Provincial Agricultural Fair of Canada West

Provincial Agricultural Fair of Canada West was an annual provincial agricultural fair held in various places[1][2] in Canada West and after 1867 in Ontario.

The fair was established in 1846 and sponsored by the Provincial Agricultural Association and the Board of Agriculture for Canada West. It replaced an earlier attempt in 1792 by the Agricultural Society of Upper Canada[3] founded in Newark in 1792.

The fair was mainly an agricultural themed show featuring horses and domesticated animals from around what was still a very rural pre-Confederation Ontario. It would last until 1878 as it met competition with large number of local fairs that emerged across some towns and counties in Ontario[4] and eventually succeeded by the Canadian National Exhibition in 1879.

List of Provincial Agricultural Association of Canada West/Ontario

YearHostNotes
1846TorontoHeld at Government House Grounds near King Street West and Simcoe Street.[2] The amount of prizes was $1,600. The number of entries was 1,150.[5]
1847HamiltonUsed Old Race Grounds[6] between Dundurn Street (then Garth Street) and Locke Street South along Aberdeen Avenue in Kirkendall area. The amount of prizes was $3,000. The number of entries was 1,600.[5]
1848CobourgHosted by Northumberland Agricultural Society and held on land loan by Patrick Wallace in the west end of town.[7] The amount of prizes was $3,100. The number of entries was 1,500.[5]
1849KingstonLikely on same site used the then Frontenac Agricultural Society Fair c. 1825 near Kingston (Kingston and District Agricultural Society after 1825). The amount of prizes was $5,100. The number of entries was 1,429.[5]
1850Niagara (Niagara-on-the-Lake)Held at Court House (now Old Court House Theatre) and 14 acres of land set aside(perhaps military reserves).[8] The amount of prizes was $5,000. The number of entries was 1,638.[5]
1851BrockvilleHost of fair from September 24 to 26.[9] The amount of prizes was $5,000. The number of entries was 1,466.[5]
1852TorontoSeptember 21 to September 24.[10] North part of Grange Park (neighbourhood). The amount of prizes was $6,000. The number of entries was 3,048.[5]
1853HamiltonOctober 4 to 7.[11] The amount of prizes was $6,400. The number of entries was 2,820.[5]
1854London, OntarioSeptember 24 to 26.[12] The first year London was chosen as a host site, corresponding to London's celebration of the coming of the railroad.[13] Fair site was north of Oxford St., and south of Grosvenor St., between Talbot St. and the Thames River (now London Life Recreation Grounds). Attended in last three days by James Bruce, 8th Earl of Elgin.[14] On the opening day, approximately 30,000 people attended. The amount of prizes was $7,200. The number of entries was 2,933.[5] The floral hall hosted the first recorded public art show in London[15]. A contemporary account notes the large size of the agricultural show, and the almost complete absence of exhibits highlighting mining and quarrying, forestry, and the Great Lakes fishery.[16]
1855CobourgOctober 9 to 12[17]
1856KingstonSeptember 23 to 26[18]
1857Brantford, OntarioHeld September 29 to 30[19]

From 1858 the fair rotated between Toronto, Kingston, Hamilton and London in the same sequence for the duration of the fair's existence.[20]

