IMAGE EVALUATION TEST TARGET (MT-3) k A / 1.0 I.I 1.25 1.4 IM 2.2 1= 1.6 V] <^ //, /a » J."^ .>* m^ V # !% /^ ff e] vV^ ';' Photographic Sciences Corporation '^ ^^ O '% .V <' ^ rv >^ ?3 WEST MkIN street WfeJSSTER, P4.Y. 14580 (716) (172-4503 ;^

which might consequently be mistaken for birch. Near the mouth of the Castle Frank brook, as the little stream passing through the Castle Frank property was called, there long survived, on the opposite bank of the Don, a grove of the wild Canadian willow, a tree sometimes employed formerly for shade pur- poses along our back streets. I remember the first time I saw olive trees growing in the south of France, £ was struck with their strong resemblance in point of foliage and general form to some of our wild Canadian willows. At the present moment, far to the westward on the north side of College street, a cluster of gnarled and irregular willow trees is to be seen, with stems of .i great diameter, remnants evidently of a grove of Canadian wild willows whic I differ considerably from the imported Euro »ean willow. The jfroup referred to occur! in a swale or patch of low land -»n the <»ld Oik Hill property formerly Helungiag to General ^ICneas Shaw. On the west side of Dutfenn street, a short dJHtance co the north, on the lidge of the lake,are some tine tall speci- mens of the Canailian willow overshadowint; the Gwynne property, l)ut these are trans- planted trees of the second growth. The soil around Toronto does not seem in general to have been very favorable to the development of the oak on any erand scale, but in the Queen's Park, on the level ground at the north-west of the Parliament Buildings, specimens occur in considerable uambers of thJH tree, with stems of goodly diameter and branches affording an extended shade. Every year, of course, insensibly adds to the girth and general dimensions of these trees. It is to be hoped that a century hence — nay. centuries hence — they may still be found .standia:: here, honoured and beloved, like so many renowned congeners of theirs in the old country. Far- ther north in the Park is a large patch of the mixed original forest, w^hich it i.s hoped may likewise long remain undisturbed. East of the Queen's Park, just where St. Albaus street begins, m the grounds round the residence of Mr. Christie, are some stately native oaks gracefully draped with Vir- ginia creeper. In the Horticultural (!Jarden are well-grown specimens of early oaks, several near the gardener's lodge and .several near the rosary. Near the Prince of Wales' maple tree is a specimen of the English oak, pianted here subsequently by his brother, Prince Arthur, which shows the habit of the English oak in regard to the lateral outspread of its branches, when it has liberty to expand them. The Can- adian oak seems to be inclined to branch out at a greater height above the ground. A lai^e oak occurs in the sidewalk on Gerrara Street, 8 oil the mirth .side, a little to the west of Sher- l>uurno street. Not far from the luilgo lit the front gate of the residence known as the "Orange," a solitary oak tree is noticeable. The other trees in these grounds are chietly graceful elms of the second growth reserved from the original forest. Some other example of a primitive oak should not lo omitted, namely that which stands a little to the west of Col borne Lodge in High Park carefully pre- served by ih) late Mr. J. G. Howard. Near this house are other oaks less remarkable. Within the memory of men still living some well developed old oak trees were to be seen at irregular intervals along the shore of the bay between the foot of George street and Berkeley street. One especially was long pre- served, opposite the residence of Mr. George Munro. some time Mayor, who did his best to preserve what used to be known as the Fair Green, now '^holly built over. That oaks were to be founu in other localities round Tor- onto may be crucluded from the name Oak Hill, apjlied to the property of (general Shaw, before referred to. In and just outside the grounds of the new Upper Canada College buildings, on the brow of the Davenport or Spadina rise of land, on the northern side of the city, are to be seen some fine old oaks happily preserved. The old trees still re- maining just below the front of Spadina House, on this ridge of land, are also oaks. Again, far to the north, we have the Oakridges, so called probablv from ancient specimens there seen. Oakvi^. 