Cabbagetown*
By: J.M.S. Careless
From: Polyphony Summer 1984 pp. 15-18
© 1984 Multicultural History Society of Ontario
*This article is an abridged version of one that appears in "Gathering
Place: Peoples and Neighbourhoods of Toronto," by the same author,
entitled "The Emergence of Cabbagetown in Victorian Toronto" (Multicultural
History Society, 1984).
Like many another urban neighbourhood, Cabbagetown has gone through various
transitions since it first took shape in the late nineteenth century. Set
at the eastern end of the original City of Toronto and extending to the
Don River, this locale was scarcely occupied before 1850, for the main thrusts
of expansion had moved westward along the harbourfront or northward around
Yonge Street, the central route inland. Hence the easternmost city territory
for a considerable time had stayed as little more than a fringe of humble
cottages and vegetable plots. But that changed with the growth of a railway
and industrial Toronto from the mid-nineteenth century.
The area increasingly became a populous residential district for urban workers,
bordering a new rail and factory complex at the Don end of the harbour,
which offered jobs, soot and smells together. Thus Victorian Cabbagetown
characteristically developed as a domain of small, cheap houses on minor
streets. It had little in common with the handsome estates of Rosedale rising
beyond Bloor Street on its north, or with the big mansions on Sherbourne
and Jarvis Streets to its west. And the poor, the working-class and lesser
members of the middle class who filled this unadorned preserve stemmed overwhelmingly
from the flow of Anglo-Celtic immigration of the Victorian age. Consequently
the community that had consolidated there by the late century was all but
homogeneously English-speaking, pre-eminently Protestant (though with a
sizeable Catholic Irish minority), and highly British and Orange in feeling
and tradition.
This is the historic Cabbagetown to be examined here. Yet one may go on,
briefly, to note later transitions. Around the First World War, as still
newer areas arose in the enlarging city, aspiring residents began moving
from the district. Poorer elements crowded into its houses, sometimes two
or more families in each. These flimsily constructed, largely rented homes
readily leaked and deteriorated; and landlords found decreasing value in
keeping them up. The grim years of the 1930s deepened the decline, but it
no less marked a process of neighbourhood decay continually repeated across
urban America. Cabbagetown's life-quality, cohesion and morale went downhill
together. In due course Hugh Garner in the preface to his novel Cabbagetown,
first published in 1950, would thus describe the locality he had earlier
lived in for some three years as "a sociological phenomenon, the largest
Anglo-Saxon slum in North America." That is the kind of sweeping verdict
that catches the eye, yet also expresses literary licence. The same licence
was exemplified when Garner went on to say that, "Following World War
II most of Cabbagetown was bulldozed to the ground." Actually, most
of the area's Victorian cityscape then stayed in being, despite several
big clearance projects whereby the state and the developer erected high-rise
towers of sinister proportions and other handy blocks for breeding social
alienation.
Still, Cabbagetown went on changing from the 1950s, as an in flux of newer
ethnic elements brought a very different diversity, and then as gentrifiers
swept in, extensively and expensively remodelling its humble houses. Again
these are typical processes in urban America. In any event, today it may
be said that little beyond the physical layout remains of the old Cabbagetown
community. It is now scarcely more than a heritage myth, hazily invoked
by real estate agents busy merchandizing quaintness.
But Cabbagetown did exist: as a working, well-knit neighbourhood of Victorian
Toronto. Its community life in that era is substantially conveyed in the
reminiscences of the city journalist, J.V. McAree, who was born within it
in 1876 to Ulster immigrant parents and grew up at the Cabbagetown Store
he describes in his book of 1953 . The account undoubtedly displays nostalgia
and later, selective memory; yet allowing for these, and with corroborating
evidence, one may broadly deem its picture valid. This Cabbagetown was a
place of small-town family and neighbourly focuses, of mutual aid and accepted,
bonding obligations. It was equally a place of arduous work, often in adjacent
industries; of stringency, layoffs, and all-too-frequent hardship; of contending
constantly with dirt, cold and disease.
Quite probably popular tradition is right in attributing the name Cabbagetown
to proliferating little fields, cabbage patches and squatters' shacks-which
became residences for the expanding poorer elements of the city-associated
as the term was also with poor Irish settlers of the day, both Protestant
and Catholic, who traditionally raised the humble green vegetable. Yet it
should be kept in mind that such a disparaging label for a local area of
low esteem was more generic than specific. Urban places in nineteenth-century
North America had their full quota of similar Shantytowns, Paddytowns, Corktowns
and so on. Nevertheless, a loosely applied nickname of this sort could become
an enduring badge of identity for a recognized neighbourhood community:
and so it had become for "Cabbage Town'' (at first two words) by the
time that title appeared in printed works on Toronto- thus far not noted
before the earlier 1890s.
