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Joseph Bloor Commemorative Plaque, 2016  

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8400 × 6000 pixels (50.4 MP)

71.1 cm × 50.8 cm @ 300 PPI

6.2 MB

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Resource details

Resource ID

5223

Access

Open

Address

117 Bloor Street East, Toronto, ON M4W 0A8

Credit Line

Heritage Toronto

Date of Creation

2016

Historical Themes

Faith and Religion
Industrial Heritage
Towns and Villages

Keywords

British-Canadian heritage
Brewery
Lost Rivers

Program Category

Plaques

Rights

Heritage Toronto

Time Period

1794-1834
1835-1899

Caption

Joseph Bloor Commemorative Plaque, 2016

Description

Joseph Bloor (also “Bloore”) was a prominent landowner, brewer, and philanthropist. Born circa 1789 in Staffordshire, England, he immigrated to the Towns and Villages, now Toronto, in 1819 with his wife, Sarah (née Lees), and their three children.

He established a successful brewery in the Rosedale Valley near today’s Sherbourne Street. In about 1836, he and William Botsford Jarvis, another influential landowner, laid out the village of Yorkville on their combined lands.

Bloor’s contributions to the development of Yorkville were recognized in 1854 when the Concession Road separating the village from Toronto was renamed Bloor Street.

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Location Data

Marker lat / long: 43.670632, -79.38425 (WGS84)

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