Mimico

Mimico
Neighbourhood

Vimy Park

Location within Toronto

Coordinates: 43°36′46″N 79°29′39″W / 43.61278°N 79.49417°W / 43.61278; -79.49417Coordinates: 43°36′46″N 79°29′39″W / 43.61278°N 79.49417°W / 43.61278; -79.49417
Country  Canada
Province  Ontario
City Toronto Toronto
Established 1856 (Subdivision)
1858 (Postal village)
1905 (Police village)
Incorporated 1911 (Village)
1917 (Town)
Changed Municipality 1953 Metropolitan Toronto from York County
1998 Toronto from Etobicoke
Annexed 1967 into Etobicoke
Government
  MP James Maloney (Etobicoke-Lakeshore)
  MPP Peter Milczyn (Etobicoke-Lakeshore)
  Councillor Mark Grimes (Ward 6 Etobicoke-Lakeshore)

Mimico is a neighbourhood and a former municipality in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, being located in the south-west area of Toronto on Lake Ontario. It is in the south-east corner of the former Township (and later, City) of Etobicoke, and was an independent municipality from 1911 to 1967.

Mimico is the oldest of the former Lakeshore Municipalities. The Town of Mimico was established by a plan of sub-division in 1856, but was not sub-divided from the former Township of Etobicoke until 1911. The land area of Mimico originated mainly from three family farms, namely: Stock Estate (North of Portland), Hendry Estate (between Royal York and Queens Ave), Van Every Estate (between Royal York Rd and Dwight Ave). Mimico was an independent municipality until 1967, when it was amalgamated into the new Borough of Etobicoke (later, City of, in 1984), which was itself amalgamated in 1998 into the current city of Toronto.

Today, Mimico is primarily a residential area with two commercial strips; one along Royal York Road and the other along Lake Shore Boulevard West, parallel to the shoreline (from Louisa Avenue to Allen Avenue). There is also a former commercial strip along Mimico Avenue connecting Royal York Road and Lake Shore Boulevard West. Some areas of industrial use exist along the railway corridor. In early 2012, Toronto Life magazine ranked Mimico first on their "Where to Buy Now" list of Toronto neighbourhoods.[1]

Character

Condominium towers east of Mimico on Humber Bay

Historically, The Town of Mimico had few municipal buildings and none of these survive. Architecturally, homes in Mimico range from grand lakeside estates to bungalows built in the 1920s to 1940s, and low rise apartment buildings built in the 1950s and 1960s. East of historic Mimico between Mimico Creek on the west and the Humber River to the east, there is a large area of condominium high-rise tower development at the former "Motel Strip" area of Humber Bay along the lake shore. Lake Shore Blvd. West is also home to many Eastern European delicatessen, independent stores and bakeries, giving the area an Eastern European atmosphere.

Businesses in Mimico's commercial strips along Royal York (north of the railway tracks) and Lake Shore Boulevard West (South of the railway tracks) have organised themselves into two Business Improvement Areas: 'Mimico Village' (along Royal York Rd. in northern Mimico) and 'Mimico by the Lake' (the heart of the former 'Mimico Beach' postal area along the lakeshore in eastern Mimico).

Boundaries

Old Barn behind houses on Superior Ave

The former Town of Mimico is bounded by Evans Avenue, Algoma Street and Manitoba Street to the north, Lake Ontario to the south, a line midway between Fleeceline Road and Louisa Street to the East, with the western boundary along a line through Dwight Avenue (south of the railway mainline) and St. George Street (north of the railway mainline).[2] These boundaries for Mimico are defined on City of Toronto zoning maps. See:

  1. Town of Mimico, Ward Map (1930)
  2. City of Toronto, Urban Development Services West District, map, Etobicoke Zoning Mimico South [3]
  3. Toronto, City Planning West District, map, Etobicoke Zoning Mimico North [4]

For statistical purposes, a "neighbourhood planning area" named after Mimico (simply because it is the closest defined community) starts at the Humber River to the east, its northern boundary being the Gardiner Expressway as far west as the CPR north-south railway line west of Kipling Avenue. The western boundary follows the CPR railway line south to the CNR railway line. The western boundary then continues along the CNR railway line to Dwight Avenue, then south along Dwight Avenue to Lake Ontario.[5] This planning area includes part of the former Township of Etobicoke (including parts of Humber Bay and Alderwood), and are used for planning purposes (which also match the census tracts for that area).[5] This planning area also includes the recent Humber Bay Shores condominium developments along Lakeshore Boulevard West east of Mimico at the former "Motel Strip" area of Humber Bay, as well as the industrial areas along the rail lines to the west and an area to the north, all of which comprised part of the Township of Etobicoke.

