Mariday Park: Difference between revisions

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[[File:MaridayGrid.png|thumb|Mariday Park shown on a map of Thunder Bay]]
[[File:MaridayGrid.png|thumb|Mariday Park shown on a map of Thunder Bay]]
Assuming three people on average live in each home, it has a population of about 2,000 humans, for a population density of 3,333 humans per square kilometre, ten times the density of Thunder Bay as a whole as of 2019.  By comparison, Manhattan has a density of 25,000 humans per square kilometre.
Assuming three people on average live in each home, it has a population of about 2,000 humans, for a population density of 3,333 humans per square kilometre, ten times the density of Thunder Bay as a whole as of 2019.  By comparison, Manhattan has a density of 25,000 humans per square kilometre.
==Name==
Name Mary Jane Day
Age 24
Birth Year 18 October 1875
Birth Place Nottawasaga
Marriage Date 20 Dec 1899
Marriage Place Simcoe, Ontario, Canada
Father John Day
Mother Catherine Montgomery
Spouse John Carrick  (occupation: Farmer) [https://www.ancestry.com/interactive/8838/ONMS929_21-0332?pid=1416342&backurl=https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?dbid%3D8838%26h%3D1416342%26indiv%3Dtry%26o_vc%3DRecord:OtherRecord%26rhSource%3D7921&treeid=&personid=&hintid=&usePUB=true&usePUBJs=true&_ga=2.16167600.707295.1579354747-1398961881.1577532055]
Occupation: Domestic
Source: Marriage Certificate
Both living in Nottawasaga (Simcoe, Ontario)
John Carrick's place of birth: Indiana, USA.  Occupation: Traveller
As of 1901, Mary Jane Day
Carrick came to Port Arthur in 1903 attracted by a real estate boom in anticipation of the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway locating at the Lakehead.
Child, John Alfred "Jack" Carrick, born 6 Apr 1903 in Sault Saint Marie [https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/tree/150951862/person/322162311398/mergefamily?dbid=60872&rpid=751351703&ssrc=&usePUB=true&usePUBJs=true&sePT=Record&seST=Search&seET=savTree&seSubT=Image], died 17 August 1952 in Detroit, Michigan
Mary Jane Carrick died 20 January 1947 and was buried in her hometown of Simcoe, at Creemore Union Cemetery, Simcoe, Ontario.
Name: Mary Jane Carrick
Birth Date: 18 Oct 1875
Birth Place: Nottawasaga, Simcoe County, Ontario, Canada
Death Date: 20 Jan 1947
Death Place: Ontario, Canada
Cemetery: Creemore Union Cemetery
Burial or Cremation Place: Creemore, Simcoe County, Ontario, Canada
Has Bio?: N
Father: John Day
Mother: Catherine Day
Spouse: John James Carrick
Children: John Alfred Carrick
URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/94206777
[https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=60527&h=1175639&tid=150951862&pid=322162311398&hid=1014020191422&usePUB=true&_phsrc=swN498&_phstart=default&usePUBJs=true&currentPageIsStart=]
J.J. Carrick (17 September 1873 - 11 May 1966)


==History==
==History==
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Port_Arthur,_Ontario Port Arthur] became a city in 1906.
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Port_Arthur,_Ontario Port Arthur] became a city in 1906.



Revision as of 14:40, 18 January 2020

Mariday Park, Winnipeg Tribune, 1910. Advertisement by J.J. Carrick

Mariday Park is a 600 metres x 1000 metres neighbourhood of approximately 700 detached homes, set on 35 city blocks arranged among 14 streets in Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada, created in 1909 by J.J. Carrick.

Density

Mariday Park shown on a map of Thunder Bay

Assuming three people on average live in each home, it has a population of about 2,000 humans, for a population density of 3,333 humans per square kilometre, ten times the density of Thunder Bay as a whole as of 2019. By comparison, Manhattan has a density of 25,000 humans per square kilometre.

