Trethewey Airfield Commemorative Plaque, 2017
File information | File dimensions | File size | Options |
Original JPG File | 7200 × 4575 pixels (32.94 MP) 61 cm × 38.7 cm @ 300 PPI |
4.7 MB | Restricted |
Low resolution print | 2000 × 1271 pixels (2.54 MP) 16.9 cm × 10.8 cm @ 300 PPI |
801 KB | Restricted |
Screen | 1259 × 800 pixels (1.01 MP) 10.7 cm × 6.8 cm @ 300 PPI |
232 KB | Restricted |
Resource ID
5255
Access
Open
Address
59 Hearst Circle, Toronto, ON M6M 2T9
Credit Line
Heritage Toronto
Date of Creation
2017
Historical Themes
Industrial Heritage, Innovation and Technology, Transportation History
Program Category
Historical Plaques
Rights
Heritage Toronto
Time Period
1900-1953
Caption
Trethewey Airfield Commemorative Plaque, 2017
Description
In 1910, from July 8 to 16, the Ontario Motor League sponsored the first aviation show in the Toronto area, held in a grass field here on mining entrepreneur W. G. Trethewey’s model farm. On July 13, thousands watched French pilot Jacques de Lesseps in his Blériot XI Le Scarabée become the first to fly an airplane over the city of Toronto. Afterward, this site remained popular with early aviators and became a licensed airfield, often called the de Lesseps Aerodrome. Landing lights were installed for night flying, and mail service to Montreal and Detroit was established. In 1928, the de Havilland Aircraft Company of England opened its first Canadian assembly plant here. In the 1930s, the airfield was the base for the Royal Canadian Air Force No. 10 Squadron, later the No. 110 (City of Toronto) Squadron, now the 400 Squadron. The airfield was closed in the mid–1940s and homes were built for Second World War veterans and their families.
Marker lat / long: 43.699404, -79.497612 (WGS84)