The Building of the |
Introduction The “History of |
Roads and
Toll Gates
|
|
Guelph’s transformation from a backwoods village of some seven hundred residents in 1843 to a bustling commercial and industrial town fifteen years later was the result of good fortune and a concerted effort by the people of Guelph to make their town the centre of commerce in Wellington District. |
|
Economic development
was greatly aided between 1843 and 1856 by the settlement of the area north
of At the same time there was a rapid increase in
agricultural production, particularly in the longer settled townships. Table XIV shows that acreage under
cultivation increased by fifty percent between 1841 and 1843 and an
additional fifty percent between 1843 and 1847.
Large-scale immigration after 1847 brought
about the opening of new areas, and for the first time, provided a
significant number of labourers. Thus
cleared acreage virtually doubled between 1847 and 1851, and Table XV
indicates that livestock production followed an almost identical pattern
during the decade. |
Table XVI points out both the strength and weakness
of agricultural development in 1851. On
the one hand, the rapid expansion of population, acreage under cultivation
and livestock, meant that at last Although the farmer was perfectly willing to trade
produce for a wide variety of services and goods in the village, this trade
was much more characterized by the variety of services than by its volume. Businessmen with money, therefore, found
that no single enterprise could absorb all their capital but that it was
necessary to enter a wide variety of businesses in order to put their money
to work. Thus William Allan was
owner-manager of a grist mill, a distillery and a carding mill, in addition
to being a building contractor.
Despite this, he had no distinct advantage over his competitors who
had much less capital but concentrated their energies on a single enterprise. Nevertheless, in
spite of these problems, |
Table XIII
Population
by Township, 1840-1851(1.) |
||
Municipality
|
1840 |
1851 |
|
1256 |
3590 |
Puslinch |
1617 |
3862 |
|
2290 |
2879 |
1860 |
||
Nichol & Pilkington |
1002 |
2450 |
1990 |
||
Garafraxa |
284 |
2083 |
Eramosa |
863 |
2350 |
Peel |
--- |
2435 |
Maryborough |
--- |
994 |
Minto & Arthur & Luther |
--- |
1803 |
--- |
||
--- |
||
Amaranth |
--- |
500 |
Total |
7312 |
26796 |
|
Table XIV
Acres
under cultivation, 1840-1851(2.) |
||||
Municipality |
1840 |
1843 |
1847 |
1851 |
|
5175 |
6925 |
9830 |
19950 |
Puslinch |
5704 |
*11489 |
16805 |
25850 |
|
8959 |
11925 |
14737 |
18456 |
Nichol |
3266 |
4819 |
7168 |
10666 |
Garafraxa |
617 |
1054 |
1973 |
5749 |
Eramosa |
4734 |
6405 |
9334 |
16241 |
Peel |
---- |
--- |
--- |
6993 |
Maryborough |
---- |
--- |
--- |
1693 |
Minto |
---- |
--- |
--- |
4611 |
Arthur |
--- |
--- |
--- |
|
Luther |
--- |
--- |
--- |
|
Amaranth |
--- |
292 |
522 |
1718 |
Pilkington |
--- |
--- |
--- |
7154 |
Total |
28455 |
42909 |
60369 |
119081 |
* estimated |
In
deliberations concerning the factors which contributed to its economic
weakness, A long editorial in the The ice-bound condition of the harbours of our Great
Lakes, and of the |
Not only did farmers in the interior townships bear
the burden of the general difficulties caused by poor transportation, they also
suffered from the particular difficulties of the inadequate roads of
Wellington District. For example, one
pioneer family, the Tuckers of Bosworth, reported that when they moved to the
area in the 1840’s: The townships of Peel, Luther, and Maryborough were solid bush. Their journey thence included boat from |
Table XV
|
||||
Municipality |
1840 |
1843 |
1847 |
1851 |
|
553 |
637 |
839 |
1445 |
Puslinch |
641 |
*802 |
1029 |
1444 |
|
860 |
951 |
1098 |
1155 |
Nichol |
364 |
440 |
518 |
670 |
Garafraxa |
82 |
147 |
249 |
593 |
Eramosa |
424 |
539 |
700 |
1066 |
Peel |
--- |
--- |
--- |
697 |
Maryborough |
--- |
--- |
--- |
198 |
Minto |
--- |
--- |
--- |
464 |
Arthur |
--- |
--- |
--- |
|
Luther |
--- |
--- |
--- |
|
Amaranth |
--- |
60 |
60 |
156 |
Pilkington |
--- |
--- |
--- |
515 |
Total |
2924 |
3552 |
4493 |
8403 |
*estimated |
Table XVI
Agricultural
Development in 1851(5.) |
||||||
Municipality |
Farms 20 acres and up |
Estimated acres cultivated |
Acres cultivated per farm |
Acres wheat per farm |
Bushels wheat per farm |
Bushels per acre |
|
490 |
19350 |
39.5 |
9.1 |
127.6 |