3 is also a reminiscence of this tree, as an object noticeable along the north shore of our lake. Finally the pine must be noticed, a tree which formed so marked a feature in the scenery round Toronto formerly. The steep, sandv banks of the Don, on both sides, were within my own recollection lined with fine tall specimens of the white pine, and a few re- maining examples of these are to be seen along the brow of the hill, on the eastern bound- 9 ary of wluit whs known aa the Castlo Frank pro|.orty, a portion of which is now inchided in th } St. James Cemetery. TroeH of the yellow pine species wore to be seen in abun- dance m the Humber Plains, but sparingly along the Don. At the northern end of the Moss L-*ark lot towards Bloor street, a solitary relic of the flourishing white pine for- est hereabout was long a conspicuous object and gave rise to some graceful fugitive verses which I have prcervj'd at p.p. 231-32 of " Toronto of Old," not Knowing them then, as I have since learned them to have been, the handiwork of the late Senator Macdonald, long before he was dignified with that title. The last three stanzas, supposed to bo utterances of this tree, including several hapiy forecasts, are appended. The pale face came, our raul « were thinned, And the loftiest were br^ laku, Then ploughed its way of ''nam. And the red man tied friii fhe scene of strife To find a wilder home. And many who in childhoo Vs days Around my trunk have played. Are resting like the Indian n')w Beneath the cedar's shade ; And I, like one bereft of friends, With winter whitened o'er. But wait the hour that I must fall, As others fell before. And still what changes wait thee, When at no distant day, The ships of far-off nations Shall anchor in your bay ; When one vast chain of railroad. Stretching from shore to shore, Shall bear the wealth of India, And land it at your door. It will not be uninteresting to add that our first Lieut. -Governor, Gen. Simcoe, was so well pleased with the productions of our Canadian woods and forests, that he took the trouble to have specirnens of many of them planted and ^imMfpiipiliPiiiiiiii^^ iMiiillli 10 cultivated within the grounds surrounding his pleasant home in Devonshire. Thus we have Mr. Charles Vancouver, in his *' General View of the Agriculture of the County of Devon," remarking: "At Wolford considerable atten- tion was paid by General Simcoeto the culture of exotic as well as of the native trees of the country. The black spruce of Newfoundland the red spruce of Norway, the Weymouth pine, pinaster, stone and cluster pine, the American sycamore or button-wood, the black walnut, red oak, hickory, sassafras, red bud, with many smaller trees and shrubs, forming the undergrowth of the forests in that country, are all found to grow at Dunkeswell, i. e. Wol- ford, with considerable strength and vigour." Many of these Canadian specimens I have my- self seen near Wolford, still in a flourishing condition. These notices of forest survivals in our midst may help to foster and maintain an in- terest in our forest trees generally. It is most desirable that, so far as it shall be practicable, our remaining forests should be preserved, and wherever an undue, tlioughtless destruction of them occurred, that they should be judiciously replaced by some system of planting. It is hoped likewise that all lovers and admirers of these beautiful natural objects may be induced to give their hearty support to the Govern- ment of our I'rovince in its desii'e to establish public parks on a large scale, as it has recently done in the case of the Algonquin Reserve, consistins; of over 988,000 acres, situated on the watershed between the rivers flowing into the Ottawa on the east, and the Georgian Bay on the west. Let us hope also that our words may do something towards confirming the Gov- ernment at Ottawa in its determination to re- tain the Canadian portion of the Thousand Isles in the River St. Lawrence, with their syl- van garniture intact, as another national Plais- ance on a large scale accessible to all. Mr. Edgar Jarvis, of Elm Avenue, Rose- dale, writes to me of a fine ^Im on the grounds 11 4: of the < ld«Rosodale honustead, formerly occu- pied by the well-rememb«red Sheriff, W. B. ' Jrtrvis, lot, however, an original denizen of the furett, but a tree planted by the hand of Amelia daughter of Frederic Starr Jarvis, in the year 1830, and now rising to the height of 7o feet, fond spicading its branches over an are.i of nearly 100 feet in diameter. Also of a gii^antic white oak, a genuine survivor of the forest, on Mr. Hamilton's property, near the north iron bridge, (-)f this tree Mr. Jarvis write.s that it is ten feet in circumference at its base, a foot above the surface. It shoots up gracefullj', tapering in size without a lateral branch, for forty feet, when it spreads out am', upwards, with a beautiful green head rustling in the breeze. The total height ia nearly 90 feet. It is the product of an acorn dropped in the ground probably about the time of Samuel Champlain. A study of the two graceful young elm trees to be seen in the grounds of the old Upper Canada College, on King Street, would help us to form an estimate of the age of elms that we set- growing elsewhere. The elms in front of the college buildings are to my certain know- ledge more than sixty years old. These again, strictly speaking, are not survivors of the original forest. They were deliberately plant- ed in a .sapling state for an ornamental purpose in the position they now occupy, as was the case with the elm in Rosedale alhided to by Mr. Jarvis. It is to be hoped that it niiiy not be the fate of these beautiful objects to be ruthlessly rooted up and destroyed.