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HISTORY
Scarborough Junction received its name in 1873, when a post office using this
name was opened in the Bell General Store which stood on the south-west corner
of Kennedy Road and St. Clair Avenue. The Junction part of this name referred
to the two railways - the Grand Trunk and the Toronto-Nippising - which crossed
paths at the south end of this neighbourhood.
In
1896, Scarborough Junction was the most heavily populated village
in the former Township of Scarborough. It had its own school,
general store, and the Bethel Methodist Church. The historic
Bethel Church Cemetery is quietly tucked away off Kennedy Road,
south of Eglinton Avenue.
The urbanization
of Scarborough Junction took place in the late 1940's and the 1950's when farm
fields were replaced with rows of war veterans' housing and cosy little bungalows.
These houses sold very quickly to young families that were looking for affordable
houses in what was then the outskirts of Toronto.
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