Family History
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The
first person we should mention is Peter Shaver,
the builder of the house. The eighth child of
William and Mary Catherine Schaeffer, he was born
in Ancaster, Ontario in 1809. It is believed that
the children of William and Mary anglicized the
family name to Shaver. With one of the first land
deeds for the area, 21 year old Peter purchased
100 acres to farm in 1830, on land located just
north of what is now Burnhamthorpe Road and Highway
427. It was a rather primitive part of Ontario,
for all that existed were fields of black walnut
trees. Two years later he would marry Esther Vansickle,
whose ancestors had come from the Netherlands.
They had six children. In 1846, the year that
Esther Josephine was born, Peter received a patent
from the Crown for another 100 acres to the south
of his farm, extending from what is now Burnhamthorpe
Road all the way south to Bloor Street. |
The first house was of wood frame
construction and he named his farm Applewood. Fertile
soil and hard work produced good crops as was evidenced
by the 1851 census for his property:
Barley - 110 acres, Wheat - 30 acres
Peas - 4, Buckwheat - 4
Potatoes - 2, Clover - 10, honey,
Apples and Wood 200 lbs
In the history of Etobicoke, the
Christian tradition played a vital role in setting
the pattern of life for the pioneers. The Shavers
were devout Methodists. The records of Islington United
Church show Peter and his brother George as two of
the trustees responsible for the first Methodist church
in Etobicoke.
In those days it was not uncommon
for houses to be occupied by extended families, where
more than one generation of the family livd in the
house. Above we mentioned a daughter, Esther Josephine.
She married James Woodsworth, a Methodist minister.
In this house, in 1874, she gave birth to James Shaver
Woodsworth who would go on to become a parliamentarian,
founder of the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation
and a social reformer who coerced the MacKenzie-King
government into introducing Old Age Pensions, Unemployment
Insurance and Family Allowance. In 1882, the Rev.
James Woodsworth would move this part of the family
to Winnipeg, where he became Methodism’s chief missionary
to the prairie people. His son, J.S. Woodsworth would
follow in his footsteps. The young James Shaver Woodsworth
trained for the Methodist ministry and, in 1898, he
entered Victoria College in Toronto where he met his
future wife, Lucy Staples. |