These other areas outside Mimico were never part of the Town of Mimico and are not considered part of the Mimico neighbourhood.

Main streets

Looking east to Sir Henry Pellatt's 'Bailey House' (later the Legion Hall) at bend in Lake Shore Road, east of Mimico, 1936
Looking east to row houses east of Mimico at bend in Lake Shore Blvd. West, 2007

Lake Shore Boulevard is a four-lane arterial that runs parallel to the Lake Ontario waterfront from east to west, and is primarily residential within the Mimico area. The major north-south route is Royal York Road.

The original naming convention for Mimico side-streets was for English community names: Buckingham, Windsor (now Blue Goose Street), Newcastle, Portland, Burlington, Manchester, Oxford, Dorchester (now in The Queensway), Southampton (Cavell), Salisbury Ave. (Park Lawn Rd.), Torrington (Grand Ave.), Cambridge (to the North became Mendota), Coventry (to the East became Queens Ave.).[6]

Some later streets were named for Mimico settlers: O'Donnell, Van Every, Robert Hendry (Wheatfield), George (Hendry), Pidgeon (western part of Stanley), Howland (Ourland), Stock's Side Road (Queen St., later The Queensway); and more recently for former mayors of Mimico: Skelton, Norris. The Griggs and Edwards retirement homes are also named for former mayors.

Transportation

Lake Shore Road looking East at Mimico Avenue 1927

The area is served primarily with buses along Royal York Road and Evans Avenue connecting with the Bloor-Danforth subway and with streetcars along Lake Shore Boulevard. The City of Toronto is in the process of studying various proposals to increase transit connections in the area to downtown. The Mimico GO Transit station provides regular east-west commuter rail travel to downtown Toronto and to as far west as Hamilton. Along the north of the area is the Gardiner Expressway, a large twelve-lane highway (originally built as the Queen Elizabeth Way).

Before the building of the Bloor-Danforth Subway, the TTC operated a 'Mimico' bus route along a portion of Royal York and the Queensway from Humber Loop to the foot of Royal York.[7] A second route was the 507 Long Branch streetcar, which was joined in 1995 to the 501 Queen route (the longest streetcar route in the world), and therefore no longer turns at the Humber Loop. Because of poor service on the western section of the route, the TTC is considering reinstating the separate Long Branch route.[8]

History

Etymology

The name 'Mimico' is derived from the Ojibwe word omiimiikaa meaning "abundant with wild pigeons" (c.f. 19th century Mississaugas omiimii, "pigeon").[9] The 'pigeon' after which Mimico was named was the Passenger pigeon. It was thought to have been the most numerous species in the world at the time European colonization began in North America and is now extinct.

Mill settlement

Etobicoke's first church, the original Christ Church

After arriving in the Toronto area, Elizabeth Simcoe, wife of Upper Canada's first Governor and the founder of Toronto, refers to the large number of (passenger) pigeons[10] after which Mimico is named. The area known as "Mimico" was originally located up the Mimico Creek at Dundas Street,[11] where Upper Canada's early highway connecting Toronto to the west and the community of Mimico were located. One of Etobicoke's most prominent businessmen, William Gamble, opened a sawmill on the west bank of Mimico Creek up from the lake, and a small settlement for the mill workers was built nearby. With Mr Gamble's patronage Etobicoke's first church, Christ Church (Anglican), was opened on Church Street (Royal York Road).[12] At this time, Mimico was in Etobicoke Township, which had been meeting with the other townships in the southern part of the County of York (what would become Metropolitan Toronto) as the Township of York (excluding the Town of York, later City of Toronto).[11] Mr. Gamble eventually moved his business away,[13] but with the addition of a school at the foot of Church St (Royal York Rd), Mimico would not disappear.

