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HISTORY
Deer Park used to be referred to by the First Nations people as "Mushquoteh",
which means a meadow or opening in the wood where deer come to feed. In 1837,
the Heath family purchased forty acres of land in "Mushquoteh". Appropriately,
they named their estate Deer Park.
By
the 1850's, the Deer Park area had grown to include a handful
of country villas, a general store, a school, a cemetery, a
race track, and a hotel that was located at the intersection
of Yonge and St. Clair. Patrons at the Deer Park Hotel used
to delight in feeding the deer that roamed on the hotel grounds.
The deer were
long gone by the time Deer Park was annexed to the City of Toronto in 1908. Deer
Park filled in very quickly after annexation. By the 1930's the Deer Park neighbourhood
was established as one of Toronto's finest residential districts.
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