14.0 |
Puslinch |
496 |
25690 |
51.8 |
11.5 |
183.4 |
15.9 |
|
343 |
18176 |
53.0 |
10.9 |
215.6 |
19.7 |
Nichol |
221 |
10626 |
48.1 |
9.7 |
156.4 |
16.1 |
Garafraxa |
332 |
5529 |
16.7 |
6.7 |
82.8 |
12.4 |
Eramosa |
319 |
15761 |
49.4 |
10.3 |
204.9 |
19.9 |
Peel |
398 |
6813 |
17.1 |
5.7 |
61.3 |
10.7 |
Maryborough |
167 |
1693 |
4.1 |
3.8 |
32.4 |
8.5 |
Minto |
328 |
4511 |
13.8 |
3.7 |
32.1 |
8.6 |
Arthur |
||||||
Luther |
||||||
Amaranth |
85 |
1708 |
20.1 |
4.5 |
76.1 |
16.8 |
Pilkington |
255 |
7034 |
27.6 |
7.6 |
125.4 |
15.8 |
Total |
3434 |
116891 |
|
|
|
|
Average |
|
|
34.0 |
8.2 |
126.3 |
15.4 |
|
The
lack of good transportation facilities in Canada was aggravated by the fact that
the main source of provincial funds came from tariffs on imports, and, with
trade so severely hampered, there was little money to spend on the
importation of goods. What money there
was in the provincial treasury was quarrelled over
endlessly by the elected representatives, eager to get as much as possible
for their own constituency. The
inevitable result of such a situation was that major undertakings were
virtually impossible and the small amount of funds forthcoming were spent in
patching up roads that had deteriorated almost to the point of uselessness. At the local level, the situation was even more
hopeless. The primary source of road
improvement was the statutory labour which every adult male was required to
perform each year. This varied according
to the amount of assessment on each person’s property and was fixed by
statute. In 1837, the rates of statute
labour shown in Table XVIII were in effect. Of course, the wealthier inhabitants hired someone
to do this work for them. Although statute labour did contribute
significantly towards the development of local roads, residents objected
strongly to working away from their neighbourhood when their own roads were
still inadequate. |
Table
XVII Town of |
|||
|
1843 |
1846 |
1847 |
Population |
700 |
1357 |
1480 |
Houses |
234 |
342 |
374 |
Grist Mills (13 runs of stones) |
3 |
4 |
4 |
Saw Mills |
1 |
2 |
2 |
Distilleries |
4 |
4 |
4 |
Churches with spires
|
3 |
3 |
3 |
Plain chapels |
2 |
3 |
4 |
Stores (general assortment of goods) |
14 |
19 |
22 |
Bakers |
3 |
4 |
4 |
Saddlers and harness makers |
2 |
3 |
3 |
Coachmakers |
1 |
1 |
1 |
Wheelwrights |
4 |
5 |
6 |
Blacksmiths |
6 |
6 |
7 |
Tinware factory |
1 |
1 |
1 |
Butchers |
3 |
5 |
6 |
Lawyers |
2 |
4 |
4 |
Surgeons |
4 |
4 |
4 |
Druggists |
1 |
2 |
2 |
Taverns |
9 |
7 |
9 |
Coopers |
2 |
4 |
4 |
Tanneries |
2 |
4 |
4 |
Weekly newspapers |
--- |
1 |
2 |
Daily Royal Mail (4 horse
coach)
|
--- |
1 |
1 |
Daily covered stages |
--- |
3 |
2 |
Livery Stables |
--- |
1 |
1 |
|
--- |
1 |
1 |
Book Club |
--- |
1 |
1 |
Brick yards |
1 |
2 |
2 |
Stone masons |
15 |
18 |
21 |
Bricklayers and plaisterers (sic) |
7 |
11 |
13 |
Watch makers |
1 |
2 |
1 |
Gun smith |
--- |
1 |
1 |
Iron foundry |
--- |
1 |
1 |
Boot and shoemakers |
11 |
19 |
25 |
Confectioners |
1 |
1 |
2 |
Carpenters and builders |
20 |
31 |
37 |
Breweries |
3 |
3 |
2 |
Painters and glaziers |
2 |
3 |
3 |
Private classical school |
--- |
1 |
1 |
Dist. Grammar D. |
1 |
1 |
1 |
Common schools |
2 |
5 |
5 |
Bank agencies |
--- |
2 |
2 |
Mutual Fire Insurance Co. |
--- |
1 |
1 |
Hook and Ladder Company |
--- |
1 |
1 |
Printers and booksellers |
--- |
2 |
3 |
Well sinkers and pump makers |
--- |
2 |
2 |
Cabinet makers |
4 |
4 |
11 |
Chair makers |
4 |
6 |
|
Nurserymen and gardeners |
2 |
1 |
1 |
Tailors |
8 |
11 |
13 |
Dressmakers |
7 |
9 |
9 |
Milliner |
--- |
--- |
1 |
Hair dresser |
--- |
1 |
2 |
Auctioneers |
--- |
2 |
2 |
Ironmongers |
--- |
1 |
1 |
Carding machine etc. |
--- |
1 |
1 |
Cricket club |
--- |
1 |
1 |
Circulating library |
--- |
1 |
1 |
|
Table XVIII
Statute Labour
|
|
Value of Assessment in £ |
Days of Labour Required |
Up to 25 |
2 |
25 to 50 |
3 |
50 to 75 |
4 |
75 to 100 |
5 |
100 to 150 |
6 |
150 to 200 |
7 |
200 to 250 |
8 |
250 to 300 |
9 |
300 to 350 |
10 |
350 to 400 |
11 |
400 to 500 * |
12 |
* With each increase of £100
in assessment above £500 requiring an additional day’s labour. (8.) |
The main
difficulty in building trunk roads was the incapacity of the district
councils to raise large sums of money from taxation. With a limitation of two pence per pound on
the statutory assessment, money was not available for large-scale
development. With so little cash crop