First plan for Mimico

Plan of Mimico; 1856

By 1850, after the Union of The Canadas, Etobicoke was formally recognised as a Township. The Great Western Railway (originally chartered as the Toronto & Hamilton Railway) was built through the southern part of the Township.[14] The first Mimico railway station opened in 1855, just north of the tracks beside Christ Church on Church St. (now Royal York Rd.). A plan of subdivision was commissioned with side-streets for the 'Town of Mimico'. Mimico was advertised as being '8 minutes' from Toronto[15] (by train), then bordered by Dufferin St. In 1858, a Mimico post office had been opened just south of the Railway Station on Church St. (Royal York Rd.) where St. Leo's Church is today and in 1863, the Wesley Methodist Church was established.[16]

Etobicoke survey map 1878

This prompted the original Mimico area on Dundas St. to adopt a new name; Islington. In Tremaine's 1860 Map of York County, the Mimico subdivision is reprinted with all its side streets, however by 1861, the plan had already failed,[17] the area largely returning to agricultural use. Mimico's founding families were therefore mostly farmers: the Van Everys (Loyalists), the Hendrys and the Stocks.[18]

Second plan for Mimico

Mimico; Goad's 1890 Fire Insurance Plan

Between 1883 and 1893, there were 13 separate annexations to the City of Toronto[19] which brought the border of that city to the Humber R.[20] In 1890, the Mimico Real Estate Security Company Ltd was formed to divide and sell lots in Mimico. This plan included the subdivision of Mr. Edward Stock's land as far north as the Stock's Side Road (an extension of Toronto's Queen Street, now the Queensway) and a cattle path he had established as a shortcut from Church St. (Royal York Rd.) to Lake Shore Road became Mimico Avenue.

Around that time, the Mimico area was incorrectly shown on some fire insurance plans as extending North of Lake Ontario, West of the Humber River, South of North Queen Street (Delroy Drive) and East of Mimico Avenue (now Kipling Avenue), as the community of Mimico was located in the immediate vicinity of the railway station and post office.[21] A year later a Presbyterian Church was built on Mimico Avenue.[22] Mimico was expected to grow quickly. A second post office was opened in the Town of New Toronto (established in 1890). A small number of Victorian buildings were built on the newly laid out streets assuring that this time they would not simply disappear. Mimico and the other lakeshore communities west of the Humber River were eventually linked by an independent radial railway line run by the Toronto and Mimico Electric Railway and Light Company,[23] which originated in the Sunnyside area. This line was originally intended to link with a line started from Hamilton. However, the western end of the T&M was never completed past Port Credit.

The radial railway line brought many of Toronto's wealthy to Mimico's waterfront area, where several large estates were built. First and most impressive of which was the Featherstonaugh Estate which was shaped like a castle at the bottom of Royal York Rd.[24] This period in which Mimico took shape was also the period in which Mimico's namesake, the passenger pigeon, disappeared from the area, the last known bird dying near the beginning of the next century in the United States. A Mimico resident, Mr. John Kay on noticing the disappearance of this species donated a stuffed passenger pigeon to the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto to preserve some of the last evidence of what had been Mimico's namesake.[25]

Incorporation

1913 Map of Central Mimico revised to 1926

Mimico became a police village in 1905[24] and the next year the Grand Trunk Railway's Mimico railway yards were opened. Mimico became a Village in 1911[20] electing its first Village Reeve, Robert Skelton.[26] The same year a second post office named 'Mimico Beach' was established to serve the southern half of Mimico, located on Lake Shore Road.[27] Mimico became the smallest community to obtain a Carnegie Library in which the town council met at first. The first immigrants began to arrive in Mimico and at this time Etobicoke's first Catholic Church was built in Mimico, St. Leo's.[28]

