The creation of the
Upper and
Lower Canadian provinces (colonies) from the division of the
Province of Quebec (1763–1791) colony by the
Parliament of Great Britain's
Constitutional Act of 1791 had a deciding influence on the timing of the founding of Ancaster. At its inception, Upper Canada was only sparsely settled (unlike the more established Lower Canada), and its land had not been officially surveyed to any great extent. Thus, there was an urgency by the then
Lieutenant Governor of Upper Canada
John Graves Simcoe to survey this new and relatively barren province for establishing military roads and for preventing settlers from clearing and settling land not legally belonging to them. Predating Upper Canada, however, the earliest European settlers to arrive and clear land in the mid-18th century in what would eventually become Ancaster were mostly a wilderness society made up of American farmers travelling north searching for arable land and to a lesser extent
French-speaking fur traders and British immigrants travelling southward. Also arriving at this area again travelling north in substantial numbers around 1787 with the incentive of inexpensive land grants were the
United Empire Loyalists still loyal to the British crown who were fleeing from the United States after the 1776
American War of Independence. Britain's promise of free land brought many people from the new republic to the south and east, who did not exhibit the same loyalty to the crown as the Loyalists. This would eventually lead to a series of defections, accusations and treasonous acts during the War of 1812 that precipitated the largest mass hangings in Canadian history, the so-called
Bloody Assize of 1814 whose trial took place in Ancaster in 1814. When the United States invaded Upper Canada during the
War of 1812, its occupants were primarily of American ancestry. However, after the war, the province would have a noticeably more British-centred influence. In an age before steam power, the wilderness that would become Ancaster had an early economic advantage because it existed amidst a natural break in the
Niagara Escarpment. Thus, even its relatively minor water resources were valuable because they were easily accessible. Just as vital an influence in Ancaster's rapid development was that it already had access to two crucial prehistoric
First Nations roads. The first European settlers to set foot in this region would have encountered the Iroquois Trail and the
Mohawk Trail intersecting precisely in the area that would eventually become Ancaster Village. This aboriginal Iroquois trail had become the most critical transportation route in Upper Canada. It meandered down the escarpment from the future Ancaster into what would eventually become Hamilton, Ontario, towards present-day
Lewiston, New York, eventually linking up with similar aboriginal trails in New York. In the other direction, the Iroquois trail led from present-day Ancaster to what would eventually become the town of
Brantford, Ontario, at which point the trail branched off into the Detroit Path and the Long Point trail. By 1770, the 80-kilometre Mohawk Trail was essentially the escarpment accompaniment of the lakeside Iroquois trail. The Mohawk Trail ran parallel to the Iroquois Trail. It originated and diverged from the Iroquois Trail in present-day
Queenston, Ontario, until finally ending and reconnecting to the Iroquois Trail in present-day Ancaster at what is now known as the intersection of Rousseaux and Wilson Street. The two trails had been interconnected in four locations along the Mohawk Trail's 80-kilometre route when favourable escarpment conditions permitted. By 1785, the Iroquois Trail passing through present-day Ancaster had been widened to accommodate horse and buggy traffic. Another influential road that intersected the Mohawk Trail very close to Ancaster Village was the Twenty Mile Road that followed the
Twenty Mile Creek up to present day
Smithville, Ontario, and beyond. Lastly, Ancaster also had fertile soil and abundant fresh water, which encouraged pioneer settlers to arrive in this region to clear the land and plant crops for subsistence agriculture. Ancaster was established formally in 1792, but the area now referred to as Ancaster Village had been referred to informally by local villagers by the more colourful name of Wilson's Mills. This was in reference to millwright James Wilson, who, along with his affluent fur trader, entrepreneur and business partner
Richard Beasley, were the primary founders of Ancaster village. With Beasley's financial backing, Wilson built a gristmill in 1791 and a sawmill in 1792 that would be the only mills west of Grimsby for many years. To attract workers to his mills, Wilson needed to provide the social amenities and commercial framework for an area of land that, in that period, was an isolated frontier forest with accessible waterpower situated precisely at the juncture of already well-established pre-historical indigenous transportation trails. In that period, the area was populated with just a smattering of
First Nations aboriginal peoples and wilderness farmers. Again, with Beasley's financial assistance, Wilson managed to generate the impetus for a community by constructing a general store, a blacksmith shop, a distillery, and a tavern, all within walking distance of his mills. As a result, Wilson's newly arrived employees began to build their homes near their place of work and thus the necessary factors were in place for the community of Wilson's Mills to thrive. Wilson's primary residence was also used as a school, a magistrate's court and a cooperage. To this day, the main street that winds through the historical Ancaster Village that once was a section of the original aboriginal Iroquois Trail still bears the legacy of Wilson's name. By 1793, an area containing Wilson's Mills was finally surveyed and officially became known as Ancaster Township as chosen by
