Chapter 1 The Beginning
The Don Rowing Club was established in 1878 by the Christie brothers.
They owned a vacant house in downtown Toronto, on Vine Street (now
Overend Street). Vine Street bordered the Don River before the course of
the river was changed. With three other friends, Andrew McFarlane, T.
Hogarth and J. Swanson, they formed the genesis of what was to later
become the Don Rowing Club. At the time, the club was no more than an
informal and convenient place for the friends to meet for rowing and to
use for the storage of their equipment.
In the latter part of the nineteenth century, rowing was a popular
pasttime for young men looking for an enjoyable, competitive sport.
Regattas were held on Saturday afternoons, and the Don became one of
many small clubs in the Toronto region. Clubs were generally informal,
usually consisting of no more than three or four men that liked to row.
With the Humber and Don Rivers easily accessible and the waters of
Toronto Bay close by, there were plenty of opportunities for rowing.
With the popularity of rowing remaining high, the club attracted more
interested rowers. Soon it became necessary to move to larger quarters.
A boathouse was constructed on Eastern Ave., still near the Don River,
where the activities of the club were confined to skiff rowing. A skiff
was a one-person kind of working boat, or type of small rowboat. In
1880 a clincher four (another older style of working boat) was purchased
from W. Laing of Ashbridges's Bay, but that same year the Don River
overflowed, flooding the area of the boathouse. The members moved
again, to a less vulnerable area. A new building was erected around the
Queen Street bridge.
From the beginning, Don rowers were keen competitors. C. Enright and W.
O'Connor were two early members of the Don that brought fame to the
club by winning the C.A.A.O double in 1884.
Immediately after this win, a four was purchased from the Toronto Rowing
Club. In this boat the crew * won the Junior C.A.A.O. Four in 1885. At
the C.A.A.O in Lachine in 1890 , another crew** won the Senior Shell
Fours. They repeated this win at Barrie the following year. A junior
crew also won at Barrie the same year and again in 1893 at Hamilton. In
1895 a four*** won at Hamilton. Later, this crew was sent to the
national at Scranton. However they were beaten when they failed to turn
a marker buoy by the club. In the latter years of the century the Junior
Doubles were won each year almost exclusively by the Don.
*J. Long, W. Rame, W. Chisholm and T. Reynolds
**J. Sullivan, F. Liston, C. Rame and J. Hurley
*** J. OıConnor, A. Trayling, W. Nelson and L. Kennedy
Chapter 2 1900-1930
i Cherry Street
Though the club was achieving great success on the water, the same could
not be said of events off the water, for once again the club was forced
to re-locate when work began that changed the course of the Don River,
cutting them off from access to the river and lake. Club headquarters
were moved to temporary quarters at the Mulock foundry on a strip of
marshy land, at the mouth of the river.
This area was once an island, called Fisherman's Island. It was joined
to the mainland by a spit of land that later became Cherry Street. The
land between the mainland and Fisherman's Island became a landfill
project, and today includes the shipping channel. There is no longer
much evidence of this former island except for the south shoreline which
remains as it once was. Those interested in pinpointing exact locations
should consult old city maps which clearly illustrate the old course of
the river, and places like Fisherman's Island.
ii Ashbridges Bay
In 1912 the club moved to Ashbridges's Bay and constructed a fine club
house at the foot of Morely Ave. (Woodfield Rd) Ashbridges's Bay was a
much larger area than it is today, and
in 1913 the club officers succeed in obtaining the honour to hold the
Dominion Day regatta over their course. Then the day before the regatta
disaster struck. Fire tore through the structure, utterly
destroying it. Once more the members had to start all over again.
Valiantly they re-built once more on the same site. During this time the
club prospered. Social and rowing events flourished in a club that
boasted a large dining area and a grand piano.
Much of the information about the difficulties experienced by the Don in
the early part of this century come from correspondence between the Don
and the Harbour Commission which leased land to the Don for the club's
activities.
During this time, Toronto was rapidly growing. Many changes were
taking place along the waterfront which severely curtailed the
activities of the club. Diverting the course of the river and land
fill projects along the lakefront both created, at different times,
enormous problems for the oarsmen. Now, just as the club was doing so
well, municipal authorities, in the name of progress, established their
main waste disposal works on the adjacent property, creating an
insoluble problem for the DRC.