Cabbagetown grew with renewed immigration to Toronto in later Victorian
times. The strongly Catholic Irish influx had dwindled away in the mid-fifties
and was not to soar again.1 But a migrant stream from Britain grew once
more in the later sixties; and while it did not reach anything like previous
flood proportions for a now far larger city, it went on, with varied fluctuations,
across the rest of the period. Notably this newer intake derived largely
from England, with fewer Irish and Scots among it.2 And those it brought
were no longer country dwellers or semi-rural cottagers, but inhabitants
of an urbanized industrialized Britain. Consequently they were generally
adapted to city occupations, industrial and store employment, and many would
move into developing Cabbagetown as a well-suited residential quarter. Along
with Canadian-born inhabitants-chiefly the offspring of earlier Anglo-Celtic
arrivals-they consolidated a now maturing neighbourhood; and quite naturally
reinforced its British composition and character. At least to the turn of
the twentieth century, there were scant non-British, non-English-speaking
traces in the neighbourhood, for the smaller wave of continental European
migration to the city that rose in the new century came after Cabbagetown
had essentially been occupied. In any case, the later Victorian British
inflow fitted into context in that district continuing its motherland ties,
imperialist loyalty and Anglo Saxonism. Furthermore, its Protestant predominance
was sustained besides.
Anglican churches in particular arose in the area beyond Little Trinity:
St. Peter's in 1866, All Saints in 1874, St. Simon's in 1888 and St. Bartholemew'
s by 1889. The formation of parishes in itself illustrated the progressive
filling in and structuring of Cabbagetown. Less numerous were major Methodist
and Presbyterian churches, such as Berkeley Street Methodist (1871), or
St. Enoch's Presbyterian (1891); while the Catholic Church of the Sacred
Heart (1888) then remained a minor focus in contrast to the strongly Catholic
convergence around long established St. Paul' s in Cork Town below Queen
Street, with its big charitable House of Providence nearby (1858). Moreover,
this district version of Toronto the Good, the city of churches, was decidedly
evangelical in its dominant tone. Independent chapels of ardent fundamentalist
faith, missions, earnest prayer meetings and outdoor revival gatherings
also featured the majority Protestant community and further evidenced its
outlook.
The population growth that had built up this very identifiable neighbourhood
by the 1890s may be substantiated from the census records for St. David's
Ward from the 1870s. In 1871 (allowing for the western section of St. David'
s of that date, which did not form part of Cabbagetown) the population of
the latter locale might reasonably be estimated at around 7,000 in a city
of some 56,000.3 In 1881 St. David's, now nearly co-terminous with Cabbagetown,
held 11,000 in round numbers within a city of 96,000.4 And in 1891, when
even more coincident, it had over 22,000 inhabitants in a Toronto of 181,000.5
The most obvious fact is the veritable doubling of population in the Cabbagetown
area over the eighties-a basic product of climbing industrialization and
in-migration during the decade. Thereafter, the district's own demographic
record is submerged within the new and different civic ward system implemented
in 1892. For by the early nineties the Cabbagetown locale had clearly been
taken up and its community had acquired firm outlines, whether or not out-migration
or more crowding-in would subsequently affect its numbers. We have seen
when and how it became settled during the Victorian era. It now remains
instead to examine the society and life of this emergent neighbourhood.
One major aspect of Cabbagetown society was its religious patterning, at
a time when Toronto's church ties were pervasive -whatever the class-and
taken pretty seriously. Census statistics for the seventies to nineties
affirm the area's notably Protestant complexion, yet tell more. The figures
for extended St. David's in 1871 show about 7,400 inhabitants belonging
to the chief Protestant denominations and some 3,000 Catholics.6 And though
this ward then still reached west to Jarvis Street and so included others
besides Cabbagetowners, there is no cause to think that the religious ratio
would have been greatly different if we had just the Cabbagetown section
to go on. At the very least, one may judge that the traditionally large
Protestant majority ascribed to it was apparent by that date. The census
returns of 1881, for a St. David's reduced much more to our area, may be
considered in more detail. They report 2,410 Catholics, 3,937 Anglicans,
2,095 Methodists and 1,449 Presbyterians, which (with 632 Baptists added)
give a main Protestant majority of 8,113, even without other small sects.7
Finally, the 1891 returns in a St. David's, which by then virtually coincided
with Cabbagetown, show 3,992 Catholics, 7,166 Anglicans, 5,081 Methodists,
4,200 Presbyterians and 1,088 Baptists-or a main Protestant majority of
17,535 in a far more populous location community.8 Three points stand out:
the Catholic element had grown by less than a third over the eighties; the
Anglicans had nearly doubled and remained much the largest single denomination;
while the Methodists and Presbyterians had more than doubled.