YearHostNotes
1858TorontoCrystal Palace or Palace of Industry built near King Street West and Shaw Street[21]
1859KingstonHeld again in the city for third time.[22]
1860Hamilton[23]
1861LondonMilitary Garrison property near Victoria Park.[20] The second provincial fair held in London (and sixteenth in Canada West) was on September 24–27, 1861, on grounds between Waterloo and Richmond, running south of what would become Kenneth Avenue "nearly down to Central Avenue".[24] Octagonal Crystal Palace for the fair opens September 10, 1861 (demolished May 1888), designed by William Robinson, and built for $9000, sited immediately south of Great Market Street (now Central Ave) between Waterloo and Richmond.[24]
1862TorontoSeptember 23 to 26[25]
1863Kingston[26]
1864Hamilton [26]
1865LondonMilitary Garrison property near Victoria Park.[20] Held September 18–22, this was the fair's third time in London.[27]
1866Toronto [28]
1867Kingston [26]
1868Hamilton [26]
1869LondonMilitary Garrison property near Victoria Park.[20] The fair took place in September,[29] and was attended by the Governor General (Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught and Strathearn) and Sir John A. Macdonald.[30]
1870Toronto [20]
1871Kingston [20]
1872Hamilton [20]Held September 23–27.[31] Attended by Lord Dufferin and Lady Dufferin.[32]
1873LondonMilitary Garrison property near Victoria Park.[20] Held September 22–25—the 28th Provincial Fair was London's fifth.[33] Attended by the Governor-General of Canada, Lord Dufferin.[34]
1874Toronto [20]
1875Kingston [20]
1876Hamilton [20]
1877LondonMilitary Garrison property near Victoria Park. (The fairgrounds in London moved to their current Queen's Park location on September 19, 1887).[20]
1878TorontoLast year Fair was held and first time at Exhibition Grounds by New Fort with Crystal Palace disassembled and rebuilt there.[21]

Following Toronto's decision to create a permanent fair (Toronto Industrial Exhibition or now the Canadian National Exhibition), the provincial fair was replaced by the Dominion Exhibition from 1879 until 1913.

All the remaining cities to continue with their existing fairs:

  • Kingston: continued with the Frontenac Agricultural Society Fair that began in 1825 on an irregular pattern to 1925, thereafter the Kingston Fair has been held annually[35]
  • Hamilton: the closest fair in the city has been the Ancaster Fall Fair held since 1850
  • London: continued with the Western Fair that began in 1868 and operating since 1885 as the only fall fair in the city

Other fairs

A list of annual agricultural and/or country fairs in Ontario created before or after the establishment of the provincial fair:

Other annual fairs around Canada and the United States:

