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Canadian Genealogy
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Mariposa Township,
Victoria County, Ontario Canada
Mariposa is the Spanish word for "butterfly." No
record or even legend persists to explain through what whim of early
officialdom a backwoods township was so named.
Mariposa township was surveyed in 1820 and formally attached to
Durham County, Newcastle District in 18 21. In shape it was
originally a rectangle, nine miles from east to west and fifteen
from north to south. There was added to it later, however, a broken
southern front on Lake Scugog, now known as concessions A, B, C, and
D, Mariposa, but formerly attached to the township of Cartwright,
which now lies entirely on the south side of the lake. The other
municipal neighbors of Mariposa are Ops and Fenelon on the east,
Eldon on the north and Brock, in Ontario County, on the west. Its
superficial area is 75,102 acres. The land surface is moderately
undulating, with a very immature drainage system. The chief stream,
known variously as Big Creek, Black Creek, Davidson's Creek, West
Cross Creek, and Mariposa Brook, rises in swamps near Manilla on the
western boundary, flows eight miles northeast to about Lot 18,
Concession 13, then turns directly south until it passes Little
Britain on Concession 4, and finally turns ,east to pass out of the
township on the 3rd Concession and empty into the Scugog River in
Ops. The meagre flow and gentle current of even this main stream and
the consequent lack of any considerable water power is beyond doubt
the explanation for the absence of any outstanding village in
Mariposa The soil, however has always surpassed in richness that of
any other township in Victoria. Once the heavy timber had been
removed, it held, as it still holds, an easy leadership in
agricultural prosperity.
This well known fertility of the township resulted in the blocking
of general settlement until nearly a decade after the major
immigration into Emily. For the Canada Company secured large
concessions here; George Strange Boulton of Port Hope, the Family
Compact member for Durham., arranged for a rich grant to himself;
and lesser octopuses were not wanting.
For many years Mariposa was visited annually by these economic
parasites, who came in to inspect and invest for speculation, but
not to occupy the land. At last in 1827, S. Patterson, of Markham,
Ontario, settled near the modern Manilla. Others who located prior
to 1830 on land near Manilla which they purchased from the Canada
,Company at from $1.50 to $2.00 per acre were the Ewings, McLeods,
Houghs, McPhersons, Pillings, and Winters. Just before and during
1831, a large contingent of Scotch settlers, chiefly from
Argyleshire, poured in along the Eldon boundary on the north.
Amongst the families who overflowed on the south side of the line
were the Blacks, Calkins, Campbells, Charltons, Copelands, Grants,
Irishes, Kinnells, McCrimmons, McCuaigs, McGinnisses, McLeans,
Ringlands, Spences and Wicks. In 1831, also, the Edwards and
Williams families took up land along the western boundary and one
Samuel Dick built his cabin in the hardwood forest near the site of
modern Oakwood. His nearest neighbors on the east were at Purdy's
Mills, nearly nine miles away. In this same year, when actual
settlers began to increase and set about the improvement of the
land, the blowfly swarm of speculators became so 'numerous and
importunate that the Land Office refused to grant any further
locations without an express pledge of settlement. Fortunately men
were not lacking to undertake such pledges. For the next three years
there was a steady immigration of settlers of the very best type,
chiefly Canadian born pioneers of the second generation whose
fathers had hewn out prosperity in the front townships of
Northumberland County and in the Ontario County townships of
Whitchurch and Markham. Most of these families settled in the centre
of the township, along "Big Creek." Amongst them were the Armitages,
Bacons, Bunnells, Davidsons, DeGeers, Delongs, Dundases, Haights,
Hubbells, Lakes, Lloyds, Marks, Minthorns, McNeils, McWilliams,
O'Brien's, Penroses, Piersons, Readers, Richardsons, Roadhouses,
Taylors, Tifts, Waites and Weldons. From 1834 to 1837 a few more
families drifted in each year. Prominent among those who settled in
the eastern part of the township were William Brown, William Bowes,
and John Cruse, a Quaker. For many years yet there was little or no
communication between the Canadian born settlers in the centre of
Mariposa and their Scotch neighbors on the northern border, for a
deep tract of difficult forest, held by speculators, intervened.
There were likewise very few early settlers in the extreme south of
the township.
All of these pioneers in Mariposa came in from the south and
southwest and not by way of Peterborough, Cavan, or Emily. Supplies
were first obtained from Newmarket, then from Prince Albert, on Lake
Scugog, and finally from Port Perry. Trade was not opened up with
Lindsay until very much later. In the beginning, the nearest post
office for the receipt and despatch of mails was at Butcher's Point
on Lake Simcoe. Then Prince Albert was for a short time the closest
centre for mail, until "Mariposa" post office was opened at what is
now Manilla.