John Graves Simcoe. Simcoe was apparently inspired in the name choice by
Peregrine Bertie, the 3rd Duke of
Ancaster and
Kesteven. Thus, Wilson's Mills was indirectly renamed
Ancaster after the historic village in the county of
Lincolnshire, England. In 1794, Wilson sold his half share of the gristmill and sawmill business to Montreal-born fur trader, interpreter, businessman, militia officer and office holder Jean Rousseaux "St. John," who already had a home and general store on Wilson Street. Rousseaux's Ancaster general store experienced frequent trading with
Joseph Brant's
Mohawks and other
Iroquois people from the
Six Nations confederacy located at the
Grand River. Rousseaux would eventually buy out Beasley's remaining share of the mills in 1797. Rousseaux had also been Governor Simcoe's official native and French interpreter and was also a close confidante and advisor to native leader
Joseph Brant. James Wilson at this point moved away and the local villagers by 1795 gradually began referring to the community of Wilson's Mills as Ancaster Village. Curiously, the detailed whereabouts or activities of James Wilson after his departure are not well documented. There is evidence that Wilson was born before 1755, had a wife and three children but his burial location is unknown. With the profits from this business transaction Rousseaux built the Union Hotel in 1797 on Wilson Street, which is now remembered as the location of the
Bloody Assize trials in 1814 during the
War of 1812. By building his hotel on Wilson Street, Rousseaux reversed the trend of building exclusively on the Mohawk trail. In 1794–1797, Rousseaux also added a general store, brewery and distillery as well as hiring Ancaster's first school teacher. His accomplishments include being the first assessor, tax collector, magistrate, and the Township's first Lieutenant Colonel of the Militia. Rousseaux also became a considerable landowner, assisted significantly with native relations, was able to bridge French and English cultures successfully and was instrumental in the early development of Ancaster and old York. Rousseaux eventually resold the mills to the Union Mill Company in 1802, and they ultimately were destroyed by fire in 1812. However, the mills' brief 20 years of service (1791–1812) provided the initial catalyst for the economic and social development of Ancaster Township. Rousseaux died of pleurisy at Fort George (Niagara-on-the-Lake) during the War of 1812. In 1871, the still-existing and well-maintained Ancaster Township Hall opened at an initial cost of $2,400. Additional examples of Victorian architecture are also located on Wilson Street, amongst them the Richardson residence, built in 1872 as a wedding present for Dr. Henry Richardson and his new bride, Sarah Egleston. Other similar structures include St. John's Church 1869, the Gurnett Home 1826, Gurnett General Store 1826, Hammill House 1860, the Egleston House, Job Lodor's Home 1820, Rousseau Hotel 1832 and the Thuresson Home 1872 to name just a few. The oldest building in Ancaster is the Tisdale house at 314 Wilson Street, which was built c. 1806 and whose current function is a police museum. The travelling expedition of Edison's
phonograph was exhibited in the Township Hall in 1878. In 1891, John Heslop was murdered in his home on Mineral Springs Road, and the murder case remains unsolved. After 1900, affluent Hamilton industrialists began purchasing farmland close to Ancaster village for building estates. By 1946, housing subdivisions began to be established around the village and thus started the post-
World War II population expansion that continues to this present day with the current housing construction in the
Meadowlands subdivision. A final contributing factor to Hamilton's dominance was the fact it was chosen to be the administrative centre for the new Gore District in 1816 In the latter half of the 19th century, Ancaster became an unimposing
gristmill hamlet and
police village. Ancaster's many derelict, burnt down, or abandoned factories, such as the gutted four-story knitting mill and the ruined tannery littered its surroundings in that era like modern ruins that shouted at a former glory. The economic reality was that these former Ancaster factories would be rebuilt elsewhere. Ancaster would not have access to a modern transportation system until the
Brantford and Hamilton Electric Railway intersected Ancaster Village in 1907, thus making fresh milk and other perishable foods, general supplies and mail easily deliverable daily for the first time. The arrival of the B&H radial line corresponded with the inevitable process of change that Ancaster was undergoing, which is recognizable today from that of a former prominent industrial and highly influential self-sufficient village to its current status as a bedroom community of Hamilton. The evidence for this radial train is still easily visible in Ancaster village by a well-maintained gravel path behind St. John's Anglican Church on Wilson Street. Walkers and cyclists can still follow this old radial line path down the escarpment (behind Meadowlands Shopping Centre) to the Hamilton Chedoke Golf Course. The radial line was dismantled in 1931 as a condition of sale from the Cataract Company. With the advent of competition from the automobile and bus companies in North America at the turn of the 20th century, generally, only publicly owned streetcar companies had the financial means to survive into the 1950s. At the end of the 19th century, the townsfolk of Ancaster were indeed conscious that their town had once been a glowing star in Upper Canada that had quickly lost its lustre during the Victorian age despite its second successful wave of industrialization in the 1820s. In 1897, local author Alma Dick-Lauder, writing about Ancaster in the
