Ontario Highway 5 Explained

See also: Dundas Street.

Province:ON
Type:Hwy
Route:5
Map Custom:yes
Map Notes:A map of Highway5
Length Km:14.0
Established:1920
Direction A:West
Direction B:East
Cities:Hamilton (Dundas & Waterdown)
Previous Type:ON
Previous Route:4
Next Type:ON
Next Route:6

King's Highway 5, commonly referred to as Highway 5 and historically as the Dundas Highway and Governor's Road, is a provincially maintained highway in the Canadian province of Ontario. The east–west highway travels a distance of 12.7km (07.9miles) between Highway 8 at Peters Corners, north of Hamilton, and Highway 6 at Clappison's Corners. Prior to several sections being downloaded to the municipalities in which they were located, Highway5 served as bypass to Highway 2, connecting with it in both Paris and Toronto, a distance of 114.3km (71miles).[1]

Highway5 followed a significant piece of Dundas Street (historically also called The Governor's Road), one of two routes constructed under the orders of John Graves Simcoe during his short tenure as Lieutenant Governor of Upper Canada, the other being Yonge Street. The route was designated as part of the provincial highway system in 1920 and numbered as Highway5 in 1925. Initially it travelled from Toronto to Clappison's Corners before turning south and following what would later become Highway6 south through Hamilton and onwards to Jarvis. It was redirected west from Clappison's Corners to Peters Corners in 1927, and later to Paris in 1931.

Highway5 was quickly engulfed by the growing outer suburbs of Toronto in the 1950s and 1960s, which led to various portions being transferred to local jurisdiction (though still signed as connecting links) over the years. The portions within Metropolitan Toronto were transferred in 1954, followed by portions through Mississauga in 1971, 1978 and 1991. By the 1990s, the provincially-maintained route only extended as far east as Highway 403; it was shortened to its present length in 1998.

Route description

Highway5 serves as a short connector between Highway8 in the west and Highway6 in the east, and is essentially a continuation of Highway8. This configuration comes as a result of the truncation of both highways by the Ministry of Transportation of Ontario (MTO). The removed sections were transferred to the jurisdiction of the City of Toronto, the City of Mississauga, Halton Region, the City of Hamilton, the County of Brant, and Oxford County on January1, 1998. Prior, Highway5 followed two segments of Dundas Street between Toronto and Paris.

The current route of Highway5 is almost entirely straight and rural. It passes immediately to the north of the Niagara Escarpment, a World Biosphere Reserve. South of the escarpment, at the western tip of Lake Ontario, is the Dundas district of Hamilton, which was once a separate town within the former Hamilton-Wentworth Region. It is between Peters Corners and Clappison's Corners.

Highway5 begins at a roundabout at the southern end of Highway8 and the northern end of former Highway 52 in Peters Corners. To the west, the road is now Hamilton Road5 (which the highway is now designated as beyond both ends of its remaining length through Hamilton). It proceeds westwards towards Paris. Proceeding east, it crosses a ravine, divides a large woodlot and passes through agricultural lands. It crosses Spencer Creek as it approaches Brock Road. Spencer Creek plunges over the nearby escarpment at Webster's Falls. Highway5 then passes through a rural residential area and returns to a farmland setting. It passes through the rural hamlet of Rock Chapel, and then curves to the left on its final approach to Highway6. East of Highway6, the road continues as the eastern section of Hamilton Road 5, and becomes Dundas Street.

The MTO still maintains a 1.1km (00.7miles) portion of Dundas Street at the Highway407 interchange in Burlington, a 400m (1,300feet) portion at the Highway403 interchange on the Oakville–Mississauga boundary, and a 1.9km (01.2miles) portion at the Highway427 interchange in Toronto.

