King of Kensington
Senior Member
Would it be fair to say that many of Toronto's communities -- Jewish, Italian, and perhaps even the Chinese or West Indians/Black Canadians now present in places further afield, whether in North York, Vaughan, Markham or Scarborough, ultimately owe their existence to the older path paved by internal migration from the Ward (via places like Kensington, Chinatown, Little Italy) first, ultimately ending up towards the "suburbs"?
I mean, there's no doubt that growth in part, operates from immigrants directly moving to the suburbs, but do you think that the older (early 20th century, if not 19th) urban immigrants basically set a foothold first in other parts of Toronto, acting as trailblazers to settle before the foreign-born feel attracted to live there too? Or do some of the farther "ethno-burbs" (such as the Italians in Woodbridge, the Chinese in Markham etc., the Caribbean Canadians in North York/Scarborough) derive from "pioneering" (for lack of a better term) immigrants who basically settled suburbs first independently, without considering whether an older urban community of the same ethnicity was there or not?
It would make sense that some later groups (eg. South Asians) that didn't have much of a pre-1960s community in the city probably went directly to at least the former inner suburbs/metro Toronto first, without an inner city phase, but I wonder which ethnic communities have continuity with their earliest members in Toronto's inner city, like the Ward. Is it basically, if a ethnicity had a significant community before the post-war period, then it grew from city to suburb, but if it mostly stemmed from post-war migration, probably founding "ethno-burbs" directly was more likely?
In the case of the city's Jewish and Italian communities, absolutely. The Jewish community followed Bathurst St. north from Dundas/College/Harbord to Forest Hill and North York, and eventually Thornhill. Little Italy also dates back about a century, but a second concentration around Dufferin and Davenport existed pre-WWII before "Corso Italia" at Dufferin and St. Clair developed in the 1950s. The movement up Dufferin and Keele into Downsview and northwesterly into Woodbridge can be traced to a path established decades before.
Poles and Ukrainians followed a westward path along Queen St. These communities were centered around Bathurst and Queen, then followed Queen St. west towards High Park and into Etobicoke and Mississauga. A lot of Poles came in the 80s and 90s (I think they outnumbered the pre-war and post-war Poles) but they settled in the Polish
It's quite likely too that the Greek community is in the Danforth/East York because the city's pre-war Greek community was located east rather than west of the CBD. Though I believe there was a Greek community around Christie Pits before the Danforth took off.
In terms of the Chinese community, it's harder to say, the pre-war community was much smaller than the Jewish and Italian communities and there was a greater time lag between pre-war and post-war immigration. The present Chinatown at Dundas and Spadina developed from the old Chinatown and served as the impetus for Chinese immigration to the area. But as the community expanded a secondary Chinatown developed in the east end but that was almost certainly established independently of the pre-war community. Not sure why Agincourt developed as a Chinese enclave.
The Black/Caribbean community was located around Dundas and Spadina until the 1960s and at the time Jews were much more willing to rent to Blacks. The Oakwood-Vaughan-Eglinton West area had a sizable Jewish population (and was located just west of Forest Hill/Cedarvale) before it became an area of Black/Caribbean settlement (and I've read that played some role in why they initially went there (but I'm not sure).
Toronto didn't have a sizable South Asian community so there were no pre-war "pioneers." Also the different South Asian groups tend to live in different areas. Sikhs initially settled near the airport in Malton and expanded into Brampton for example, while Bangladeshis, Pakistanis and Tamils all have their areas of concentration.