Mimico's largest employer was traditionally the railway (with its yards mostly located in New Toronto), but because New Toronto was planned as an industrial town, many larger industries located there. Nevertheless, a new train station was needed and was built on the south side of the tracks near the north end of Station Road. In 1909, a hotel was established beside the railway called the Windsor Hotel (today the Blue Goose Tavern). Although other 1890s subdivisions in Toronto at Roncesvalles and the Beaches were entirely built up in the pre-war years, Mimico's growth was slow with no street being fully built and some still without any residences built on them. Nevertheless, many foursquare houses were built mostly in south-central Mimico in this period. In 1916, a referendum was held on the question of New Toronto joining Mimico, this was accepted by Mimico voters but rejected in New Toronto. Mimico incorporated as a fully independent town in 1917.

World War I and the Depression

Mimico Railway Yard looking west along Drummond St. from Church St. (Royal York Road), Stock's original home 'Harwarden' in foreground

During the First World War, in 1917, Mimico became fully independent and elected its first Mayor, John Harrison, by acclamation.[29] The town also reacted to the sensational execution of British Nurse Edith Cavell by naming Mimico's old Southampton Street in her memory in 1916. Another street was also given this name in Toronto's East End leading to recent attempts by Toronto to rename Mimico's Cavell Ave.[30] At the end of the war, the local chapter of the Imperial Order of the Daughters of the Empire, who met at the Carnegie Library, presented the town with two plaques honouring all those from the town who had enlisted and another honouring those who had died.

With the union of the Methodist, Congregational and many Presbyterian churches, the old Wesley Methodist Church on Church St (Royal York Rd) became vacant as a new United Church was built on Mimico Ave.[16] The Town of Mimico purchased the old Methodist Church which served as the Town Hall.[31] In 1922, Mimico's Baptist Church was built.[32] Many bungalow style 1 12-storey homes were built in the interwar years, especially south of Mimico Avenue, and most notably, the tree-lined 'crescent' streets (Lake Cres, Eastbourne Cres, Dartmouth Cres and Lake Shore) were developed with large cottage–style homes. In 1928 the local streetcar line merged with the Toronto Transit Commission (TTC) which at first combined the line with Toronto's 'Queen' line.

Doubts about Mimico's survival appeared during the Great Depression when the Town went deeply into debt and many businesses disappeared. The depression also bankrupted some of Toronto's wealthiest including Sir Henry Pellatt (builder of Casa Loma) who had already built a house in Mimico (Bailey House) which stood at the bend in Lake Shore near Fleeceline overlooking the commercial stretch on Lake Shore.[33] Smaller industries moved into areas around the railway tracks.

Just before the outbreak of World War II, Canada's first 'Limited Access' Highway, the Queen Elizabeth Way, was opened by Queen Elizabeth just north of the Town of Mimico's northern boundary.

World War II

Aerial photograph of Mimico, 1942

Mimico's longest serving Mayor (at different periods from 1936–1948) was Amos Waites who alternated in this post with Mayor Archibald Norris.[34] About the time of the Second World War many 1-storey houses were built, filling in most of the gaps in the housing especially in northern and western Mimico. Many new immigrants came to Mimico in the 1950s. In 1953, Mimico became one of thirteen cities and towns which formed the new Metropolitan Toronto. The next year Hurricane Hazel struck and while communities around Mimico were some of the worst affected, the storm left Mimico largely untouched. The Town of Mimico saw its future in attracting many more small families and working people to the area and began to tear down older homes that stood on large lots and filled in these and the last remaining empty lots with apartment buildings.[35]

Smaller 3-storey apartment buildings went up on almost every street while larger apartments appeared along much of the Lake Shore on the east side. More commercial space was also built especially on the northern side of Lake Shore Road from Mimico Ave. to Burlington St. A period of church expansion occurred with Christ Church Anglican and St. Leo's Roman Catholic Church[36] building new Churches at this time for larger congregations. St. Leo's new church was built on the site of Mimico's 1858 Post Office which was demolished and shortly after the postmaster's home (Werden House) was purchased to become the new rectory. In 1958, the Presbyterian Church built a new church building beside the old church. A legion hall was established in Mimico in Sir Henry Pellatt's former Bailey House.