History

Predecessors

Dundas Street is one of the oldest roads in Ontario, created before Confederation when the province was known as Upper Canada (a reference to being upstream from Lower Canada on the St. Lawrence River). Under the orders of the first lieutenant governor of Upper Canada, John Graves Simcoe, Captain Samuel Smith led 100 of the Queen's Rangers to open a road from the head of Lake Ontario (now known as Dundas) to La Tranche (later London) in early 1791. The first 32km (20miles) from the lakehead to the Grand River—where the Mohawk village that was home to Joseph Brant was located—were blazed by the rangers by October25, 1793. Another 75km (47miles) were cleared from the Grand River to the forks of the Thames River by the spring of 1794.

In 1795, Asa Danforth, the namesake of Danforth Avenue, opened a road east to the new town of York (now Toronto). These early trails "involved nothing more than clearing a corridor through the bush, leaving the bigger stumps to rot, often detouring around the really big trees."The nature of travel in this period meant that daily movement was limited to several miles, and as a result hotels and taverns were established every few miles. Several of these became the seeds of villages, such as Waterdown, Cooksville and Islington.[2]

Designation

When the Department of Public Highways of Ontario (DPHO) began taking over the responsibility of roads in 1917, it did not assign route numbers. Highways were instead initially referred to by the major cities they connected. What would become Provincial Highway5 during the summer of 1925 was initially known as the Hamilton–Jarvis Highway and the Dundas Highway.[3] [4] [5] Throughout the summer of 1920, several roads were taken over by the DPHO through Haldimand County, Wentworth County, Halton County, Peel County and York County. Within Haldimand County, the road between Jarvis and north of Caledonia was taken over (or assumed) by the province on June24, 1920. Another set of roads were assumed through Wentworth on July8, connecting with the portion in Haldimand County, through Hamilton to Clappison's Corners and east through Waterdown along Dundas Street. Within Peel, through what is now Mississauga, Dundas Street was assumed on July22. A portion within York County was assumed through Etobicoke from its western boundary as far east as the village of Islington on July29. A final segment of Dundas Street, within Halton from Waterdown to what is now Winston Churchill Boulevard, was assumed on July31.[6] Portions of the route through Caledonia, Hagersville, Jarvis and Hamilton were not assumed by the DPHO.

Several more segments of road were assumed the following year, including two portions on the outskirts of Toronto. On March16, 3.9km (02.4miles) of Dundas Street, between Islington Village (at the modern corners of Dundas, Bloor and Kipling) and the Toronto city limits at Jane Street were assumed by the DPHO. On September14, another 3.7km (02.3miles) of road were assumed along Danforth Avenue, from Sibley Avenue to Kingston Road, via Pinegrove Avenue and Highview Avenue;[7] [8] Danforth Avenue did not continue east of Warden Avenue at this time, and so the DPHO constructed a new railway overpass and extended the route to Kingston Road, opening in 1925.[9]

Within Wentworth County, the construction of the Clappison Cut through the Niagara Escarpment was underway by 1921, with the aim of bypassing the winding old route that is known today as Old Guelph Road. The new route, which travelled straight along the boundary between East and West Flamboro, was assumed on January12, 1921. The province and the City of Hamilton also constructed several new bridges across Cootes Paradise to create a new northwest entrance into Hamilton. The new entrance, connecting the Toronto–Hamilton Highway (later Highway2) with the incomplete route up the escarpment to Clappison's Corners, was ceremonially opened by the Minister of Public Works and Highways, Frank Campbell Biggs, on August23, 1922.[10] The Clappison Cut was completed and paved in 1924.

Highway5 and Highway6 travelled concurrently from Highway8 (Main Street) in downtown Hamilton to Clappison's Corners when route numbers were assigned in 1925. Highway5 was long at this time. This situation was short lived however, as Highway5 was redirected west from Clappison's Corners to Peters Corners to meet Highway8 on May25, 1927. Highway6, in turn, assumed the route of Highway5 south to Jarvis.[11] The route was extended further west in 1930, when the newly-renamed Department of Highways (DHO) assumed the road from Highway8 at Peters Corners to Highway24 west of St. George, as well as the Governor's Road between Highway24 and Highway2 at Paris. The 19km (12miles) road between Highway8 and Highway24, through Beverley and South Dumfries was designated on June18, while the 6.8km (04.2miles) section of the Governor's Road, along the boundary between South Dumfries and Brantford Township, was designated several months later on September24.[12] These two segments were connected by a concurrency with Highway24.[13] This brought the length of the route to, including the approximately of Bloor Street and Danforth Avenue between Jane Street and Sibley Avenue, within the Toronto city limits.