In a letter to the Harbour Commission in 1921, the club asked for a new
site because they were completely hemmed in by improvements in the bay.
In 1923 they wrote again asking to have pipes cleaned in the circulating
channel so they could get in from the lake without having to row up to
the eastern gap. By 1924 they were loudly complaining to the Harbour
Commission that they would be unable to hold their annual spring regatta
because Woodbine beach was being closed in by landfill, and the sewage
treatment plant was creating severe pollution problems for the oarsmen
who were becoming sick from rowing in the muck. Not only was the water
severely polluted, but it had become shallow as well. In some spots,
the water was no more than a few inches deep.
iii Shipping Channel
At this point the club executive identified a site on Harbour Commission
plans called the Polson extension (include map here to show where this
was) that would suit their purposes. They would train their crews on
the shipping channel which was still unused, until such time as it was
needed. In 1924 the Board approved an application from the Don for
temporary occupancy of the Polson extension for rowing purposes. The
Don wrote to the Commission with their plans for a building 20 feet by
70 feet to be built on the site, erected at their own expense and
removed when instructed by the Commission. The site was approved for one
year for the princely sum of a $1.00 rental fee, starting April 1925,
with 30 days notice to vacate. By 1926, O.G. McIllroy, Don secretary,
wrote the Toronto Harbour Commission that the site was unsuitable for
rowing. They moved back into the old clubhouse at Ashbridge's Bay while
looking for a new location.
iv Ashbridge's Bay - old Clubhouse
Still in 1927 they had no new site and club members were asking the
mayor (name) for help. Conditions at Ashbridge's had so deteriorated
that the social aspects of the organization were non-existent, and the
club was on the wane. The Star reported the bay was so foul it was
impossible to induce new men to row on its "turbid, sewage laden
surface." Valiantly, the Dons battled on, until in 1932, fire totally
destroyed the club and several costly boats.
v Coatsworth Cut Site
Seeking new quarters, the officers at this time came in contact with a
proposal to build a breakwater along the eastern beaches. Board of
Control for the City of Toronto passed a motion, that Mr. Robert
Dibble, on behalf of the club could make application for a piece of land
100 feet by 200 feet on the lakefront just east of the Cut known as
Coatsworth Cut. This location (still marked on some city maps) was
situated on the lakefront, between Woodbine Ave, and Leslie Street in
the vicinity of the turning basin. The clubhouse planned for this site
was an ambitious project, estimated to cost around $30,000; an enormous
sum of money for the time.
The building was to be erected by George Gooderham, and presented to the
organization. The rent for the site was set at $25.00 a year. However,
soon after receiving the land, authorities rejected the idea of a
breakwater. When the sea wall proposal was turned down, the club
reluctantly abandoned their plans. When the club vacated the Coatsworth
site, the only structure on it was a frame building of no value for
housing rowing shells. The magnificent clubhouse was never built.
Chapter 3 1930-1960
Located between the Alexander Yacht Club and the National Yacht Club,
the Don set up its next locale on Stadium Road near the C.N.E. Here
they constructed a frame boathouse. From the bottom of Bathhurst Street
the rowers enjoyed, and were challenged by the sometimes turbulent
waters of the lake. Jim Pogue remembers that in those days sores on the
bottom were a regular consequence of rowing in wet woollies through
those wavy waters of the western gap.
But the troubles of the Don were far from over. These were depression
years. People had no money and neither did the Don. Increasingly
frustrated letters from the Harbour Commission were fired off to the DRC
in a vain attempt to collect taxes and rent owing, letters the Don
administration just didn't bother answering. Rent for the premises was
set at $100.00 a year, plus taxes. The Harbour Commission also wanted
rent of $25.00 a year for the unused Coatsworth cut site for which the
Don had signed 21 year lease.
Under these kinds of pressures many clubs might have closed their doors,
but under the able leadership of Bob Dibble, the Don worked out a deal
with the Harbour Commission to transfer back to the Harbour Commission
a portion of the site at Ashbridge's Bay, for which the club had paid
$3000 and couldn't use because of the operations of the sewage plant .
The Harbour Commission would pay all arrears of taxes on the Bathhurst
Street property, a sum of $809.00 and would grant the club a new lease
on a site nearer the bay immediately south of Tip Top Tailors. The
Telegram reported that the deputation to the Toronto Board of Control
consisted of Bob Dibble, Cap Crawford, Bill Carter and Jack Guest.
