Harman Patil (Editor)

Scadding Cabin

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Current use
  
Museum

Website
  
York Pioneers

Year built
  
1794

Governing body
  
York Pioneers

Province
  
Ontario

Scadding Cabin

Location
  
Alberta Circle, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Address
  
CNE Grounds (not a mailing address, see below), Toronto, ON, Canada

Similar
  
Fort Rouillé, Horticulture Building, Automotive Building, New Fort York, Horse Palace

Scadding cabin toronto s oldest house in cne


Scadding Cabin (or Simcoe Cabin) is a 1794 log cabin in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It was built by John Scadding and is the oldest known surviving house in Toronto.

Contents

Toronto s oldest house scadding cabin exhibition place


History

The cabin was originally built on the property of John Scadding, an immigrant from Devonshire, in order to fulfill his settlement duties to the Crown. The cabin stood at the east side of the Don River on a 253-acre land grant that stretched north from Lake Ontario to present day Danforth Avenue. Scadding lived in the cabin until he returned to England in 1796.

When Scadding returned to York in 1818, he sold his property, and cabin, to a farmer named William Smith, who used the cabin as an outbuilding. The cabin remained in the Smith family until 1879 when the cabin was offered to the York Pioneers. Henry Scadding, son of John Scadding, was a founding member of the historical society.

York Pioneers

In 1879 John Smith, the owner of the Scadding property, gave Scadding Cabin to the York Pioneers. 1879 was also the beginning of the Toronto Industrial Exhibition, later the CNE, and the York Pioneers worked with the CNE’s founders to move the cabin to its current site to celebrate the fair’s inauguration.

The cabin was dismantled, moved and reconstructed by the York Pioneers on the grounds of the first Industrial Exhibition, now Exhibition Place, on August 22, 1879.

Current use

The York Pioneers currently operate Scadding Cabin as a museum. Scadding Cabin is furnished as a pioneer home from the 1830s to early 1840s, although there are artifacts that date back to the 1790s. Furnishings include two spinning wheels and a wool winder, equipment for making bread and butter, a candle mold and utensils for cooking on an open hearth.

Scadding cabin is open during the Canadian National Exhibition held each year from mid-August to the end of Canada’s Labour Day weekend. The cabin is also open through special arrangements and for community events during the summer months such as Toronto’s Doors Open. In the past the cabin has been open during the Luminato Festival and annual CHIN picnic when these events are held at Exhibition Place.

References

Scadding Cabin Wikipedia