HISTORY
The Bridle Path could hardly have been envisioned by Alexander Milne, who settled
on what is now Edwards Gardens in 1827. Milne operated woolen and saw mills on
the banks of Wilket Creek until 1832 when a dwindling water supply forced Milne
to move east to a mill site along the Don River.
The Bridle Path
inconspicuously spent the rest of the 1800's and early 1900's as farmland. It
wasn't until 1929, when the Bayview Bridge was built over the steep Don River
Valley, that this area was considered for residential development.
Hubert Daniel
Bull Page, a Toronto-based land developer was one of the founders of the present
day neighbourhood. Page envisioned the Bridle Path as an exclusive enclave of
estate homes. In 1929, Page built the Cape Cod Colonial style house at number
2 The Bridle Path, in an effort to spark interest in his subdivision.
Early plans for
this neighbourhood called for an elaborate system of equestrian Bridle Paths.
These Bridle Paths have long since been paved over, however their legacy remains
in the Bridle Path's unusually wide streets and in the name of this neighbourhood.
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