Immediately south of the Danforth , the CNR tracks cross Warden Avenue. A heritage mural was painted there a few years ago.
The wall on the west side was painted first. In the centre is a portrait of Elizabeth Simcoe. In August 1793, Elizabeth Simcoe wrote that the bluffs reminded her of the limestone cliffs in Scarborough England. Apparently that led to the bluffs being called Scarborough Highlands. Scarborough village became the settlement near the Scarborough bluffs.
To the left of her is a painting of the Scarborough bluffs.
And to the right, a steam train at the station.
On the east side, a painting of the stone Bell estate house built in 1830 is in the centre. Although it is known today as the Bell estate, the original builders were Richard and John Thornbeck who obtained 100 acres on that site in 1828 (near presentday Warden and St. Clair). In 1861 this 4 bedroom house was occupied by Richard Thornbeck, his wife, six children and his widowed mother.
Thornbeck sold the house to William Bell in 1882. It was then home to a line of Bell decendents for over a century. It was Bell’s Scarborough Dairy from 1931 to 1943 when it was purchased by Donlands Dairy. Part of the property was later owned by Beckers Milk who had a milk processing plant there until 1995. In 2012 the house was empty and boarded up.
below: On delivery, with horse and wagon from Mitchells. Arthur Mitchells Grocery store was an early landmark in the community of Birchcliff. It was on the corner of Kingston Road and Birchmount.
The mural was painted in 2012/2013 by De Anne Lamirande with help from Andrew Horne and Emelia Jajus
This mural illustrates the Bell estate’s beautiful fieldstone house built in 1830, just east of Warden Avenue which was designated as a historical site in 2011 and still stands today. Established on the property was Bell’s Scarborough Dairy which flourished from 1931 to 1943. The A.H. Mitchell Grocery Store was located on Kingston Road and made deliveries in this area by horse and buggy. The centre columns feature Oak trees, the red Canadian Maple and Birch trees which represent the Oakridge and Birchcliff communities.
[note: Oakridge is north of the tracks while the community of Birchcliff is to the south]
With collaboration from City of Toronto and Mural Routes
[…] below: Another Heritage Trail mural – “Mitchells General Store” by Phil Irish, 1998. Mitchells store was one of the first businesses established in the Birch Cliff area. The same store is mentioned in another Scarborough history mural just a bit north on Warden Avenue (see Scarborough Bells) […]