
Situated on the slab of land separating Lake Ontario and Georgian Bay,  Toronto was on one of the three early portage routes to the northwest,  its name taken from the Huron for "place of meeting". The first European  to visit the district was the French explorer Étienne Brûlé in 1615,  but it wasn't until the middle of the eighteenth century that the French  made a serious effort to control the area with the development of a  simple settlement and stockade, Fort Rouillé . The British pushed the  French from the northern shore of Lake Ontario in 1759, but then chose  to ignore the site for almost forty years until the arrival of hundreds  of Loyalist settlers in the aftermath of the American Revolution.
Specifically the town, then known as York, was built inland from the  Toronto Islands, a chain of small islands leading into a marsh(long  since drained away) at their eastern end, with an opening at the western  end. In 1813, as part of the War of 1812, York was attacked and partially  burned. It was in retaliation for this that British forces attacked  Washington, DC, the next year. Fort York was lightly manned at the time,  and realizing that a defence was impossible, the troops retreated and  set fire to the magazine. It exploded as the US forces were entering the  fort, leaving a big crater in the ground (that no longer exists), and  many US soldiers were killed in the explosion. After the US forces left a  new and much stronger fort was constructed several hundred yards to the  west of the original position. Another American attack in 1814 was  defeated with ease, the landing force never being able to approach the  shoreline.
By the end of the nineteenth century Toronto had become a major  manufacturing centre dominated by a conservative mercantile elite who  were exceedingly loyal to British interests and maintained a strong  Protestant tradition. This elite was sustained by the working-class  Orange Lodges , whose reactionary influence was a key feature of  municipal politics - no wonder Charles Dickens had been offended by the  city's "rabid Toryism". That said, these same Protestants were  enthusiastic about public education, just like the Methodist-leaning  middle classes, who also spearheaded social reform movements,  principally Suffrage and Temperance.
According to a United Nations report, Toronto has the second-highest  proportion of immigrants in the world, after Miami, Florida. Almost half  of Toronto's residents were born outside Canada. The resulting cultural  diversity is reflected in the numerous ethnic neighbourhoods of the  city; and the proliferation of authentic shops and restaurants derived  from cultures around the world makes the city one of the most exciting  places in the world to visit. Moreover, the relative tranquility that  mediates between such diverse populations is a testament to the tolerant  character of Canadian society.
Toronto History
Tilaa:
Lähetä kommentteja (Atom)







 
0 kommenttia:
Lähetä kommentti