production, higher taxation would have created extreme hardship for the
subsistence farmer. Thus there was
strong opposition to laws that would open the door to more direct taxation. In general, what money the district councils had available for road and bridge building was seldom used to undertake such works directly. Rather, these funds were used to encourage local initiative on the part of the inhabitants most directly affected by the public work. To have a bridge built those most interested in the project would get up a petition asking for money for the materials required. Upon the receipt of petitions from all parts of the district, the councillors, at the Quarter Session, negotiated amongst themselves for a division of the money available. If the area’s district councillor had managed to have funds allocated to the projected bridge, a by-law would be passed. In most cases, the labour necessary was supplied by the local residents as part of their statutory labour. After the bridge was completed to the satisfaction of the district surveyor, he reported to the district council and the money was paid out to the supplier of the materials. This was cumbersome and inefficient, although it did reduce the outlay of that scarcest of all commodities-cash. |
In spite of these difficulties, During 1838, a
movement was commenced for improving the road between |
In the face of By 1846, so successful had the road’s trustees been in
the improvement of the road with money received from the collection of tolls
and from further government grants, that the Guelph Advertiser could report,
somewhat enviously, that: The formation of a mile and a half of new macadamized
road, through the swamp between Galt and |
As long as the Not only was |
In 1846,
however, The significance
of this road project to In 1836, a group
of |
Although
the Toronto and Lake Huron project caused a good deal of interest and support
in Guelph, a number of local businessmen were beginning to realize that
whether or not the railway was built, good roads were still going to be
necessary to bring the produce to market.
What was needed, they decided, was a first class stone (macadamized)
or plank road running from |
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Notice: An Application will be made to the Provincial Parliament
at its next session, to incorporate a joint Stock Company for the purpose of improving
the direct Road leading from the Town of Guelph to the Macadamized Road in
the Township of West Flamborough by planking or
Macadamizing the same. Dated, this 4th day of October, 1846. G.S. Tiffany, Benjamin Thurtell, Wm. Notman, William
Armstrong, Jas. B. Ewart, James Hodgert,
R. Juson, George J. Grange, W. Leslie, Wm. Clarke,
James Wright, T. Sandilands, Al. Dingwall Fordyce.(18.) |
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A similar notice a few weeks later announced that an
application would be made to incorporate a second joint stock road company
from In July, 1847,
the Provincial Government finally passed the bills incorporating the two road
companies. The incorporators named in
the acts represented the most important businessmen in the area. For the Guelph and Dundas
road they were James B. Morden, Walter Colcleugh, John Weir, William Miller, William McKindlay, George S. Tiffany, William Notman,
James Bell Ewart, Richard Juson,
James Leslie, James Wright, Benjamin Thurtell,
James Hodgert, George John Grange, William Clarke,
Thomas Sandilands, Alexander D. Fordyce and Adam J.
Fergusson.(20.) For the Guelph and Arthur road the incorporators were:
George J. Grange, Adam J. Fergusson, Benjamin Bobington,
Daniel MacNab, Alexander D. Fordyce, William Hewat, William Clarke, Thomas Sandilands,
James Hodgert, William Mutch,
Thomas Webster, Alexander Drysdale, John Watt,
George Jardine, Gilbert Hunter, Samuel Broadfoot,
George C. Hamilton, Alex. Harvey and John McNaught.(21.) |
In addition to having received the charters for the
two road companies, It is alike due to Mr. Webster, and the constituency
which he so ably represents, to state that the people of the Wellington District
are indebted to his exertions for the improvement of the Owen’s
Sound Road, the establishment of a weekly mail on that route, and also for
£500 to be applied to the improvement of the Brock Road, and the incorporation
of a Company for macadamizing the said road ....