The process that, in consequence, produced a still more Protestant Cabbagetown
can surely be linked to the relative decline of Catholic Irish immigration
since the 1850s and to the continued flow of English and Scots into Toronto,
even though natural increase of native-born and movement from the countryside
to city jobs additionally affected the neighbourhood society. Here we need
a closer look at the ethnic origins and birthplaces of its members, and
for that must focus on the 1881 ward census. The ethnic figures for the
St. David's Ward of 1871 are risky to apply specifically to Cabbagetown,
while the 1891 Census did what censuses too often do, change category units,
rendering it of little value for a relevant comparison on nationalities.9
At any rate, statistics for 1881-in the midst of the area's principal growth
period-showed, for St. David's, 4,562 residents of English origin, 1,305
of Scottish and 4,548 of Irish stock. 10 The last-named group, of course,
comprised both Protestant and Catholic elements. Since in that day Toronto's
Catholics were overwhelmingly Irish-derived, it seems meaningful to subtract
the contemporary Catholic component given for St. David's in 1881 from the
Irish ethnic total, which leaves a remainder of 2,138. Almost certainly,
this, to a great extent, represented the Protestant Irishmen of the ward.
In other words, probably almost half the Irish residents in Cabbagetown
of the eighties were of Orange rather than Green affinity. Beyond these
main ethnic groups, only about 260 each of French or German origin were
then reported for the area, 6 "Russian-Polish," 10 Swiss, 5 Scandinavians
and 18 ''Africans.''11 There were no Italians, Jews, Dutch or Chinese listed.
An Anglo-Celtic bailiwick indeed, if not either an English or Irish entity.
As for birthplaces, the English element in 1881 contained the largest number
of homeland-born, 1,924, or over 42 per cent.12 The Irish correspondingly
displayed nearly 34 per cent of overseas origin, the Scots about 32 per
cent. Totalling these segments against the area majority of Canadian birth
(but Anglo-Celtic stock) gives to the neighbourhood of 1881 a non-native
component of around 40 per cent, still a high proportion when one considers
that this comes just after the migration lull around the close of the seventies
when hard times ruled Toronto. And since the city' s British intake swelled
again over the eighties into the nineties, it is altogether probable that
Cabbagetown did maintain its large immigrant ingredient throughout the rest
of the period. It remained, in short, both an Anglo-conformist stronghold
and a home of migrants from the United Kingdom. That it held only 379 of
United States birth in 1881 indicates that any American component was very
limited. 13 Yet it did play host to another small and rather different group
of newcomers: French Canadians-about 250 by 1881-who had been brought there
to work in a local tannery. 14 They formed the nucleus of the Sacred Heart
Catholic congregation, but hardly affected the ethnic nature of the community.
Inherently linked both with the politics and the dominant sentiments of
this society was the Orange Order. A recent work on the Order in Canada,
by Cecil Houston and William Smyth, demonstrates that its membership was
widespread across later Victorian Toronto, with lowest density in the upper
class residential tracts of Jarvis Street and Rosedale, but highest density
in Cabbagetown. No doubt the numerous Ulster Irish in that neighbourhood
had much to do with the case. Yet Houston and Smyth confirm that the Order
drew widely on English and Scottish stocks also, and it had strong followings
in all three major Toronto Protestant churches-Anglican, Methodist and Presbyterian,
especially the first two-which were also the largest in Cabbagetown. Smaller
Protestant denominations like Baptists or Lutherans were much less evident
in Orangeism; as they were again in Cabbagetown. At the same time, the Order
crossed class lines and kept a substantial middle-class component, even
if the bulk of its members came from the lower classes.
Orange lodges pervaded the district, but a main meeting-place for their
members was the eastern Orange Hall on Queen Street. Here was a forum for
their views on public issues, and a headquarters for political transactions.
The Orange vote in Toronto mattered municipally, provincially and federally.
Orangemen were perennial among civic politicians and plentiful in city employment,
whether at City Hall, the works department or in the police force, for all
of which Cabbagetown residents offered a goodly quota. It is unnecessary,
however, to view this as some dark conspiratorial net, a King Billy underground.