Postwar growth

Mimico Town Council in 1943 with Mayor Amos Waites

In 1967, the Town of Mimico was merged with two other lake shore communities (the Town of New Toronto and the Village of Long Branch) and the Township of Etobicoke to form the Borough of Etobicoke. The Last Mayor of Mimico, who was first elected in 1960, was Hugh Griggs who edited Mimico's official history 'The Mimico Story'. While Canada celebrated its Centenary, the new Mimico Centennial Library was opened. Mimico had torn down the Carnegie Library (the only of Toronto's Carnegie Libraries to be demolished) and two adjacent houses to build the larger Mimico Centennial Library, which was set back from the corner location of the previous library building.[37] The plaque honouring the towns First World War veterans was removed to a new park named 'Vimy Memorial' at Lake Shore Blvd. West and Queens Ave. The legion hall that had been in Sir Henry Pellatt's Bailey[38] house was moved to Eden Court, the former farm residence of the Stock family, when Bailey house was demolished for a street to serve new industries east of Mimico. Bailey House's time as the Legion hall is commemorated in the name of the street it was demolished for: Legion Road.

Slow decline

Mimico began slowly to decline as the children of families who lived in the small houses of the 1940s moved to the growing outer suburbs and the apartments did not live up to the hopes they had generated as they quickly deteriorated. Businesses also continued to fail[39] and many of the small industries moved out. In 1984, Etobicoke became a city and a plan was prepared to rejuvenate Mimico which called for limiting the amount of commercial space by rezoning Mimico Avenue as non-commercial.[39]

The same year Humber Bay Park was opened; consisting of two artificial peninsulas on either side of the mouth of Mimico Creek, with one on the east side and one on the west side (enclosing Mimico's beach to create a harbour) which connect to the main land at the end of Mimico Creek. The creation of the artificial park led to unintended consequences with some of the sandy shoreline in Mimico eroding away.

With declining enrollment at Mimico High School due to the extension of Provincial funding for Catholic high schools, the building was offered to the Catholic board as the number of Catholics had been increasing with many Italian and Polish immigrants arriving in Mimico. This offer was refused[40] and an Adult Learning Centre was opened there instead. The Centre has since swapped buildings with John English Elementary School. An estate on Lake Shore Boulevard was bought by the Polish government at this time to become their Toronto Consulate.[41] A new railway station was built in the 1970s to service GO trains on the site of the 1855 station on the north side of the tracks just south of Christ Church on Royal York while the old 1916 station fell into disrepair.

Attempts at rejuvenation

A view of Mimico Harbour in south Etobicoke.

In 1998, Etobicoke was amalgamated with Metro Toronto and its five other municipalities into the new City of Toronto. Much of the former industrial land was subdivided for 'Monster Homes' in the 1980s and later for townhouses, a process that continues today.[42] Old plans for rejuvenating Mimico and its waterfront are also slowly being realized. In recent years the tide of condominium development along the lake shore has closed in on Mimico.

Mimico's oldest church, Christ Church Anglican experienced two fires within a short period of time and the remains were demolished leaving the old cemetery and a new park where the church once stood.[43] The possibility of Mimico 'gentrifying' is sometimes mentioned in plans for Mimico but this has only taken place on a very small scale. Greater attempts at preserving Mimico's history are also being made with the historical designation of Eden Court (former home of Edward Stock)[44] and the preservation and ongoing restoration of Mimico's old railway station.[45]

Efforts have also been made recently to prevent the demolition of the Town of Mimico's last municipal building (Firehall at #13 Superior Ave. - now demolished for a condominium) and the Franceshini/Ormsby Estate (Amedeo Garden Court property).

Schools

Former Mimico High School on Central Ave
George Gauld former 'Girls' Entrance
Old John English Public School

George R. Gauld Junior School

George R. Gauld Junior School is a public elementary school located on Melrose Street. With increased immigration of working families to the Town of Mimico's northern half, it was felt that a new elementary school was needed to compliment John English. In 1923, George R Gauld Public School was opened being named after a former trustee and superintendent of the nearby Victoria Industrial School (later moved to Guelph, the remains of the older institution becoming the Mimico Correctional Centre).[46] The school has had two additions, one in 1932 and another in 1959.