With the In spite of the
optimism displayed by the |
Under these conditions, the challenge to Guelph by
the Trafalgar, Esquesing and Erin Road Company took
on crisis proportions. However the
leading public figures in The technique of transforming the In October, the
Guelph Advertiser printed a series of anonymous letters signed “Aliquis” (a favourite device of editors to put forth
controversial opinions) outlining the advantages of road-building on a large
scale cash basis rather than relying on statute labour supplemented by an
occasional government or district council grant. The first major advantage of the cash
approach, they argued, was that not only could good roads be created
immediately but, by charging tolls, it would be possible to have the users pay,
and the actual cost to the farmer would be greatly reduced.(24.) |
The second part
of “Aliquis” proposal was even more controversial,
because it required the subsistence farmers to move towards a cash-crop
economy and required all farmers to pay a cash tax
for roads rather than performing statute labour, a duty which was generally
done during periods when farm tasks were minimal. The argument for increased money taxation
was rather complex: higher cash taxes would allow the district councils to
borrow more money. With this enhanced
borrowing power, local roads could be improved immediately rather than
awaiting the slow progress from statute labour.(25.) But how would the farmers benefit from the removal of
their option of a right to perform their statute labour themselves? “Aliquis”, for
the sake of analysis, divided them into two classes: Farmers who have considerable clearances, or are in
easy circumstances, are quite aware that their presence at home is worth more
than 2s.6d. per diem (the wages of a common
labourer) that they are often called out to the roads at inconvenient
seasons, and that their wagons and implements are generally more exposed to
injury there than elsewhere.... There is, however, another, and perhaps more
numerous section of this class, to whom money is of more value than what we
are in the habit of considering its equivalent-time; and to whom the idea of
paying an additional dollar of tax would be anything but agreeable. Well, in addition to the benefit this body
would derive in common with others from the improvement of our common
thoroughfares, I would anticipate that it would be also the recipient of the
funds disbursed. The work to be periodically
accomplished being offered to public competition, in moderately small
portions, such persons having a part of their labour to dispose of, would
find a ready market by uniting in small parties to take up the contracts, to
be implemented in their respective neighbourhoods, and thus, if considering
themselves aggrieved by a money rate, they would have an opportunity of
reconverting their money into labour, and replenishing their exchequer by
contract. (26.) Where the poorer farmers were to get the specialized
equipment and capital to undertake successfully such contracting, “Aliquis” did not say. |
The most
revolutionary aspect of these proposals, and one which would be heard more
and more frequently over the next decade, was that, contrary to general
belief, debts, particularly public debts, were good things. If public works had a future as well as a
present public value, “Aliquis” argued, why should present users be the ones to pay for them. If the residents of Wellington District
borrowed money to build high quality public roads, on ten, fifteen or
twenty-year debentures, present users would escape the high capital cost such
works entailed.(27.) The
doctrine that one should spend money now and leave it for future generations
to pay the cost was novel indeed in a farming community. Nevertheless, whenever proposals for major
public works came up, both the Herald and the Advertiser would hereafter
invariably justify these expenditures on the grounds that future users should
pay. Finally, whenever strenuous objections were raised to such proposals, the promoters of the road would retreat to proclaiming that the question of debt and who should pay was purely speculative. The roads would surely not only pay for themselves, but produce a large profit for the taxpayers. In the face of such vehement assurances by the area’s civic leaders, objections soon melted away and public enthusiasm for the projected road was reported from all quarters. |
In October, 1847, the first formal step towards the
conversion of the The Warden read
a letter from John O. Hatt, Esq., expressing his
regret at not being able to attend this sitting of the [Wellington District]
Council; and inviting them to send a deputation to the Gore District Council
at its sitting next month, to confer respecting the improvement of the Brock
Road.(28.) The Council agreed that such a delegation should be
sent. Businessmen in The people of this town are largely interested in
its completion. Dundas
is the natural depot for the reception of the products of this fine country,
stretching from Flamboro’ to |
The November
meeting of the joint councils was successful when the Gore District Council agreed
to purchase £9,000 worth of shares, enough to construct the road from the As soon as the delegation from Having made the decision, the Wellington
District Council moved with despatch.
Within days, this advertisement appeared: |
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£9,000
Wanted The Council of the Wellington District having passed
a By-Law for the construction of the Brock Road, in conjunction with the Gore
District Council, which By-Law authorizes the Warden of this District to borrow
the sum of £9,000, bearing interest at 6 per cent, payable half yearly, in
Debentures of £5, £10, £15, £20, and £25, each, on the credit of the District
and, the Tolls arising from the said Road, Persons having funds at their
command, and being anxious to facilitate so desirable an object, can apply
(if by letter post paid) to James
Wright, Warden. (31.) |
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The Wellington
District bonds found a ready market locally and the entire £9,000 issue was taken
up by Guelph residents as follows: Alexander Drysdale,
£2,000; Thomas Sandilands, £3,980; George J.
Grange, £600; Frederick Marcon, £1,680; Ann
Stevenson, £40; J. Foster, £300; and Mrs. Lamprey, £400.(32.) What was lacking in In addition to the merchants and millers of |
In |
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300 TOWN
LOTS FOR At a moderate upset
price, and liberal credit or liberal discount on the purchase money down.
The Subscriber offers: THREE HUNDRED TOWN LOTS
for sale, as shown by a new plan of the
Totem of Guelph, in the possession of Francis Kerr, Esq., who will state
terms, point out the Lots on the ground and procure letters of occupation of
Title deeds for parties purchasing. John McDonald (33.) |
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The second major development in |
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40 Town Lots for The Subscriber offers for The contemplated improvement of The terms are five years for the
principal, interest payable half yearly.... Geo. S. Tiffany. (34.) |
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Meanwhile, the
promoters of the |
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On April 21st, 1848, the We have heard from good authority, that at the
meeting of the Directors, held here last week, the necessary steps were taken
for laying off the whole road as soon as possible in sections, ready for tenders,
and that there is a satisfactory prospect of the work being proceeded with at
once; and we have to state, on like authority, that it was also resolved that
the money on debentures advanced on the part of this District, shall be
expended from Guelph to Freel’s Inn, and the
surplus (if any) below Freel’s. (37.)