Dibble told the Board of Control that "the Don is one of the oldest
clubs in America, but is absolutely broke".
Despite their battles on the financial front, the gallant DRC were
victors in competition, winning the 1937 Men's Junior 8, and in the
same year, the Intermediate U.S. Nationals. These events were
extensively reported at the time in the Toronto papers, sparking a great
interest in rowing.
During 1937 plans were made for a proper clubhouse just south of Tip Top
Tailors. Again Bob Dibble was the driving force behind
these plans to erect finally a proper clubhouse. A news article of Feb.
19, 1938 reported on their $6,000 objective and asked sportsmen to:
"rally round the banner of this popular club which has been fated with
more than its share of ill luck down the years. April 1 the first sod
will be turned at the site of the new clubhouse. It was reported that
Don crews have been training all winter at the central Y and a program
mapped out with total points earned, giving the winner the Bob Dibble
trophy which will be competed for annually."
A gala evening was was held at the new boathouse on Friday November 4,
1938 to celebrate the opening of their new $7,000 facility. With hopes
high for a bright future, the club settled into their brand new
quarters. Just two years later, events on the larger world stage would
once more affect a small rowing organization.
We all live within particular historical periods. In ways that can
sometimes only be seen from a vantage point well beyond them, historical
events control and shape our lives. The twenties were good years. There
was money for boats and a clubhouse with a grand piano. The Don
prospered. This was followed by the dirty thirties. The depression years
made it difficult for the DRC to pay its bills. People had no jobs and
no money for extras like rowing. The end of the depression coincided
with another watershed in the the world history - World War 2.
Thousands of young Canadian men enlisted, or were conscripted to fight
overseas. Membership dwindled as the type of young men a rowing club
needed and wanted, were being recruited to fight for their country.
Then in May of 1940 mother nature dealt another blow. On Sunday May
19, 1940, a devasting storm with winds of 90 miles per hour destroyed
the new clubhouse, ripping off the roof and and destroying nearly all
the shells. Only two shells survived, one belonging to Jack Guest, the
other to Set Adourian. Dibble and Guest appeared before the Harbour
Commission on June 12 and stated
"that the club had paid about $7000 for
construction of the club, the storm had caused about $2500 damage to the
clubhouse, but with the destruction of the shells, damage was closer to
$30,000 and now the club had no money in its
treasury because so many active members had enlisted."
Unless the clubhouse was restored, the club could not continue.
In turn, the Harbour Commission reminded the deputation, that since
moving into the new site, they had not paid either rental or taxes, and
until they did, their request for recompense was going to fall on deaf
ears.
However help was at hand from the Argos who offered the Don members use
of Argo boats and quarters. The Argos also initiated a campaign to raise
$2500 for the Don club.
In July of 1940 the club arranged with the Harbour Commission to
reconstruct the building, after which the Don would occupy the property
as tenants on a rental basis with the Don to pay all outstanding debts.
But as the war dragged on and more men enlisted, the club had no new
source of members to draw upon. In 1941 the club sublet the premises to
the Royal Norwegian Air Force and the area became known as Little
Norway. What little equipment had survived the 1940 storm went into
storage, and the club ceased operations until the warıs end.
When the war ended, the Don started re building. Campaign efforts
raised enough money to buy three eights, a four and two doubles and in
1947 they were back in competition. Still another setback occurred in
1948 when a brand new eight oared shell hit a submerged piling off the
Sunnyside Bathing Pavilion and was completely wrecked.
Rowing was competing in the late forties and early fifties with other
activities along the waterfront, setting the stage for damage to boats
in confrontations with other water users. Just to illustrate the old
adage that the more things change, the more they remain the same,
there is a letter, sent to the Harbour Commission in 1948, from a Mr.
Scandrett, who operated Sunnyside Pleasure boats. This gentleman is
furious that, once again, while he was out of town another rowing shell
has rammed one of his canoes on the Sunnyside water course. He is deeply
concerned about the possibility of a fatal accident. He states; "I
cannot for the life of me understand how they can expect to successfully
train their athletes by continually dodging the small craft within the
breakwater."
