Grange Park was initially an elite neighbourhood, with mansions lining
Beverley Street. The neighbourhood took its name from
The Grange, a mansion built in 1817 by
G. D'Arcy Boulton, Auditor-General of
Upper Canada and a member of the prominent Boulton family. The Grange is the oldest standing brick house in Toronto. It served as the first home of
OCAD University, and today forms a wing of the
Art Gallery of Ontario. Prominent early residents of the neighbourhood included
George Brown, a
Father of Confederation and founder of
The Globe newspaper (186 Beverley Street) and the family of
William Lyon Mackenzie King, Canada's longest-serving prime minister (147 Beverley Street). , a
Georgian styled residence built in 1817. The area was transformed into a working class, immigrant community by 1900 with rows of workers' cottages. Many of the more prominent brick row houses, built in the
Edwardian style, still survive in the neighbourhood today. By 1914, the area had become predominantly Jewish as Eastern European Jewish immigrants left
The Ward and moved west of University Avenue towards
Spadina Avenue. Synagogues and other community institutions were located on McCaul, Beverley and Cecil streets. Among the more famous Jewish residents was the family of architect
Frank Gehry, whose grandparents owned a rowhouse at 15 Beverley Street. Gehry later recalled that his first exposure to art came at the Art Gallery of Ontario, for which he was later commissioned to design renovation completed in 2008. By the 1960s, the Jewish community had given way to the Chinese community following the demolition of Toronto's original Chinatown to build the new City Hall, which migrated westward along Dundas Street to form the present-day Chinatown centered at Dundas and Spadina. At the heart of the Neighbourhood lies
Grange Park itself. The park was created in 1911, when Harriett Boulton gifted her family property to be home for a new Art Museum of Toronto (later evolving into the
Art Gallery of Ontario). Upkeep of the expansive gardens to the south of Grange House was entrusted to the City of Toronto, which has maintained the lands as a public park ever since. In 1852 a fall fair held by the
Provincial Agricultural Association of Canada West took place just west of University Avenue from north of Dundas Street to south of College Street. The fair was mainly displaying animals (dairy cattle, sheep, horses), but also a refreshment area, floral hall and a midway (pleasure grounds). This was the second time for Toronto hosting, a fair that would be replaced by the
Canadian National Exhibition in 1879. ==Character==