Name

Name Mary Jane Day Age 24 Birth Year 18 October 1875 Birth Place Nottawasaga Marriage Date 20 Dec 1899 Marriage Place Simcoe, Ontario, Canada Father John Day Mother Catherine Montgomery Spouse John Carrick (occupation: Farmer) [1] Occupation: Domestic Source: Marriage Certificate Both living in Nottawasaga (Simcoe, Ontario) John Carrick's place of birth: Indiana, USA. Occupation: Traveller

As of 1901, Mary Jane Day

Carrick came to Port Arthur in 1903 attracted by a real estate boom in anticipation of the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway locating at the Lakehead.

Child, John Alfred "Jack" Carrick, born 6 Apr 1903 in Sault Saint Marie [2], died 17 August 1952 in Detroit, Michigan

Mary Jane Carrick died 20 January 1947 and was buried in her hometown of Simcoe, at Creemore Union Cemetery, Simcoe, Ontario.

Name: Mary Jane Carrick Birth Date: 18 Oct 1875 Birth Place: Nottawasaga, Simcoe County, Ontario, Canada Death Date: 20 Jan 1947 Death Place: Ontario, Canada Cemetery: Creemore Union Cemetery Burial or Cremation Place: Creemore, Simcoe County, Ontario, Canada Has Bio?: N Father: John Day Mother: Catherine Day Spouse: John James Carrick Children: John Alfred Carrick URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/94206777

[3]

J.J. Carrick (17 September 1873 - 11 May 1966)

History

Port Arthur became a city in 1906.

Mayor J.J. Carrick, developer of Mariday Park

The land that became Mariday Park was previously owned from 1879 - 1909 by Alderman Daniel Francis Burk (1848 - 1917) [4].

Real estate developer John James "J. J." Carrick, (1873 - 1967) who was actually Mayor of Port Arthur at age 36 in 1908, bought the land from Burk in 1909. Carrick hired A.L. Russell (whose office was on the north side of Cameron Street [5] and who served with the Port Arthur Historical Society), of Port Arthur's Park Board, to plan the streets.

Carrick created promotional advertisements and brochures to sell the homes.

One of these brochures read, in part:

"Mariday" [a portmanteau of Carrick's wife Mary June Day's first and maiden names] was acquired and held, almost since the increption of Port Arthur, by a somewhat different character—Alderman Daniel Francis Burk—who in the early days pinned his faith, future and funds to the then undeveloped resources on the shores of Thunder Bay. Adhering tenaciously to the belief that the then embyro [sic] site must, at a not-too-distant date, become the location of a populous and prosperous city, he proceeded to apply the British motto "What we have we hold." to the situation, and forthwith placed a "Nothing doing" sign on the property.

Possessed with the three outstanding characteristics of the pioneer of this country—sagacity, sense and sand—Daniel Francis Burk bent his energies in other directions, arranged to liquidate the demands of the Tax Collector—and waited.

Time flies—but nowhere as in the West. The clearance became a hamlet, the hamlet merged into a village, the village assumed the proportions of a town—the Hand of Destiny was at work. The patron of the Blazed Trail—the speculator from the more effete East, dropped around and commenced to sit up and make a few observations.

"Who owns that hundred acres up on the hill?" was what he queried.

"D.F. Burk," was the answer.

"What does he ask for it?"

The reply was always the same, "He won't sell."

And so it came to pass that the citizens of the classic city of Port Arthur builded their homes up to and around Mariday Park, the gem spot of the city's residential section. Likewise, it also came to pass than Daniel Francis Burk, consoled by the realization of his early dreams, finally acceeded to the oft-expressed wish of the citizens, that the property should no longer impede the city's natural pathway of expansion. On 30th September 1909, he transferred to the present owner and developer for a snug fortune a property that had cost him a comparatively palty sum 30 years before.

Mr. A.L. Russell, O.L.S., of the city's Park Board, was entrusted the task of laying out the property, and the work has been skilfully and artistically executed.

All streets and avenues are 66 feet wide. The driveways are 28 feet wide. A strip of 19 feet on each side being reserved for boulevards and walks.

The lots all have a frontage of 50 feet, varying in depth from 105 to 140 feet, to 12 and 14 foot lanes.