Hamilton Spectator using the colourful language of that time, lamented that: So who can say that new life may not once more flow to the aged village, now high and dry on old time's sand banks, bringing back her bright meridian bloom and vigour of 70 years ago? Fanned by the breath of electricity to spring like a Phoenix from her bed of ashes-ashes, understand, being principally the matter choking up the old place with a fire record unequalled since the days of Sodom, making her an object of terror to her friend, derision to her foes and a hoo-doo to the guileless insurance agent. It is rather melancholy, on a summer's day, to stand on the high bridge and watch the waters slouching by like a gang of crystal dwarfs out of a job, idling and playing and painting the 'beautiful, waving hair of the dead' grass green among the fallen ruins, which a few years ago were instinct with the hum of industry, pouring forth at stated hours, with jangle of bells, a cheerful, clattering stream of bread winners, giving life and animation to the scene, in contrast to the occasional man who now meets the casual glance up street in the sunny noon hours. Alma Dick-Lauder was referring to the fact that by 1897, although Ancaster Township had a population of 4,000, the solitary industry remained Egleston's gristmill. The "fire record" that Alma was referring to include the burning of the following: John J. Ryckman's store in 1841, St. Johns Church in 1868, The Ancaster Knitting Factory in 1875, the Morris S. Lowrey Hotel in 1881, Egleston's foundry in 1883, Thuresson's Foundry in 1884 and finally the Ancaster Carriage Factory in 1885. By Alma's expression of the 'meridian bloom of 70 years ago', she was referring to the fact that in 1820, Job Lodor had purchased the Union Mills and, in so doing, had instantly transformed Ancaster's industrial centre to the point where it was once again, albeit temporarily, the unrivalled commercial and industrial hub of the Gore district. At the time of Alma's 1897 newspaper article, Ancaster had gone from having three schools in 1835 to just one remaining school but had developed cultural institutions such as an orchestra, a literary society, and an enclosed curling rink. Job Lodor, as well as many other prominent as well as lesser-known early Ancaster settlers, left behind sometimes still legible tombstones and grave markers in the cemeteries belonging to St. John's Anglican and St. Andrew's Presbyterian Churches located on Wilson Street. The Ancaster Fair has been an annual agricultural and social event since 1850, except for 1937, when it was cancelled due to a case of infantile paralysis and 2020, when it was cancelled due to the
COVID-19 pandemic. Initially, the fair was held at Wilson and Academy Streets in the Village core. In 1894, it moved to Wilson and Cameron Drive driving park, where it remained until its centennial year in 1950 when it moved to Garner Road. After nearly 60 years at the Garner Road site, in 2009, the Ancaster Fair moved to 630 Trinity Road. In 1976, an Ancaster Town Council vote reversed a long-standing policy that would finally allow Ancaster restaurants to apply for liquor licences. Other than the
LCBO and
Brewers Retail outlets that were established in Ancaster in the 1950s, the village had, up to that point, been 'dry,' presumably since
Prohibition in Canada. Ancaster's earlier pioneers, however, experienced an entirely different social environment. Again, according to Dick-Lauder writing in 1897, "Ancaster saw plenty of life during the
rebellion of 1837 when it was quite a frequent thing for all the inns, five in number, and many of the private houses to be full overnight of redcoats passing towards the west." During this period, Ancaster Township was attached variously to
Nassau District,
Home District,
York County (West Riding) and
Halton County. When Halton County and Wentworth County joined temporarily from 1850 to 1854, Ancaster remained permanently attached to
Wentworth County, where it remains today in the
Regional Municipality of Hamilton-Wentworth The Hermitage is a popular site in Ancaster. This historic house was once the property of Reverend George Sheed in 1830. Since then, the house had changed ownership many times before burning to the ground in 1934. The last owner of The Hermitage was, in fact, local author Alma Dick-Lauder, who has been referenced above. The fire that eventually consumed The Hermitage occurred directly from a party she had been hosting. The shell of the old house and surrounding buildings can still be visited today. One of the main draws of this old property is the legend of the property being haunted. "Ghost tours" run throughout the summer, with the tour guides telling haunted stories of the land and the surrounding county.
Griffin House is a historic house associated with the
Underground Railroad. == Government ==