Tenders for construction were called in June, and on
July 13th, 1848, the .... we
are able to announce the letting out of the contract for gravelling or macadamizing
the road last week.... On Friday last,
the arrangement was finally entered into by the Directors and a Mr. Cook,
formerly a contractor on the |
The official sod-turning on the “Brock” road (the
title “Guelph and Dundas” now generally was dropped
by the local newspapers), which was set for July 21st, 1848, gave local
businessmen and public officials the opportunity to indulge themselves in
the fulsome public oratory so dear to the civic booster’s heart. The More than 200
persons assembled on the occasion, and we are informed that the procession was
more than one fifth of a mile long, presenting a very animated appearance,
with several banners fluttering in the breeze. After proceeding in this order along the
Brock Road for four or five miles, they were met by the President of the
Company, the Warden of the Gore District, Mr. Williamson of Stoney Creek, the contractor, the Gore District Surveyor,
and John Wetenhall, Esq., M.P.P. On returning, the procession halted at
Hamilton’s Tavern, when the President, G.S. Tiffany, Esq., proceeded to a convenient
place on the road, accompanied by the Directors, Committee, etc., and
preceded by two persons carrying a pick and spade; when, after a short
address on the importance of the undertaking, and the satisfaction he felt at
the interest evinced by the inhabitants of the neighbourhood, he commenced
the important ceremony by the use of both tools, and after a few words more,
the company returned to their conveyances, and proceeded towards Guelph.(39.) |
|
The sod-turning was followed by a gala public dinner at Thorp’s Hotel, where speeches and merriment lasted well into the night. |
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The actual
construction of the road, which required the best part of two years, was noteworthy
for only one event---after the completion of the bridge near Kerr’s mills in
Flamborough Township, the workmen took the night
off to celebrate the event. While the
festivities were progressing, the stone bridge fell, delaying the opening of
that part of the road until 1850.(40.) In contrast to
the relatively smooth progress of construction, the financial aspects of the
road continued to create difficulties: first, the contractor ran into
financial trouble; and second, £20,000 proved to be insufficient to complete
the road. In the fall of 1848, Cook
found himself short of cash, as money which he had expected from work on the |
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The problem with this form of payment was that local
storekeepers and banks had little interest in tying up their money in
debentures and severely discounted them.
After a sharp exchange between the The second problem, the shortage of funds to
complete the road, was more serious. When Benjamin Thurtell
assumed office as the Warden of |
|
What was required, Thurtell believed, was an amendment to the Act incorporating the Guelph and Dundas Road Company which would allow the Company to increase its capital by £2,000 and would also turn the road over to the County Councils so that closer supervision could be exercised over future expenditure. |
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|
The Councils
agreed, and in August, 1851, the Counties of Wentworth, Gore and Once the toll booths were in operation, however, a
conflict arose in establishing the rate of tolls on the road. (44.) The That this
Council recommend, that the Directors of the Guelph and Dundas
Road Company should cause the tolls to be collected at the several gates, to
be as near as may be in proportion to the tolls collected upon the Galt and Dundas road, but not to exceed a reasonable rate. (45.) Based on this, whenever the Commissioners of the Dundas and Waterloo road raised or lowered their tolls,
the Commissioners of the Guelph and Dundas road
were quick to follow suit. |
The problem of setting a rate of toll for the Shortly thereafter a delegation of millers from |
The petition of
the undersigned Millers of the Town of Guelph humbly sheweth,
That your petitioners view the making of good roads as one of the surest
signs of the progress of the country, and hail the completion of the Road
from Guelph to Dundas as one of the greatest
improvements that has been effected in favour of this Town and County. That it was anticipated the opening of the Road would place Guelph in a more favourable position than hitherto; would insure in the place a good market for agricultural produce, and especially for wheat; and induce more local manufacturers by the facilities presented for the same being conveyed more readily to the seaboard. That your
petitioners have done their utmost to meet these reasonable expectations in
regard to a Wheat Market, and an increase in the manufacture of Flour, but
find their efforts partially counteracted, and a tax imposed upon Milling
and Wheat buying, by the additional tolls imposed upon flour-and flour
alone-in passing over the aforesaid Road.... Your petitioners
therefore pray that. . .you may please... relieve
your petitioners and others from the burden now imposed upon them. And your
petitioners will ever pray, etc.... 27th Jan., 1851. David
Allan, J.C.
Presant, Smith,
Lynd & Co. (47.) |
|
The millers were successful in their petition. Two weighing machines were placed upon the road so that tolls could be collected according to weight. But, rather than penalize overloaded wagons, the rate of tolls was set up in such a way that heavy loads paid a much lower toll per 100 lbs. than did light loads. Thus a wagon driven empty or carrying a load up to 1,000 lbs. would pay four pence per gate, while wagons loaded with 3,500 lbs. might pay as little as six pence. (48.) From a fiscal
standpoint, the new scale of tolls was a disaster. They never produced enough revenue to cover
repairs, interest and to repay the debentures. For example, in June, 1851, the concessions
to collect tolls on the |
In 1852, the To counteract these charges, a public meeting was
called by the Town Reeve where the following resolutions were passed:
The purpose of the bridges, of course, was to break
the road company’s monopoly by opening the way for teamsters to use the
township concession roads whenever weather allowed. |
Within
this week, this advertisement appeared in the |
NOTICE To parties willing to
give gratuitous labour in erecting the New Bridges THE
TOWN COUNCIL, in conjunction with the Committee appointed by the General
Meeting of the Inhabitants, having decided that the site of the lower of the two
Bridges about to be erected on the Speed, shall be at the point where
Wellington Street abuts on the River-all persons willing to give gratuitous
labour in the constructing of said Bridge, or of the road leading thereto,
are requested to assemble at 7 o’clock on Monday morning [June 28, 1852], at
the junction of Wellington and Gordon Streets, where Overseers will attend to
direct the operations. James Hough
Town Clerk. (53.) |
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In addition to the
pressure exerted upon the These theories were taken up by local businessmen
who incorporated them into their campaign to force a reduction in the toll
rate. At a public rally on June 28,
1852, held at Freel’s tavern, the following motion
was passed: Resolved: That the tariff of tolls established at the
last meeting of the Board of Directors, is not only an unjust tax upon those
who travel the said road, unprecedented upon any road in the Province, but
also calculated to drive the travel off said road, and thereby decrease
instead of increase the revenue of said road, and materially injure the trade
of those in business on the line of the said road and the towns of Guelph and
Dundas. (56.) |
In the face of these concerted attacks, the The road Commissioners, however, in order to shift responsibility from themselves in making such a controversial decision made these changes conditional upon the lessees of the toll gates accepting the new toll rates while continuing to pay to the road commission the full rate of their lease. |
Table XIX
Rates of
Toll per Gate for Wagons Drawn by Two Horses on the |
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Load |
April 1, 1851. |
June 29, 1852. |
Percent decrease |
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1,000
lbs. 2,000 3,000 4,000 5,000 |
Os.