John English Junior Middle School

Main article: Mimico High School

David Hornell Public School

David Hornell Junior School, built in 1961, is located on Victoria Street. It is named after Mimico resident and World War II flying ace and Victoria Cross recipient, Flight Lieutenant David Ernest Hornell. Hornell was awarded the Victoria Cross posthumously for service during the Second World War serving in RCAF No. 162 Squadron. On July 24, 1944, Lieutenant Hornell's Consolidated Canso was damaged by gunfire while attacking (and successfully sinking) U-1225 off the Faroe Islands. Hornell successfully landed the crippled and burning flying boat in heavy seas, but died of exposure. An outdoor plaque and a display of memorabilia in the front hall are dedicated to Hornell and the school honours his memory annually on Remembrance Day. The school serves a diverse population of students. For many of them, David Hornell School is their first link with Canadian culture. A large number of the students speak another language at home while they acquire English skills at school.

Other schools:

Recreation

Recreation options in Mimico include the Mimico Tennis Club, the Mimico Cruising Club and the Etobicoke Yacht Club.

Near the foot of Park Lawn Road is Humber Bay Park, land created by infill of the lake, creating an artificial peninsula and enclosing Mimico Harbour at Mimico Creek. It has a few picnic areas, boat slips, walking trails and grasslands for recreational use.

In 1890, a waterfront walkway was planned consisting of The Parade at the bottom of Superior Avenue and Marine Parade starting at the bottom of Royal York Road.[21] This plan had disappeared by 1911 except for a small part of Marine Parade (Sussex Drive).[47] The City of Toronto, along with the Toronto and Region Conservation Authority, is building a publicly accessible waterfront.[48] The first phase of the Mimico Linear Park, opened in July 2008, connects three small parks using cobblestone beaches, boardwalks and sand dunes, and will eventually connect with Humber Bay Park to the east.[49] As of 2008, construction of the second phase was delayed due to a minority group of property owners who refused to sell their lakefront access.[50] This project has been completed through the Humber Bay neighbourhood with a roadway named Marine Parade Drive after the original one in Mimico.

Mimico has had a long reputation for supporting both of Canada's national sports. In hockey, Mimico has developed a number of NHL players; there was even a Wayne and Shuster sketch where Johnny and Frank played for the mythical Mimico Mice against the then-Stanley Cup champion Toronto Maple Leafs. Mimico's lacrosse clubs have been in existence since the 1800s and have won a number of National Championships.

Landmarks

General
Former Mimico Police & Fire Station

Notable people

Settlers
Election poster for Amos Waites
Mayors[53]
Politicians
Athletes
Other
Recreation
Churches
First brick Christ Church, 1889

Although they take the name, the Mimico Correctional Centre (former Victoria Industrial School), the Mimico Railway Yards and the Mimico Lunatic Asylum (former) are not actually located in the neighbourhood, but are a bit further west in New Toronto and the former Etobicoke Township.

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mimico.