The fifties
A history of the club written up by Jack Guest in 1952 is filled with
optimism for the Don's future, and for good reason. In 1951, just four
years after rising once again from the ashes, this particular phoenix
won victories at Hamilton, Toronto, Lachine, Detroit, Washington, as
well as six Canadian championships at the Royal Canadian Henley in
eights, fours, doubles and singles. They finished as the top Canadian
club that year, second in total points to Westside of Buffalo. Most
notable victories of the year were the wins of the 145 pound eight and
Now just as these successes were bringing status to the club, once
more changes to the waterfront began to disrupt their activities.
Along the lake shore, in front of the CNE, landfill operations were
being carried out. Letters to the Harbour Commission in 1957 from the
Don objected strenuously, on account of this being the only waterway
satisfactory for regattas with races over 3/4 of a mile. If this area
was filled in, then the Don training facilities would disappear, and the
clubhouse would be of no further use. Despite their objections, plans
went ahead to fill in this area, the Toronto Harbour Commission
approving a plan to fill in 75 feet of the frontage along the shore of
the CNE.
The Don countered that they would withdraw their objection if the city
would make a suitable financial settlement, giving them money for their
present boathouse, which would be totally useless to the rowers after
the landfill operations, and for the inconvenience of being displaced.
Metro agreed to settle the matter for $25,000. Now the Dons, found
themselves once more looking of a new home.
Chapter 4 1960-1970
In 1960 the Don Rowing Club moved to the town of Port Credit. Not long
before this move, Port Credit had expropriated the land along the river
south of the railway trestle bridge for public use. This action on the
part of the town was due in part to initiatives of the recently formed
Credit Valley Conservation Authority. The C.V.A was created in the
aftermath of Hurricane Hazel which devastated parts of Toronto in
October of 1954. People living along the river floodplains of the
Humber, Credit, Rouge and other waterways suffered terrible damage and
loss of life from this storm. The Credit River for example, rose seven
feet the night of Hazel. As one of its objectives, the C.V.A. wished to
move homes away from these floodplains in order to prevent such tragic
losses from happening again.
Where the Canoe and Rowing clubs are now located, there was a marina
consisting of about 25 boats for rent. It was owned and operated by the
Hare family. After Hazel the town decided to expropriate this land, in
accordance with the aims of the Conservation Authority. Since it was
owned by a family who not only lived there, but drew their livelihood
from the river, and since the CVA had no power to expropriate on its
own, it was necessary to have another valid reason for the
expropriation. One suggestion was to construct an aquatic facility on
the site.
An aquatic facility was a fortuitous choice, because the Toronto Island
Canoe club had been destroyed by Hazel, and they were looking for a new
location. Their president was also a member of the Conservation
Authority.
The Credit Valley Lions were asked to assist with the formation of the
aquatic facility. They agreed to help, and the Lionıs Aquatic
Association was formed to fund and co-ordinate the project. Knowing
that the Don Rowing Club was also looking for a new place for their
activities, the DRC was approached to become part of this new aquatic
facility.
While the Don had some money from the City of Toronto for having to move
from Bathhurst Street, the canoe club had almost none. The Lions agreed to
find the necessary money to construct the building. They went to the
bank for the capital, but the banks refused to loan them money. Far from
admitting defeat at this unexpected roadblock, the Credit Valley Lions
made an unprecedented gesture to keep the aquatic facility alive. Each
member, pledged one thousand dollars of their own money as security for
the loan. The boathouse was built as a shared facility, with bays for
both the rowing and the canoe club.
Ten thousand dollars of the Dons' money was used towards the
construction of the building and to the purchase of equipment necessary
to operate a rowing club. Building the old boathouse was an expensive
undertaking. Pilings had to be driven 35-40 feet down into the ground
beneath to stabilize the land before building could begin. The fact is,
that underneath the old boathouse, and the strip of park beside it,
there is still swampy wetland, just like the land that lies along the
river north of the railway bridge.
Getting the boathouse built solved the problem of a permanent location.
There was still the problem of the water conditions. It seemed the Don
could not escape sewage treatment plants. Right beside the present day
Canoe Club, where the Royal Canadian Legion building stands was a sewage
treatment centre. The Legion was built on top. The tank in the basement
of the Legion where many people took their first Learn to Row lesson,
was the place where sewage was treated. Liquid effluent from the
treatment process was then pumped directly back into the river. Dave
Beatty a former captain remembers that the foam of the effluent was
frequently level with the dock. Marathon swimmers, Marilyn Bell and
Cliff Lumbsen trained for their swims in these polluted waters. When
Port Credit became part of the city of Mississauga, the plant was
closed. The last remaining evidence of its unsavoury past is the old
tank in the subterranean depths of the Legion and the pipe just above
the canoe club where the sewage poured into the river.
