HISTORY Long Branch was first settled in 1797 by Colonel Samuel Smith a loyalist officer
with the Queens Rangers. Smith's five hundred acre tract of land spanned the entire
present day neighbourhood. Smith, who served two terms as administrator of Upper
Canada, built a modest regency style cottage at the south-east corner of 41st
Street and Lakeshore Boulevard where Parkview Public School is situated today.
Smith passed
away in 1826. His children retained possession of his estate
until 1871 when it was sold to James Eastwood. The industrious
Eastwood timbered the pine and oak forest that covered this
land. He then rafted the logs from the mouth of the Etobicoke
Creek to the Toronto Harbour where the lumber was sold for a
tidy profit.
In 1883,
Eastwood sold the eastern sixty-four acres of his property to
the developers who created Long Branch Park, a summer resort
modelled after its namesake in New Jersey. Ferry boats ushered
thousands of Toronto vacationers each year to Long Branch which
boasted fanciful summer cottages, a grand hotel, a boardwalk
and numerous amusement rides including a Coney Island Carousel.
Long Branch became
more accessible in 1916 when Lake Shore Boulevard was paved. This transportation
corridor helped turn Long Branch into a year-round community. This neighbourhood
was developed largely from the 1920's up to the 1950's.
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