0s.
1s. 1s.
2s. |
5d.
7.5d. 0d. 6d. 0d. |
Os.
0s. 0s.
1s. 1s. |
4d. 7d. 9d. 0d. 3d. |
20 7 25 33 38 |
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By this means the gatekeepers were made responsible
for the decision as to whether or not the new lower tolls would be
implemented and they would bear the losses if any were created by the
change. The Commissioners justified
their actions on the grounds that they and the gatekeepers were bound by the
terms of the leases, but that if the gatekeepers voluntarily decided to
reduce the tolls during the life of the lease, they should be allowed to do so.
(58.) Under such pressure from the road Commissioners and
the press, two of the gatekeepers, Thomas Ingram and William Clinton (gates
one and two) agreed to reduce their tolls to the June 29th rate, but William
Card, the lessee of gate three, near Urged on by the local press, public meetings were
held, resolutions passed and delegations appointed, all aimed at forcing Card
to change his mind. A delegation,
consisting of three Town Councillors, W.S. Knowles, George Sunley and Dr. Henry Orton, and four businessmen David
Allan, W.J. Brown, John Pipe and Fred George, met William Card at Freel’s tavern, and the following exchange was reported: Mr. Card, the
lessee of the Guelph Gate, met the deputation at Freel’s;
and had some conversation relative to the reduction of the tariff of tolls
upon which he became lessee. Our
readers will recollect that he leased the gate at a rent of £500. He now
states, that according to the rates he has collected during the first month,
usually the month of least travel, he will make £950 in total, or £450
profit, under his present tariff; and he refuses to adopt a lower tariff,
without an amount of compensation such as can not be given. (59.) |
When it is remembered that William Card’s expected
profit of £450 would buy, clear, and stock two large farms, it is not
surprising that he clung so stubbornly to his contract. After reviewing the failure of the The people of In the meantime, Card’s opponents had decided upon
a second avenue of attack. They now
undertook to test the legality of the higher tolls in the local courts. The MAGISTRATES’
COURT,
Present,-B. Thurtell,
Esq., Chairman, and A. A. Baker. David
Martin, Teamster, appeared to a summons at the suit of Wm. Card, Keeper of
the Toll Gate near Guelph, in the Brock Road, for refusing to pay toll. The Prosecutor [Card] stated, that on the
2nd of July, the defendant came to the Toll Gate with a loaded wagon,
weighing 60 cwt., the rate of toll which amounted to 3s.2.5d. A demand for this sum was made; but the
defendant refused to pay more than 1s. 3d. [the revised toll of June 29th]. Prosecutor objected to receive that sum,
and defendant passed on with his team. The Defendant said that sometimes Mr.
Card had demanded 4s. 9d. cy, sometimes 6s. 3d. and other sums. Defendant offered him 1s. 3d. each time and
believed that that sum was as much as he had any right to pay. (61.) |
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The complexity
of the case arose from the fact that Benjamin Thurtell,
the Chairman, was one of the road Commissioners who had set the toll, while
Alfred A. Baker, the second Magistrate, was Clerk of the Division Court and a
political and social associate of Dr. William Clarke, Guelph’s
leading mill owner. Upon hearing the
case, Thurtell voted to convict Martin while Baker
argued that under the On July 17th,
the Martin case came before the
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This time Thurtell again voted to convict Martin, but Allan, Clarke,
Harland and McCrea voted to acquit. (63.) Not surprisingly, given the composition of
the Bench, A. J. Fergusson, M.P.P. and County Solicitor, advised William Card
to appeal to a higher court. Card
agreed and continued to collect the higher tolls. Not all of the delegations which visited Card,
however, were as polite as that official town group which had met him at Freel’s tavern.
