Berkeley House, York, Upper Canada Explained

Berkeley House was a prominent house in York, Upper Canada. It was the home of two Clerks of Upper Canada's Privy CouncilJohn Small, and his son Charles Coxwell Small. Upper Canada's first small Parliament buildings were built next door to Berkeley House. Small is reported to have hosted meetings of the province's executive committee in his home.

History

In 1795, John Small bought a one-acre parcel of land with a large log cabin on it, which he covered in stucco and expanded. The original log cabin had been built in 1793 by George Porter, a self described former militia sergeant. Small paid Porter $50 for the property.

Charles Coxwell Small further expanded the house as an Italianate villa that became the centre of 1820s social life in York, after he inherited the property in 1831. It included multiple large rooms, including one 18x45 feet.

The building was demolished in 1925. It is now site of the Globe and Mail Centre.

Henry Scadding, an early resident of York, whose Toronto of Old recorded his recollections of York and early Toronto, devoted most of a page to describing Berkeley House, the renovations it went through, and early maps of the property. He described the early house existing in a clearing, east of King Street's eastern termination at Ontario Street. He described Charles Small expanding and "elevating" the original log cabin, and incorporating it into the expanded building. One of the maps bore the annotation "A sketch showing the land occupied by John Small, Esq., upon the Reserve appropriated for the Government House at York by His Excellency Lt. Gov. Simcoe."