brockton. The Denisons’ were among Toronto’s wealthiest early settlers, their influence stretching back to the 1790s when George’s grandfather, John Denison, first arrived. But there was no preview of the image, just the title.

I had no idea what it looked like. Was it a rough sketch? A detailed drawing? A map? The only way to find out was to request a high-resolution copy from the archive. So I did.

And then, I waited.

For sixteen months.

To be honest, I forgot about it.

I received some other documents about the Denisons’ and assumed the record didn’t exist or had been lost. The anticipation faded, replaced by other research and new discoveries.

Then, out of nowhere, in May 2023, an email landed in my inbox. The image had arrived.

I opened the file, unsure of what to expect. And there it was. A forgotten sketch of Brockton as it appeared in 1855, captured by one of Toronto’s most prominent landowners and father to one of Toronto’s most notorious Confederate Civil War collaborators.

It’s a simple sketch that provides a never before seen glimpse of a lost village before it was absorbed into the city.

A forgotten sketch of Brockton Village dating to about 1853
Denison, George T. 1853. View of Brockton, about 1853. Pencil on paper. Item ID 293654. Library and Archives Canada, accession no. 1955-015 PIC.

I imagined George in 1855, seated in his study, gazing westward from his estate. Perhaps he marveled at the small but growing village taking shape along Dundas Street, just beyond Toronto’s boundaries. Maybe he picked up a pencil and, with a few quick strokes, sought to capture this dusty little settlement that had sprung up on land his father had once owned and shaped for profit.

Rusholme. The sketch of Brockton was taken from one of the rooms facing west (the rear of the house).
(Toronto Public Library)

Taking the Land to Make a Neighbourhood β€”how Brockton took shape.

But as I looked closer, something struck me: 1855 was only fifty years after Treaty 13. In another thirty years, this village would become a city neighbourhood.

I had been thinking a lot about how, in just half a century, this land had been completely transformedβ€”partly because I was reading Mary P. Ryan’s Taking the Land to Make the City: A Bicoastal History of North America, which examines how urban expansion followed similar patterns across North America and inspired this websites tagline “Taking the land to making a neighbourhood β€”how Brockton took shape.”

From Baltimore to San Fransciso, land that was once Indigenous or rural was systematically transformed through surveying, speculation, and development. The book helped me see Brockton’s story in a new lightβ€”not just as a local curiosity, but as part of a larger history of how land was shaped to fit the needs of a growing city.

Brockton’s history is one of survey lines, shifting property boundaries, and global migrations. While traces of the village still linger in street layouts and a handful of surviving buildings, much of its past has been rewritten by waves of change. The forces of imperial land policy, settlement, speculation, and urbanization shaped this land in ways that are still visible today.

The plan for brockton-history.ca is dig deeper into this forgotten sketch, exploring the how the Brockton Village developed, who who lived here, and how a collection of estates slowly evolved into a village then very quickly into a city neighbourhood. Using primary sources, archival records, maps, census data, and city directories, we’ll reconstruct Brockton’s story and reveal how its past still echoes in the present.

By writing and sharing stories about Brockton and its evolution, I hope to connect my neighbours with the larger historical forces that shaped this neighbourhood, Toronto, and Canada itself and find the stories this forgotten sketch hold. Additionally, I hope to share some of the resources available to anyone interested in exploring their own streets and neighbourhood.

Let’s get started!

11 responses to “Uncovering Brockton Village: A forgotten sketch of a Toronto village and the stories it holds”

  1. janed31741fce0e Avatar
    janed31741fce0e

    This is exciting, Eric. Can’t wait to read more.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. ericvery Avatar
      ericvery

      Thank you Jane! Appreciate your support.

      Like

  2. Gabe Avatar
    Gabe

    looking forward to reading this!

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Fiona Avatar

    The Toronto Reference Library’s Marilyn & Charles Baille Special Collections Centre has the Denison Family Fonds (1779-1900) which includes 32 volumes and 510 pieces of textual records. You can find an online inventory of these records, which are a part of the Manuscript Collection, at https://www.torontopubliclibrary.ca/books-video-music/specialized-collections/historical-baldwin.jsp

    Liked by 1 person

    1. ericvery Avatar
      ericvery

      Thank you so much Fiona! L24 looks promising for some work on the Dundas Street:

      1840 – Apr. 20 Receipt from J. Young, Clerk of the Commissioners of the Home District Turnpike Trust, to George Taylor Denison Jr. for books, papers, etc. connected with work on the Western, Dundas and Lake Roads. Attached is a copy of minutes of Home District Turnpike Trust authorizing transfer of books.

      These might also help to add some colour to posts on early land transfers in neighbourhood.

      April 1853 – Indenture of bargain and sale from Mrs. Lucy Brock to G.T. Denison Jr. of part of Park Lot #30, Cone. 1, York Twn.

      March 1859 – Indenture between G.T. Denison and John Marshall, carpenter for lease, to Marshall, of a building lot, part of Park Lot #30.

      Also intrigued by the “architectural sketches…sketches of streetscapes and landscapes” in L22.

      I’ll have to find some time to drop by!

      Like

  4. Finding Brockton on the Map – Brockton: A Lost Toronto Village Avatar

    […] we’re going to talk about Brockton’s history, we should start with a simple question: where is […]

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  5. Peter Marshall Avatar

    As a newcomer to Brockton and longtime Toronto history fan I can’t thank you enough for this fantastic website. The beautifully designed pages make it a pleasure to read and the thoroughly cited sources make it effortless to discover further background information. And because I research and write histories of older homes for Ontario clients so I can relate to the thrill of discovering an elusive illustration such as the Brockton Village sketch!

    I had actually done a lot of research on Brockton history myself prior to discovering your site and while I’ve drawn from the same digital resources as you have, I also have a fair amount of photos of hardcopy records from various archival that you might have not seen yet. In particular, I have colour versions of many volumes of Goad’s fire insurance plans that are only available in black & white online. I also have reproductions of a number of original subdivision plans from the Land Registry Office. I’m happy to share any of this if you’d like to get in touch with me through my Hogtown House Histories website at househistories.ca.

    Keep up the amazing work!

    Like

    1. ericvery Avatar
      ericvery

      Thank you Peter! Appreciate the support and really enjoyed your piece on Delaney Crescent.

      I was planning on reaching out in the future about the Mechanic Ave handbill and map, which I hadn’t seen before. I’ll definitely be touch once I move into the second half of the 19th century!

      Like

  6. πŸ““BN005 – From Land Grants to Village Streets – Where Brockton: A Lost Toronto Village is Headed Next – Brockton: A Lost Toronto Village Avatar

    […] subdivision fit into 1850s city building.5. The 1850s Village – Dig into the 1850s sketch that got this project started, through the 1852 census and early […]

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  7. Randall (Randy) Frederick Curtin Avatar
    Randall (Randy) Frederick Curtin

    My third great-grandfather James Curtin lived in Brockton Village in the mid to late 1850’s. He can be found living with the Sullivans in a log building in the 1861 Census. James daughter Mary was married to Bartholomew Sullivan. James was from Tralee in County Kerry. Bartholomew was from a nearby townland known as Ratass. Should there be any references discovered about these families I would very much like to be included. Enjoyed your site immensely. Great job and thank you for all of the time and work spent on this project.

    Like

    1. ericvery Avatar
      ericvery

      Thanks so much for reading and sharing what you know about your family’s history. I’ll definitely keep an eye out for James Curtin!

      Like

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