The property is beautifully treed with yellow birch, poplar and spruce, Cement walks, macadamized streets, water and sewer connections are being installed by the city under the direction of the City Engineer...

— John James Carrick, in his promotional book selling the lots to his "Mariday Park" [6], 1909

Development

One of J.J. Carrick's 1909 advertisements
The houses mentioned in the advertisement still stand as of 2012

Streets

Running North-South:

  • Marlborough Road*
  • Ray Boulevard
  • McKibbin*
  • Rupert*
  • Hill Street South
  • Winnipeg Avenue*
  • Summit*
  • High Street

Running East-West:

  • Red River Road
  • Beresford*
  • Bay
  • Cornwall
  • Whitney*
  • John Street

Of these 14, half of them do not extend outwards and exit only inside the Mariday Park neighbourhood. [marked with a *]

Culture

Dr. Penny Petrone (1925 - 2005) grew up in a poorer part of town, in the streets East and below Mariday Park. In her memoir she reflected on the elitist character of the neighbourhood, during her adolescene circa 1935 to 1945:

An article in the 10 January 1914 issue of the Daily News-Chronicle recorded the comparison that one Italian made between the coal docks and Mariday PArk, the best residential area in Port Arthur: "Thousands and thousands of dollars have been spent in Mariyday Park, which has about one-third the people the coal dock has. T'at is verra good. It maka nica street, nica place to live, but we who live in de coal dock have not got near dat much and we are tree times as big as the peoples in Mariday Park..."

...

With Mamma's permission we also sold lettuce, radishes and onions from her garden at five cents a bunch. Mary and Rita had regular customers in the neighbourhood, while I had to venture up the Bay Street steps into the Mariday Park area where the rich people lived. High, Summit and Winnipeg Avenues were a strange world of large houses and streets empty of pedestrians. The stillness frightened me. I was self-conscious when I rapped on the doors. Business was never good, and Mamma wondered whether the English ever ate garden fresh salads. After two or three forays, I stopped.

...

It did not take me long to discover just what a closed, predominantly WASP enclave, Port Arthur Collegiate was. I lived in the South End-the wrong end of the city. South-enders did not go to the Collegiate but to the Port Arthur Technical and Commercial High School...I had no choice if I wanted an academic diploma, as I very much did. The Collegiate was the only place to get one.

I knew my years were going to be unpleasant, but I had not fully anticipated what an ordeal they would turn out to be. To begin with, there was a terribel cliquishness in the school. The students lived in the "right" sections of town: MAriday Park, ST. Patrick's Square, Prospect, PEter and College Streets. They spent summers together at their cottages on Loon Lake and along the beaches of Lake Superior. They got elected to every school office. THeir parents belonged to the same fashionable clubs and went to the same Protestatnt churches. THe mothers belonged to the same church groups. THe fathers were members of the City Council, the Board of Education and the Rotary Club. My father was a labour gang foreman. And my mother spoke broken English. They did not belong to the right social clubs.

— Dr. Penny Petrone, Breaking the Mould (1995)

Retaining Wall

85% of Mariday Park's 35 city blocks are almost entirely regular, except for five blocks at the south-east corner, because of the vertical gradient between the streets.

Mariday Park's five irregular blocks

Sometime between about 1938 and 1945, a retaining wall was built at the intersection of Cornwall Avenue and High Street, by Francesco Furfaro and Peter Steine, both of whom lived in Mariday Park.

Story has it, sometime before or during the second world war, this unique wall was constructed by an Italian immigrant by the name of Francesco Furfaro, who is listed in census records as being a cement finisher and mason. He and fellow labourer, Peter Steine, constructed the wall by hand, using authentic masonry techniques – taught to Francesco while he was an apprentice in Italy. Both men were residents of Mariday Park.

— Various [7]

This wall was the subject of controversy as a proposal came before City Council in early 2017 to remolish it. [8]


Sources

Canadiana [9]

J.J. Carrick [10]

Thunder Bay Museum [11]

[4] Petrone, Penny, 1995. Breaking the Mould. [12]