Five days after that meeting and two weeks after Martin’s acquittal,
Card received a second visit. The |
THE Outrage at the On Tuesday night last [August 3, 1852] a serious
outrage was committed at the Toll Gate, near Mr. Card then went to the door, but on
trying to open it found it held firmly by some person on the outside. Immediately afterwards, he heard some
person breaking the weighing apparatus of the weighing machine; afterwards
followed a parting salute with a volley of stones at the bedroom window and
at the glass portion of the door. The
parties then went off. It is almost
unnecessary to add that a very considerable amount of damage was done. (64.) |
Although the
Advertiser rejected such methods of persuasion, it did little to ease Card’s
nerves when it warned that such conduct, if repeated, “may lead to a
grievous amount of suffering, and, perhaps, loss of life.” (65.) Finally, Card
had clearly had enough. The weigh
scales broken beyond repair, the gate house severely damaged and his family,
no doubt, in a state of terror, he abandoned his lease and no more tolls
appear to have been collected at the Guelph gate that year. (66.) |
Henceforth,
under the lower rate of tolls, the In contrast to the anxiety felt by Our prosperity
depends entirely upon the means of communication with the lands to the north
and north-west of us. The improvement
of the Brock Road was a step absolutely necessary to prevent our
retrogression, and the gravelling of the roads hence to Fergus on the one
hand, and Elora on the other, will give a fresh impetus to this place, and
mutually benefit those villages and Guelph. (68.) |
The Now that the Act
of Incorporation for the formation of a road hence to Arthur, has come in to
operation, and a considerable quantity of the Stock already taken up, there
is one clause in the Act which required the immediate consideration of all
interested in the road, and which may eventually affect the welfare of the
town itself. Notice was duly given
that at the late Session of Parliament two Acts would be applied for, one to
incorporate a Company for the formation of a road hence to Arthur, and
another from Guelph to Elora; and as both would require to go over the same
ground for a distance of four and a half miles, to avoid strife it was
thought advisable that there should be a clause authorizing the District
Council to take this portion of the road into their own hands any time within
three years, by which means the roads to the rising and competing villages
would branch different ways from Card’s Corner. Unfortunately, the Elora bill was
neglected, and the other was so altered as to allow the company to take up
the road from the limits of the town of |
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From Guelph’s point of view, if tolls on the Guelph to Card’s
Corners section of the road were set too high, Elora’s
trade might go to Berlin. To forestall such
an event, a petition was quickly circulated requesting that the District
Council take over the section of road from On December 6th,
1847, the initial shareholders’ meeting of the Guelph and Arthur Road
Company was held. At it, A. D. Fordyce
was elected president and A. J. Fergusson, William Clarke, Mr. Hogg, Thomas
Webster, Samuel Broadfoot and John Watt were named
directors. It was decided at the
meeting not to make any call upon the shareholders until the District Council
had made a decision as to whether or not it would build the road from Guelph
to Card’s Corners. (72.) On February 4th, 1848, the District Council met to
consider the issue. Leading the discussion
were William Clarke of |
As the Dr. Clarke said, this was only a part of a great District
undertaking, which was to connect the waters of Lake Huron with those of Lake
Ontario, and he felt satisfied that the Road would amply repay both the
interest and principal of the money expended in constructing it. The Act gave the Council the power of constructing
the road, and if the Council did not assume it now it would remain forever in
the hands of a private Company. . . . Dr. Clarke would have no hesitation in
securing the Council in the undertaking to the amount of £500. . .then stated
that himself and Messrs. Grange, Powell and
Fergusson were willing to become security for £1,200, and he thought there
would be no difficulty in getting the remaining £800 taken up. (73.) A by-law was then passed by which the District took
over the road and appointed a Commission to supervise its management. Little more was
done during the next twelve months, but in October, 1848, tenders totalling
£1,903. 8s. 8d. were let for the road’s construction. In addition, the contract to build a toll
house on the north corner of the Scotch plebe was let for £124. 10s. At the same time,
the Commissioners began collecting tolls. (74.) The It is.... with pleasure we lay before our
readers the following statement respecting the four miles of road opened last
Fall, leading from Guelph northward: |
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Tolls received from the commencement,
23rd October, 1848, to 10th July, 1849, being 38 weeks, averaging
per week, £3. 16s. Od. Suppose the same for the 12 months Interest on cost of Road per annum Expenses of same, about |
£120. £75. |
£149.
8s. 9d. £197. 12s. Od. £195. Os. Od. |
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£2. 12s. Od. |
|
It should be borne in mind, that the thousands of
barrels of flour, oatmeal, etc., which generally pass through Guelph during
the Winter and Spring from Fergus and Elora have this year been sent
northward to supply the deficiency caused by the failure of the crops in that
direction, otherwise the receipts would have been much larger. (75.) |
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Unfortunately,
these calculations proved to be much too optimistic. In 1859, the treasurer of If the publicly owned roads, occupying the
most travelled sections, could not make a profit, the privately owned road
companies were even less successful.
The Guelph and Arthur Road Company provides a case in point. (77.) |
The primary
reason for the failure of this road was not lack of traffic but the
conflicting interests of many of its directors and large shareholders. In the County Council debate about the
likelihood that the Company might raise its tolls to a very high level if no
controls were kept upon it, George Jackson, the reeve of Bentinck
Township, pointed out that the Directors had every reason to keep the tolls
as low as possible. (78.) One With the largest
part of the road to Fergus and Arthur remaining unimproved, residents and
businessmen along its route were anxious to have the Road Company complete
the work undertaken in the charter.
With the Road Company holding a legal monopoly on the road, including
all the improvements which had been previously made by the district and the
statute labour expended in the past, local residents refused to spend local
tax money or statute labour on it when such improvements would inevitably
result in the imposition of tolls. On
the other hand, with continued losses on the improved section, the company
was in no mood to sink further capital into a losing proposition. Finally, the Township Council of Nichol
took matters into its own hands. It
agreed to lend £10,000 to the Road Company on security of the works so that
the road could be completed through the township. In turn, in order to get a better price for
its debentures, the Township requested the County Council to issue £10,000 in
county debentures and, with the proceeds, purchase the township bonds. (81.) On the basis of this loan, work on the
road was completed to Fergus.