References

  1. CNE Archives. 2013.
  2. http://www.lostrivers.ca/points/CNEearly.htm
  3. http://www.emsdaleagriculturalsociety.com/our-history/history-of-agricultural-fairs/
  4. Agricultural Society of Upper Canada
  5. Goodspeed, W. A. & C.L. (1889). History of the County of Middlesex Canada: From the Earliest Time to the Present ; Containing an Authentic Account of Many Important Matters Relating to the Settlement, Progress and General History of the County ; and Including a Department Devoted to the Preservation of Personal and Private Records, etc. Toronto and London: W.A. & C.L. Goodspeed. pp. 202.
  6. http://digitalarchive.mcmaster.ca/islandora/object/macrepo%3A73685
  7. https://www.cobourgmuseum.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/AgricultureFairs-Final.pdf
  8. http://www.niagarahistorical.museum/media/NHS32.pdf
  9. "Descriptive Catalogue of the Provincial Exhibition, at Toronto, September 1858: With an Historical and Descriptive Sketch of the City of Toronto and a Digest of the Proceedings of the Agricultural Association Since Its Formation, with a Large Amount of Other Useful Information". 1858.
  10. "Descriptive Catalogue of the Provincial Exhibition, at Toronto, September 1858: With an Historical and Descriptive Sketch of the City of Toronto and a Digest of the Proceedings of the Agricultural Association Since Its Formation, with a Large Amount of Other Useful Information". 1858.
  11. "Descriptive Catalogue of the Provincial Exhibition, at Toronto, September 1858: With an Historical and Descriptive Sketch of the City of Toronto and a Digest of the Proceedings of the Agricultural Association Since Its Formation, with a Large Amount of Other Useful Information". 1858.
  12. "Descriptive Catalogue of the Provincial Exhibition, at Toronto, September 1858: With an Historical and Descriptive Sketch of the City of Toronto and a Digest of the Proceedings of the Agricultural Association Since Its Formation, with a Large Amount of Other Useful Information". 1858.
  13. Sanmiya, Inge V. (August 2000). A Celebration of Excellence: The History of the Western Fair Association. London ON: The Aylmer Express Ltd. p. 8. ISBN 0-9687675-0-8.
  14. Brock, Dan; McEwan, Catherine (2011). Fragments from the Forks: London, Ontario's Legacy. London, Ontario, Canada: The London and Middlesex Historical Society. p. 46. ISBN 978-0-9866899-0-1.
  15. Smart, Tom (1990). The Collection, London Canada. London, ON: London Regional Art and Historical Museums. p. 5. ISBN 0-920872-81-6.
  16. The Provincial Exhibition. The Anglo-American Magazine. November 1854. pp. 438–441.
  17. "Descriptive Catalogue of the Provincial Exhibition, at Toronto, September 1858: With an Historical and Descriptive Sketch of the City of Toronto and a Digest of the Proceedings of the Agricultural Association Since Its Formation, with a Large Amount of Other Useful Information". 1858.
  18. "Descriptive Catalogue of the Provincial Exhibition, at Toronto, September 1858: With an Historical and Descriptive Sketch of the City of Toronto and a Digest of the Proceedings of the Agricultural Association Since Its Formation, with a Large Amount of Other Useful Information". 1858.
  19. "Descriptive Catalogue of the Provincial Exhibition, at Toronto, September 1858: With an Historical and Descriptive Sketch of the City of Toronto and a Digest of the Proceedings of the Agricultural Association Since Its Formation, with a Large Amount of Other Useful Information". 1858.
  20. "Salter's Grove/Queen's Park (1879 - 1887)". Closed Canadian Parks. Retrieved April 1, 2016.
  21. http://torontoist.com/2008/08/historicist_an_exhibition_in_crysta/
  22. http://catalogue.nla.gov.au/Record/2836467
  23. "Transactions". 1859.
  24. Brock, Dan; McEwan, Catherine (2011). Fragments from the Forks: London, Ontario's Legacy. London, Ontario, Canada: The London and Middlesex Historical Society. p. 58. ISBN 978-0-9866899-0-1.
  25. https://archive.org/details/cihm_89189
  26. http://vitacollections.ca/cramahelibrary/2813225/data?n=6
  27. Brock, Dan; McEwan, Catherine (2011). Fragments from the Forks: London, Ontario's Legacy. London, Ontario, Canada: The London and Middlesex Historical Society. p. 71. ISBN 978-0-9866899-0-1.
  28. https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1526&dat=18680921&id=E0g6AAAAIBAJ&sjid=LCoMAAAAIBAJ&pg=3376,4575357
  29. The Ontario Provincial Exhibition. Montreal: The Canadian Illustrated News. October 30, 1869. p. 5.
  30. Brock, Dan; McEwan, Catherine (2011). Fragments from the Forks: London, Ontario's Legacy. London, Ontario, Canada: The London and Middlesex Historical Society. p. 81. ISBN 978-0-9866899-0-1.
  31. The Ontario Provincial Exhibition. Montreal: The Canadian Illustrated News. October 5, 1872. p. 211.
  32. The Ontario Provincial Exhibition. Montreal: The Canadian Illustrated News. October 12, 1872. p. 226.
  33. Brock, Dan; McEwan, Catherine (2011). Fragments from the Forks: London, Ontario's Legacy. London, Ontario, Canada: The London and Middlesex Historical Society. p. 91. ISBN 978-0-9866899-0-1.
  34. Miller, Orlo (1992). London 200: An Illustrated History. London, ON: London Chamber of Commerce. pp. 116–117.
  35. http://www.agrinewsinteractive.com/archives/article-6187.htm
  36. Mitchell-Reid, Alison. "The East Middlesex Agricultural Society Fonds (AFC73)" (PDF). Archives Finding Aids. Archives and Research Collections Centre, Western University. Retrieved April 1, 2016.
  37. http://williamstownfair.ca/about-us/history/
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