Oshawa

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A short guide to Oshawa’s History

 

 

 

  

Home Page

The Farndale Directory

Farndale Themes

Farndale History

Particular branches of the family tree

Other Information

General Sir Martin Farndale KCB

Links

 

Introduction

 

Dates are in red.

Hyperlinks to other pages are in dark blue.

Headlines of the history of the Oshawa are in brown.

References and citations are in turquoise.

Contextual history is in purple.

 

This webpage about the Oshawa has the following section headings:

 

 

The Farndales of Oshawa

 

The Ontario 1 Line are the descendants of Samuel Kirk Farndale (FAR00512), born 1871 who emigrated to Oshawa, Ontario.

 

Oshawa overview

 

Oshawa is a city in Ontario, on the Lake Ontario shoreline. It is about 60 kilometres east of Downtown Toronto.

 

The name Oshawa originates from the Ojibwa term aaz haway, meaning "the crossing place".

 

Oshawa Timeline

 

1760

 

Oshawa began as a transfer point for the fur trade. Around 1760, the French constructed a trading post near the harbour location. 

 

1822

 

In 1822 a ‘colonization road’ (a north-south road to facilitate settlement) known as Simcoe Street was constructed. It more or less followed the path of an old native trail known as the Nonquon Road, and ran from the harbour to the area of Lake Scugog. This intersected the "Kingston Road" at what would become Oshawa's "Four Corners."

 

1836

 

In 1836, Edward Skae relocated his general store about 800 m east to the southeast corner of this intersection; as his store became a popular meeting place.

 

1842

 

In 1842, Skae, the postmaster, applied for official post office status, but was informed the community needed a better name. Moody Farewell was requested to ask his native acquaintances what they called the area; their reply was "Oshawa," which translates to "where we must leave our canoes".

 

1846

 

The 1846 Gazeteer showed a population of about 1,000 in a community surrounded by farms. There were three churches, a post office, tradesmen of various types and some industry: a foundry, a grist mill and a fulling mill, a brewery two distilleries, a machine shop and four cabinet makers.

 

The newly established village became an industrial centre, and implement works, tanneries, asheries and wagon factories opened (and often closed shortly after, as economic "panics" occurred regularly).

 

1876

 

In 1876, Robert Samuel McLaughlin Senior moved his carriage works to Oshawa from Enniskillen to take advantage of its harbour and of the availability of a rail link not too far away. He constructed a two-storey building, which was soon added to.

 

This building was heavily remodelled in 1929, receiving a new facade and being extended to the north using land where the city's gaol had once stood.

 

1879

 

The village became a town in 1879, in what was then called East Whitby Township.

 

1890

 

Rail service had been provided in 1890 by the Oshawa Railway. This was originally set up as a streetcar line, but in 1910 a second freight line was built. This electric line provided streetcar and freight service, connected central Oshawa with the Grand Trunk (now Canadian National) Railway, and with the Canadian Northern (which ran through the very north of Oshawa) and the Canadian Pacific, built in 1912-13. The Oshawa Railway was acquired by the Grand Trunk operation around 1910, and streetcar service was replaced by buses in 1940.

 

Links, texts and books