George Leslie (Upper Canada)

George Leslie Sr.
Born Sutherlandshire, Scotland
Died 1893 (aged 8889)
Nationality Canadian
Occupation horticulturist

George Leslie Sr. a Scottish immigrant to Upper Canada, was born in 1804. He arrived, with his parents, John and Esther, and his siblings, settling in Streetsville, in what is now Mississauga.[1] Sources give the arrival date as either 1824 or 1825.[2][3]

George had worked as a gardener, in Scotland, and continued working as a gardener in Upper Canada, for the Province's richer residents, including Bishop John Strachan, Chief Justice William Campbell.[1] He would later found a plant nursery east of the boundaries of Toronto, on land originally granted to John Small.

In 1834 Leslie was one of the founders of the Toronto Horticultural Society.[1]

He married in 1836, and opened a store in Toronto, the first to be lit by gas, a novelty that attracted sightseers.[1]

His Toronto store had a small nursery, but the nursery that Leslie started in 1845, near the street now named after him, grew to 150 acres (61 hectares) and was considered the largest in Canada at the time.[1]

Leslieville, the community that grew up around his nursery, acquired a post office, and a railway station. In 1853 Leslie was appointed a magistrate.[1]

Leslie passed his nursery to his children, who broke it up into lots.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Elizabeth Gillan Muir (2014). Riverdale: East of the Don. Dundurn Press. p. 41-45. ISBN 9781459728721. Retrieved 2018-10-11.
  2. Graeme Mercer Adam, Charles Pelham Mulvany, Christopher Blackett Robinson (1885). History of Toronto and County of York, Ontario: Containing an Outline of the History of the Dominion of Canada; a History of the City of Toronto and the County of York, with the Townships, Towns, General and Local Statistics; Biographical Sketches, Volume 1. C.B. Robinson. pp. 196–197. Retrieved 2018-10-12.
  3. Graeme Mercer Adam (1891). Toronto, Old and New: A Memorial Volume, Historical, Descriptive and Pictorial, Designed to Mark the Hundredth Anniversary of the Passing of the Constitutional Act of 1791, which Set Apart the Province of Upper Canada and Gave Birth to York (now Toronto) with Some Sketches of the Men who Have ... Mail printing Company. p. 171. Retrieved 2018-10-05.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.