By 1850 the population of the township had risen to 1863, only 269
fewer than in 1920. The harvest of that year included 70,000 bushels
of wheat, 41,000 bushels of oats, 14,000 bushels of peas, 33,000
bushels of potatoes, 31,000 bushels of turnips, 38,900 pounds of
maple sugar, 10,500 pounds of wool, and 4,000 pounds of butter. This
represented, however, only a small portion of the effort of that
day, for the great task of each farmer was still the conquest of a
virgin forest of oak and maple. Such crops as were exported were
teamed in the winter time south to a village (now deserted) called
Port Hoover, on the north shore of Lake Scugog, thence across the
lake to Caesarea, in Cartwright, and south by road to Port Whitby,
on Lake Ontario.
Municipal organization in the early thirties was very slight. Louis
Winters was the first tax collector and E. R. Irish the first
Township Clerk. The personnel of the Magistrate's Court for Mariposa
and Eldon combined comprised Messrs. Irish, Ewing, Williams, and
Calkins. Samuel Davidson represented Mariposa at Peterborough on the
first Council of Colborne District in 1842.
The first Township Council after the Municipal
Act of 1849 included the following:
Reeve, John Jacobs;
Councillors, Samuel Davidson, Obadiah Rogers, Robert Whiteside, and
William Ramsey;
Clerk, A. A. McLaughlin;
Treasurer, James Thorndyke.
A Business Directory of Canada published in 1850, gives the
following names in Mariposa:
Coulter's Corners (now Manilla)
Mary Douglas, Postmistress;
George Smith, merchant;
L. McKinnon, carpenter;
D. McLean, carpenter
Oakwood:
A. A. McLaughlin, Postmaster and inn keeper;
Thomas Marks, inn keeper.
A Trio of County
Villages
Mariposa is easily the most fertile township in
Victoria County. It lacks, however, two of the most efficient
factors in the development of village life. There is no abundance of
waterpower and no focusing of railroads. The old Indian portage of
Onigoning at the rapids in the Scugog River in Ops has had both and
has therefore become the site of Lindsay, the only town in the
county. In Mariposa, on the contrary, there have been three small
villages, Manilla, Oakwood and Little Britain, none of them
incorporated, which have grown up around a Post Office, a Township
Hall and a small mill respectively.
Manilla straddles the boundary between Victoria and Ontario Counties
on the line between the 8th and 9th Concessions of Mariposa. The
germ of the present village was the Post Office opened up here in
1837 in the log store of Jacob Ham. For six years this was the only
Post Office for the township. Soon afterwards the Bible Christians
built a church, which was rebuilt of brick in 1871. The
Presbyterians built in 1853, the Baptists in 1856, the
Congregationalists in 1860, and the Methodists about 1870. A certain
amount of trade and industry also gathered about this centre. In
1881 the village boasted a flour mill, run by steam because of the
absence of waterpower, a rake factory, and half a dozen stores.
Oakwood is situated on blocks off lots 15 and 16 in concessions S
and 9. The name is derived from the heavy forest of oak which
originally covered this neighborhood. James Tift settled here about
1833 and may therefore be regarded as the father of the village. In
1843 a Post Office was established with A. McLaughlin as Postmaster.
Peter Perry of Whitby opened a store in 1844 and in the following
year a
Township Hall was built. The Hall has been rebuilt once since that
time, but has never ceased to be the municipal focus of the
township. The first tavern or hotel at Oakwood was run by Thomas
Marks.
Banks, who carried on the business for nearly twenty
years.
The first church was built by the Bible Christians
in 1850. The Episcopal Methodists built five years later, the Canada
Methodists in 1858, and the Anglicans in 1860.
Oakwood reached the peak of its prosperity in the eighties. In 1888
its population was about 330. Of that number, there were 75 children
between the ages of seven and eleven and 127 between the ages of
five and twenty-one. Oakwood took just pride in her young people in
those days.
The chief business firm in 1888 was the general store of Hogg Bros.,
with which was associated a 30,000 bushel grain elevator at Mariposa
Station, a mile from the village. To this elevator came Mariposa's
export trade in cereals, and its clover seed, which has gained a
wide reputation. Hogg Bros. also managed the Post Office and
telegraph office. Other units in the commercial aggregate were A.
Cameron's general store, M. N. Anderson's tailor shop, William
Brunker's hotel, Alfred Lake's machinery depot, Thomas Staples'
blacksmith and carriage works, Nicholas Hill's blacksmith and
carriage works, George Humphrey's carriage works, W. H. Harper's
harness shop, and Robert Broad's hardware store.
Prominent citizens of that day were, James Thorndyke, J. F.
