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Todmorden Mills

Art museums and galleries in OntarioDon River (Ontario)History museums in OntarioHistory of TorontoMuseums in Toronto
TodmordenMills1
TodmordenMills1

Todmorden Mills was a small settlement located in the Don River valley in Toronto, Ontario. It started out as a lumber mill in the 1790s. Originally known as "Don Mills", it grew into a small industrial complex and village before becoming part of East York in the 20th century. Currently the valley site is occupied by the Todmorden Mills Heritage Museum and Arts Centre, which includes the museum, art gallery, a theatre and a forest preserve.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Todmorden Mills (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Todmorden Mills
Todmorden Connector, Toronto

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Wikipedia: Todmorden MillsContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 43.68625 ° E -79.36024 °
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Address

Main Building

Todmorden Connector
M4K 2B9 Toronto (East York)
Ontario, Canada
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Crothers Woods
Crothers Woods

Crothers Woods is an area of the Don River valley in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is 52 hectares (128 acres) in size and consists of woodland, meadows, wetlands, and an assortment of past and present municipal uses. The wooded area has been designated as an Environmentally Significant Area (ESA) by the Toronto and Region Conservation Authority. An ESA designation is useful in highlighting valuable natural areas but this does not affect planning uses. The area is currently zoned as undeveloped parkland. Crothers Woods was named after George W. Crothers who owned and operated an equipment dealership called Crothers Caterpillar which sold and serviced new and used heavy machinery for the construction and mining industries. The company stayed until 1979 when they relocated to Vaughan, Ontario (now as Toromont CAT). Murhal Developments bought the property and eventually sold it to Loblaws which built the store that currently occupies the site just off Millwood Road.While there are no clear boundaries, Crothers Woods is generally thought to include both sides of the valley that extends from Pottery Road and the Bayview Avenue extension in the south and west to the Millwood Road bridge in the east. Further east, good quality forest exists on the north side of the valley for another 1.2 km to the western edge of E.T. Seton Park. The land in this part of the valley is owned by Alexandre Poirier and managed by the city of Toronto's Parks and Forestry Department.