References

  1. "Where to Buy Now: Mimico". Toronto Life. January 4, 2012.
  2. Town of Mimico, Ward Map (1930)
  3. "Mimico South" (PDF). City of Toronto.
  4. "Mimico North" (PDF). City of Toronto.
  5. 1 2 "Mimico Social Profile #1" (PDF). City of Toronto.
  6. Plan of the Town of Mimico in the Township of Etobicoke & Adjoining the Railway Station, J.O. Browne, 1856, Archives of Ontario AI 1231
  7. Historical Atlas of Toronto Pg 166: Metro Transit System Normal Routes, Toronto Transit Commission, 1955
  8. http://www.ttc.ca/postings/gso-comrpt/documents/report/f3458/501_Queen_Streetcar_Route_-_Issues_and_Solutions_-__10952_CR.pdf Archived May 26, 2011, at the Wayback Machine.
  9. Freelang Ojibwe Dictionary
  10. Simcoe Diary
  11. 1 2 Etobicoke Remembered, p.48.
  12. The Mimico Story, p.28.
  13. The Mimico Story, p.27.
  14. Historical Atlas of Toronto Pg 51
  15. Plan of the Town of Mimico in the Township of Etobicoke & Adjoining the Railway Station, J.O. Browne, 1856, Archives of Ontario AO 1321
  16. 1 2 The Story of Wesley-Mimico 1864–1964 The United Church of Canada
  17. Description Page of District 1, 1861 Census, Canada West by William Noble
  18. "Lost Village of Mimico". Ontario Roots. Archived from the original on February 19, 2012. Retrieved February 16, 2014.
  19. City of Toronto Map showing annexations; City Engineering Department, 1967, City of Toronto Archives published in Historical Atlas of Toronto 2008 By Derek hayes
  20. 1 2 City of Toronto (Showing Annexations), City Engineering Department, 1967, City of Toronto Archives Series 727, File 9
  21. 1 2 Mimico, Etobicoke Township, York County, Province of Ontario, Chas. E. GOAD, 1890
  22. The Mimico Story, p.107.
  23. The Mimico Story, p.54.
  24. 1 2 Etobicoke Remembered Pg 84
  25. Village of Etobicoke, Mimico by Lynne Haslett Pg 52
  26. The Mimico Story Pg 74
  27. "Item Display - Post Offices and Postmasters - Library and Archives Canada". Collectionscanada.gc.ca. Archived from the original on February 24, 2014. Retrieved February 16, 2014.
  28. 75th Anniversary St. Leo's Parish 1909–1984
  29. The Mimico Story, p.80.
  30. The Mimico Story, p.81.
  31. The Mimico Story, p.84
  32. The Mimico Story, p.108
  33. Toronto Sketches by Mike Filey, 1995
  34. The Mimico Story, p.132.
  35. The Mimico Story, pp.56-59.
  36. 75th Anniversary St. Leo's Parish 1909–1984
  37. Archived May 21, 2009, at the Wayback Machine.
  38. The Mimico Story, p.61.
  39. 1 2 The Mimico study: review of submissions made to Development Committee, By: Etobicoke (Ont.). Planning Dept., 1983
  40. Etobicoke Life, 1988, 'School Boards Still Far Apart'
  41. "mimicofacts - mimico66". Mimico66.googlepages.com. Retrieved February 16, 2014.
  42. "Infill townhouse developments make inroads in west end | Toronto Real Estate". January 14, 2007. Retrieved February 16, 2014.
  43. http://insidetoronto.com/article/33572
  44. "City of Toronto: Get involved - Public notice - Heritage Land". Toronto.ca. September 20, 2007. Retrieved February 16, 2014.
  45. http://www.mimicostation.ca/Mimico.htm
  46. education in the Lakeshore Area, A History, Susan Berry, 1967
  47. Goad's 1913 Fire Insurance Atlas, Mimico
  48. "Overview - Waterfront Renewal - City initiatives | City of Toronto". Toronto.ca. Retrieved February 16, 2014.
  49. Archived July 10, 2007, at the Wayback Machine.
  50. Mimico Waterfront Park opens Monday
  51. Archived October 9, 2008, at the Wayback Machine.
  52. The Mimico Story Pgs 131-136
  53. "A couple of Argos showed up | Football | Sports". Toronto Sun. September 26, 2010. Retrieved February 16, 2014.
  54. http://www.mimicolacrosse.com Mimico Lacrosse Association
  55. http://www.mimicotennisclub.org Mimico Tennis Club
  56. "City of Toronto: Get involved - Public notices - Intention to designate Heritage land". Toronto.ca. October 23, 2000. Retrieved February 16, 2014.
  57. "Wesley Mimico United Church". Wesley Mimico United Church. Retrieved February 16, 2014.
  58. "Mimico Baptist Church". Mimico Baptist Church. Retrieved February 16, 2014.
  59. "Martin Luther Evangelical Lutheran Church - Home Page". Martinluther.ca. Retrieved February 16, 2014.
  60. "West Toronto United Pentecostal Church". Torontochurch.ca. Retrieved February 16, 2014.

Bibliography

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