Cunnings, Robert Webster, Sr., William Webster, Jesse Weldon, Sr.,
W. A. Silverwood, John Coad, David King, Richard Hancock, and A.
Lake.
The first mile of concession road east from the
village is bisected at right angles by Mariposa Brook. The
neighborhood of this intersection, known locally as "The Crick," was
once busy with tanning and gristing, but by 1888 a brick yard and a
livery stable were all its boast.
The next cross roads to the east again was known as
East Oakwood or Taylor's Corners. Here the Hon. S. C. Wood, before
the days of his political bloom, did business in "The Stone Store."
In the eighties John Maunder and William Wakeley manufactured wagons
and carriages here.
Little Britain is on lots 15 and 16, concessions 4 and 5, four miles
straight south of Oakwood on the old grain route to Port Hoover. It
is built almost at the intersection of Mariposa Brook and a small
tributary which flows through the village from the west. It was
founded by Harrison Haight, who settled here in 1834 and three years
later built the first mill in Mariposa. This mill, which was not
demolished until 1910, required the efforts of nearly the whole
country side for its erection, for its beams and posts were of
ponderous white oak. At this time there was no bridge over the creek
and no road between Little Britain and Oakwood. Robert F. Whiteside
was the village's chief merchant and leading citizen during the
pioneer period. In 1850 the Christians opened a church and in 1852
the Bible Chrisktians followed suit. A Post Office was not opened
until 1853.
The year 1888 saw Little Britain the largest business centre in the
township. The chief industries were: Joseph Maunder's carriage and
blacksmithing works; Wm. Burden's carriage and blacksmithing works;
Maunder's sash, door and planing factory and shingle mill; Edwin
Mark's foundry and implement works; Isaac Finley's steam roller
flour mill, and Davidson's flour mill. W. H. Pogue, S. H. Metherell,
J. Weldon, and T. H. Morton ran general stores. T. H. Morton also
had the Post Office. H. C. Wills owned a grocery store and also ran
the stage to Mariposa Station. A. M. Rusland had a tinware store, R.
Smith a furniture store, S. Champion a tailor shop, and both Wm.
Rodd and John Eck harness shops. Joseph Jenkins ran the village
hotel.
The chief sanctuaries were the large Methodist church on Mill Street
West, presided over by the Rev. William Briden and his assistant,
the Rev. S. H. Anderson, and the Christian church, tended by the
Rev. J. C. Pilkie.
Prominent among the pioneer names in and about Little Britain are
those of Broad, Cory, Davidson, Dix, Eakins, Glass, Glennie,
Greenaway, Hall, Henderson, Johnston, King, Marks, Metherell,
Netherton, Parkinson, Prouse, Rays, Rodman, Siemmon, Stewart,
Wallis, Webster, Whiteside, and Wickett.
None of these three villages, Manilla, Oakwood, and Little Britain,
have attained dimensions sufficient to command incorporation. The
reason, as already suggested, lies in the absence of power for
industry and in the fact that no railway station has been placed
within a mile of their borders. Whether this represents the balanced
result of village plotting and counter plotting in the days of
railway construction, or whether the railway builders were
inadequately bonused, or whether the present route of the
Whitby-Lindsay division was the necessary choice of civil engineers,
is somewhat uncertain. In any case, the rail way has contributed
nothing to the growth of these centres.
There are no other villages in Mariposa.
Woodville is an incorporated village on the Eldon boundary but is
usually reckoned as belonging to the latter township, even though
part of its population has spilled over on the 15th concession of
Mariposa.
Linden Valley in the northeast, Glandine on the Ops boundary,
Valenta in the southeast and Fingerboard in the southwest are former
postal hamlets with little more than a church and a smithy.
Cresswell is a hamlet on the Whitby-Lindsay division just south of
Manilla Junction. Grass Hill is a station on the Coboconk division
at the Eldon boundary. A grain warehouse is its chief ornament.
A Section on Recent
Statistics
The Dominion census of 1911 throws interesting light
on the population of Mariposa. The chief racial strains represented
were as follows:
English, 2,321
Irish, 733
Scotch, 646
The denominational subdivisions were as follows:
Methodists, 2,678
Presbyterians, 757
Anglicans, 125
Christians, 114
Baptists, 43
Roman Catholics, 28
The population of Mariposa has fallen off remarkably during the last
generation. From 1871 to 1920, it dropped from 5363 to 3132, a loss
of 2231 or over forty-one per cent.
The assessed value of real and personal property within the township
was set at $2,480,675 in 1886 and at $3,722,995 in 1920. This
..latter figure is greater than the assessment of Eldon and Emily
com
bined, and more than twice the total value of Somerville, Bexley,
Laxton, Carden, Digby, Dalton and Longford.
Southern Townships
Victoria County
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