Draper Street (Toronto)
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Draper Street is a street in downtown
Toronto, Ontario Toronto ( ; or ) is the capital city of the Canadian province of Ontario. With a recorded population of 2,794,356 in 2021, it is the most populous city in Canada and the fourth most populous city in North America. The city is the ancho ...
, Canada. It is a north-south street located to the west of Spadina Avenue, from Front Street West north to Wellington Street. Draper Street is notable for its collection of 28 nineteenth-century row cottages of the
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style. They were designated by the
City of Toronto government The municipal government of Toronto ( incorporated as the City of Toronto) is the local government responsible for administering the city of Toronto Toronto ( ; or ) is the capital city of the Canadian province of Ontario. With a rec ...
in the 1990s to have heritage status. The entire street is designated as a ''Heritage Conservation District'' as a way to preserve its heritage for posterity. The street is named after William Henry Draper, a lawyer, judge, and politician in
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, which became
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. The street was laid out in an 1856 plan of subdivision by J. Stoughton Dennis of lands that were part of the 1794 Garrison Reserve. Draper and Charles Jones are listed as the property owners of the lots to be subdivided for development. The street is narrow, at wide. The lots are all deep and vary in width from to wide. Construction did not begin immediately after the subdividing of the properties. In 1857, an economic depression started, which may have delayed construction. The one-and-a-half-storey cottages were built from 1881 to 1889 by developer Jonathan Madell. First, seven cottages were built on the east side of the street in 1881, and four cottages on the west side from 1881–l to 1882 that were designed by architect J. A. Fowler. In 1886, two houses were built on the corners of Draper Street and Front Street West. In 1889, the row cottages of #20–32 were built on the west side of the street. In 1997, the residents of Draper Street requested the Board of Heritage Toronto to designate the properties under the ''Ontario Heritage Act''. The board voted to designate the properties, and
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approved the designation on February 4, 1999 under By-law 026-99. Of the original cottages, #19 and #21 had been torn down, #27 had its facade replaced, and #29 had its facade remodelled. The two houses on the northwest corner of Front and Draper were torn down to make a commercial building facing on Front. The areas to the north and the east of the street are the site of redevelopment. The condominium project "The Well" is to be constructed on the industrial lands to the east vacated by ''
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'' headquarters. It will convert a vacant lot on Draper Street into a parkette connecting to the project lands. A 16-storey condominium is proposed for the corner of Wellington Street West and Draper. A narrow park is being built, connecting Draper with a nearby development east of the street. The park is just wide and long. A property developer received permission to redevelop that property, if the compensated for the higher density, if they purchased nearby properties, and turned them into parkspace. This short walkway is part of the developer's deal.


Notable persons

*
Lincoln Alexander Lincoln MacCauley Alexander (January 21, 1922 – October 19, 2012) was a Canadian lawyer who became the first Black Canadian member of Parliament in the House of Commons, the first Black federal Cabinet Minister (as federal Minister of Labou ...
was born on Draper Street


References

; Bibliography * *


External links


Draper Street Site

City of Toronto - Draper Street HCD

Taylor on History: Toronto’s Draper Street is akin to a time tunnel into the past
{{Streets in Toronto Streets in Toronto