[Industrial Trail Logo]MADE IN HAMILTON
19TH CENTURY
INDUSTRIAL TRAIL

SITE 1
WHITEHERN

IMAGEWhitehern was once the stately home of Dr. Calvin McQuesten, one of the city's first foundrymen. McQuesten established himself as a physician and apothecary in the Erie Canal community of Brockport, New York in the early 1830s. A few years later, he sent his cousin John Fisher to investigate new business opportunities in Upper Canada, at the northern end of the recently completed American Erie Canal system. In 1835, McQuesten, Fisher and one other partner bought into a small Hamilton foundry set up earlier that year by skilled machinist and moulder Joseph P. Janes.

Fisher moved to Hamilton to help Janes while McQuesten remained in Brockport attending to his medical practice but also securing raw material, castings and equipment for the foundry. McQuesten moved to Hamilton in 1839 and into Whitehern in 1852.

The firm became McQuesten, Fisher and Company after Janes withdrew from the business in 1836. Fisher is best remembered as the producer of one of Ontario's first threshing machines. This firm also produced a number of stoves and other agricultural implements. In 1857, McQuesten's nephews Luther, Samuel and Payson Sawyer took over the company after McQuesten and Fisher retired. All three brothers had extensive training in the practical side of the foundry business. This company eventually became Sawyer-Massey, manufacturers of agri-cultural implements and, later, road-making machinery.

 Whitehern was occupied by McQuesten's descendants until 1968, when it was bequeathed to the City of Hamilton. It is now a City of Hamilton Museum and a National Historic Site. A historical plaque at the south-west corner of MacNab and Jackson Streets provides further information about the house.