Orange ties, for better or worse, operated pretty openly; and it would have
been hard to impugn the respectability of the Order' s stands on British
loyalty and Protestant freedom to majority Toronto then.
Cabbagetowners marched on the Orange celebration day, July 12, but almost
as virtuously as in a temperance or trades union parade. Granted there long
were fights and uproars in Toronto associated with the Glorious Twelfth
or Hibernian St. Patrick's Day, still, violence chiefly occurred in more
turbulent and crowded areas of the city. For our neighbourhood, Orangeism
broadly implied order rather than disorder.
Furthermore, it has well been pointed out that Toronto's denser residential
districts really contained religious admixtures, and there were no great
separate, terraced confines of either Protestants or Catholics as in Belfast,
mass citadels for religious warfare. In Cabbagetown, assuredly, Protestants
had many Catholic street neighbours; the converse was equally true in adjacent,
prevalently Catholic Cork Town south of Queen Street and on below King Street.
There was not the same tight territorial basis for major sectarian combat.
Sparring there might be, as when an Orange band trumpetted and coat-trailed
into a largely Catholic street; yet this local version of "chicken"
was a fairly minor fringe sport. The Cabbagetown community then was not
an ethno-religious enclave-for all its Orange display-or a politically sequestered
compound.
1. For example, in the migration ebb of the later fifties, Irish landings
at Quebec fell from a low 4,100 in 1855 to a minute 410 by 1861, while English
entries led with 6,700 and 7,700 at the same respective dates (Round numbers:
see "Government of Canada. Report of the Department of Citizenship
and Immigration" , 1960-61
(Ottawa, 1961), p. 28). Of course Irish landings rose somewhat in the renewed
phases of British migration to Canada over the late sixties through eighties,
which had their own lulls interspersed. But the Irish proportion of the
whole intake did not regain preponderance.
2. Immigrant arrivals just for Toronto, as available over the later Victorian
years, make the pattern evident. For instance, the numbers listed of English,
Irish and Scots entrants to the city (in that order) were, for 1869: 7,275,
811 and 1,548; for 1874: 7,694, 1,530 and 1,995; for 1878 (example of a
depressed year): 2,706, 646 and 979; and for 1880 (time of partial recovery):
3,982, 2,288 and 1,225. (See Ontario Archives, "Immigrants' Arrivals
to Toronto, Statistical Returns, 1868-1881,'' XLVl, handwritten, n.d.).
3. "Census of Canada". 1871 I, p. 114. The total figure for the
St. David's of that year was 11,229. In view of the much older and denser
development of the western, non-Cabbagetown section of this ward at that
date, to assign its larger but newer Cabbagetown portion, around 60 per
cent of the count seems safely conservative
for 1871.
4. "Census of Canada". 1881 1, p. 73.
5. "Census of Canada", 1891 1, p. 174.
6. "Census", 1871, pp. 114-15. If anything, the Protestant ratio
for Cabbagetown alone might have been a bit higher, since the older western
section of St. David's in 1871 likely held more Catholics, as is strongly
suggested by the denominational charts compiled for the settled city of
1851-61 in D.S. O'Shea, "The Irish Immigrant
Adjustment to Toronto: 1840-1865" unpublished graduate research paper,
University of Toronto, 1972, appendices. In any event, it is unwise to use
the 1871 Census figures for St. David's to convey much more than the general
but sizeable Protestant
ascendancy in our locale that was attained by that time. Closer applications
concerning specific church numbers run into too many uncertainties of linkage
between the total ward figures and the Cabbagetown community itself. The
same is true regarding statistics of birthplaces and national origins: the
1871 Census is not a sufficiently indicative key to them, since the fit
between the St. David's of the day and its Cabbagetown content was still
too loose before 1873.
7. "Census", 1881,1, pp. 174-75.
8. "Census", 1891, 1, pp. 282-83.
9. As for ethnic patterns later than 1881, it could be noted that the Census
of 1901 did at least present origins by wards, and here it may be somewhat
illustrative to mark the wide Ward II that from 1892 included most of Cabbagetown.
For what it is worth, the 1901 statistics for this successor ward enumerate
(rounded) 15,000
of English ancestry, 11,800 Irish and 5,800 Scottish-and specifically, 1,153
''Germans,'' 299 Jewish, 61 ''African'' and 42 Italian, among other small
components. But the 1881 Census affords the closest analysis.
10. "Census", 1881, pp. 276-77.
11. Ibid.
12. Ibid, pp. 374-75.
13. Ibid.
14. Ibid., p. 277.
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