Unfortunately, the road never came close to paying the maintenance,
interest and principal of its loans. |
In January of
1864, the Directors of the Guelph and Arthur Road Company approached the
County Council with an offer to sell the concern. The County committee established to
examine the offer made the following recommendation: While they are
aware of the importance of the County owning all the gravel roads in said
County, provided they could be obtained at such terms as would not subject
the County to any loss, they are of opinion that the said Company asks more
for their road than it is worth, and your Committee could not recommend any
action to be taken on said offer. From
all the information your Committee could obtain, they think that an offer of
ten thousand dollars might be made to the Company for the whole road, toll
gates and everything with it payable in Debentures at such terms as the
County Council may see fit to direct. (82.) This report
provided the basis for the eventual purchase. (83.) With improved
transportation, settlement within Guelph’s
potential market area was greatly accelerated, and cash crop farming encouraged
by the easier access to markets and the necessity of farmers to have cash for
the new money taxes. Having built the
basic road system, |
During the Spring we have repeatedly felt disposed
to take a stroll round the town for the purpose of noting its progress and giving
the readers of the Advertiser the result of our observations. . . . In commencing
our remarks it is only proper to state, that a rural town, depending entirely
upon a new country with a scattered and comparatively poor population,
cannot be expected to make the same progress, or exhibit the rapid changes
so frequently evidenced by manufacturing or commercial places, in a new
country. With such, The census of 1843 showed a population of 700, and
when we first set foot within the place, in the summer of that year, the
rustic simplicity of the people in dress and other respects, gave us anything
but a favourable impression of its future progress and importance. Well, it
progressed notwithstanding, for in four years its population had doubled, and
at the present time it numbers upwards of 2,000 inhabitants.... As Smith rightly concluded, the era of gravel
road-building provided the first step towards the development of |
Notes |
|
1. |
Figures are taken from “Provincial Secretary's Papers,” op. cit. |
2. |
Ibid. The figure for Puslinch, 1843, is arrived at by prorating the data for 1840 and 1845. |
3. |
Ibid. |
4. |
|
5. |
Canada Census, 1852-3, Calculations are
my own. The estimate for the acres cultivated is a minimum figure arrived at
by deducting ten cultivated acres for each occupied holding, twenty acres and
under. The acreage of wheat and bushels of wheat figures are maximums, no
amount being deducted for occupied holdings under twenty acres. Because of
the small number of holdings of under twenty acres,
maximum error is estimated to be less than one percent. |
6. |
W. L. Smith, The Pioneers of Old |
7. |
Donald McDonald, Map of |
8. |
City of |
9. |
|
10. |
7 William IV, Cap. 79. |
11. |
Clipping from the |
12. |
1 |
13. |
3 |
14. |
9 |
15. |
|
16. |
6 William IV, Cap. 5. |
17. |
6 William IV, Cap. 7. |
18. |
|
19. |
Ibid, February 26, 1847. |
20. |
10-11 |
21. |
10-11 |
22. |
|
23. |
|
24. |
|
25. |
Ibid. |
26. |
Ibid. |
27. |
Ibid. |
28. |
|
29. |
Dundas Warder, N.D., quoted in the Guelph and Galt Advertiser, October 29, 1847. |
30. |
|
31. |
Ibid. January 18, 1848. |
32. |
Calculated from the |
33. |
|
34. |
Ibid, January 17, 1850. |
35. |
|
36. |
Ibid, March 7, 1848. |
37. |
|
38. |
Ibid, July 13, 1848. |
39. |
Ibid, July 27, 1848. |
40. |
Ibid, July 19, 1849. |
41. |
See ibid, October 12, 1849; and the |
42. |
In 1976 a large proportion of the
original printing remained in the vault of the |
43. |
13 and 14 |
44. |
|
45. |
Journals of |
46. |
|
47. |
Ibid, January 30, 1851. |
48. |
Ibid, March 6, 1851. |
49. |
Ibid, June 12, 1851. |
50. |
Journals of |
51. |
Ibid. |
52. |
"Minutes", Town of |
53. |
|
54. |
Reported in ibid, June 17, 1852. |
55. |
Ibid. |
56. |
Ibid. |
57. |
Ibid, April 3, 1851, and July 1, 1852. |
58. |
Ibid, July 1, 1852. |
59. |
Ibid, July 29, 1852. |
60. |
Ibid. |
61. |
Ibid, July 15, 1852. |
62. |
Ibid. |
63. |
Ibid, July 22, 1852. |
64. |
Ibid, August 5, 1852. |
65. |
Ibid. |
66. |
The County accounts for 1853 show that
only £657. 4s. 8d. were collected in that year. See
Journals of |
67. |
Ibid, 1855 and 1857. |
68. |
|
69. |
|
70. |
Ibid, October 8, 1847. |
71. |
|
72. |
|
73. |
|
74. |
|
75. |
Ibid, August 2, 1849. |
76. |
Journals of |
77. |
|
78. |
|
79. |
Ibid, May 2, 1850, Minutes of the |
80. |
Ibid. |
81. |
Journals of |
82. |
Journal of |
83. |
Ibid, Appendix, By-law No. 102, December 6, 1864. |
84. |
|
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◄ End of file ► |