On September 23, 1961, the new clubhouse opened as The Lion's Aquatic
Facility. Opening day ceremonies, included an address by then MPP for
Peel, one William Davis who officially opened the building (and who in
later years became the premier of Ontario). President of the Lions, H.
Lee Williams welcomed the Canoe and Rowing clubs to the site and
presented both with keys to the building. Jack Guest of the Rowing club
and A.W. Whisking of the Canoe club then spoke. Two hours of
entertainment and an exhibition regatta followed the official
ceremonies. This was an ambitious start for a club with only
six active rowers.
The Lions managed the facility through the Lionıs Aquatic Association.
This association consisted of one member of council, one member of the
Credit Valley Lions, one member from the Don, one from the Canoe Club
and one member of the public. They oversaw the organization until the
late sixties when the rowing club had the necessary number of members to
allow them to manage their own affairs.
The sixties were a time of growth and change for the Don. Despite the
fact that members were few and the boats were well past their best days,
only two years after their hopeful beginning in Mississauga, the
fledgling club won its first major victory in 1963 at Henley, winning
the Junior 145 class.
Schoolboy rowing at the new location started from the growing interest
at Lorne Park Secondary School. By 1964 there were 15 steady rowers and
they turned in a stellar performance at Henley, winning both the Junior
and Senior 135 events and the Junior 145. By 1965 there were 30 boys and
they remained champs in the Junior 135 class winning the senior 135 the
following year. In 1968 the Don won both the Junior and Senior 135
events at Henley. Lorne Park was the only school in the entire Toronto
area to win championship events at the Schoolboy Regatta in 1968, and
they won two of them.
In May of 1965 the Don received its first new boat in twenty years. The
St Lawrence Starch Company, which was located at the corner of Lakeshore
and Hurontario took an interest in community activities. They took it in
turn to help buy boats for the Canoe club and the Rowing club. On the
15th of May 1965, club president Art Monteith and the Lorne Park
Secondary School 145 lb crew, with their coach Dr. Fred Parteger took
possession of the Beehive 1. This shell built by the R. Sims company was
61 feet long, 2 feet wide, made of Honduras cedar and weighed 250
pounds. An elaborate ceremony accompanied the christening of the Beehive
1. It was given an official row in front of the clubhouse by its proud
young crew. Forty high school boys from Lorne Park and Port Credit
Secondary schools were training with the Don that year. They hoped, with
their new boat, to improve on their last year's fifth place finish in
the School Boy Regatta.
Through the sixties the club remained exclusively male. One of the
events of the 1968 season was the father and son regatta held in
September. This was a fun event and a chance for the fathers to see what
their sons had been struggling with all summer. There was even a
familiarization session the evening before so these brave souls could
see what they were in for.
There is solid evidence that the Trent university rowing program had a
lot of early support from the Don. Trent was a relatively new
university in the early seventies. It numbered among its
students some keen rowers who had rowed with the Don. In July of 1970,
the director of athletics at Trent wrote to the Don about initiating a
rowing program at the university. These students who wanted to continue
to row at Trent, had suggested that the club might be willing to lend
Trent the use of an eight during the Fall. This would be an excellent
arrangement from Trent's point of view since (letter dated July
1970) intercollegiate training took place during September and October. In
return, Trent would loan the Don a two paired shell for training during the summer
months. Trent was not the only place helped out by the Don during the
sixties and seventies. When Westside suffered a disastrous fire (when)
it was the Don that helped them back on their feet with boats.
Around 1968 the Aquatic association that oversaw the management of the
Don was beginning to breakdown. In a letter written to the mayor in July
of 1968, the club expressed its frustration with the paralysis that had
overtaken the association. They began to withhold their monthly rental
fee, in an effort to precipitate some action by the association. Since
the Don had money had $10,000 invested in the site, while the canoe club
had nothing, it was imperative that there be proper management. To try
and remedy a deteriorating situation, the Don made a proposal to the
mayor that they take over the entire
management of the premises under a lease agreement (letter July 16
1968) with assurance that the canoe club could continue as tenants in
the space they occupied.
Next Chapter: 1970-1980
Coming Soon
Many thanks to Margaret Faherty for her work in compiling this history.