Paving and improvements

When the Hamilton–Jarvis Highway and Dundas Street were assumed by the province, they were paved from Islington village west to Summerville (near Dixie Road), but were otherwise gravel throughout. The route was paved between Mount Hope and Hamilton, between Sixteen Mile Creek and Summerville, as well as along Bloor Street from Islington village to Jane Street in 1921. New bridges were also completed over Sixteen Mile Creek and Mimico Creek.[14] In 1923, the remainder of the route between Sixteen Mile Creek and Hamilton, including the new Clappison Cut, was paved. This was followed the next year by the construction of a water-bound macadam surface between Jarvis and Caledonia, completing the hard-surfaced road between Jarvis and Hamilton.That year also saw the completion of a new high-level bridge along Bloor Street over the Humber River, bypassing the old route along Old Mill Road and Old Mill Drive. The bridge was opened ceremoniously by then Minister of Highways—and later premierGeorge Stewart Henry on November21, 1924.[15]

When the portion of Highway5 west of Clappison's Corners was assumed in 1927, it was already paved as far west as the Brock Road, approximately .[16] However, the paved the entire length between Peters Corners and Clappison's Corners in 1928.[17] When the province assumed the remainder of the route to Paris, it began paving the highway west from Peters Corners. Paving was completed for to Troy in 1930 and 1931;[18] another 10km were completed from Troy to Highway24 in 1932, including a railway underpass at St. George.[19] The final east from Paris to Highway24 were paved in 1933.[20]

Within Scarborough, the DHO began a project to widen Kingston Road to a dual highway in the mid 1930s, which would ultimately result in the construction of the first segment of Highway 401. This construction began at the intersection of Highway2 and Highway5 and proceeded northwest. At the intersection of the two highways, the DHO constructed a new grade-separation around the Scarborough Cenotaph beginning in 1936.[21] the overpass, carrying eastbound traffic from Danforth Avenue onto eastbound Kingston Road, was completed in 1938, though landscaping continued into 1939.[22] [23] This junction remains in place today, almost unchanged since then.

As suburbanization of Toronto encroached on Toronto Township—which would become the town of Mississauga in 1968—the DHO began to widen Highway5 to four lanes across Peel and Halton in the 1960s, beginning with the section between Highway10 at Cooksville and Mississauga Road in 1961.[24] [25] In the late 1970s, construction began on Highway403 through Mississauga. As part of this new freeway, an interchange with Highway5 was built just east of Ninth Line, on the Oakville–Mississauga boundary. The interchange opened along with the segment of Highway403 south to the Queen Elizabeth Way at Ford Drive in mid-1981; the freeway was extended north to Erin Mills Parkway on November17th of that year.[26] [27]

Shift of responsibility

Following the creation of Metropolitan Toronto on April 15, 1953,[28] the new municipality was given responsibility for most of the provincial highways that passed within its boundaries that were not already connecting links following streets urbanized prior to this time. The sections of Highway5 through Etobicoke and Scarborough were accordingly redesignated as connecting links and their maintenance given over to the new Metro government on January15, 1954.[29] A 12.1km (07.5miles) portion of Highway5 from Etobicoke Creek west to Mississauga Road was made a connecting link though the recently-established Town of Mississauga on April1, 1970.[30] Another, between Winston Churchill Boulevard and Mississauga Road in Mississauga, was designated a connecting link on November22, 1978.on November 27, 1991, a segment of Dundas Street, from the interchange with Highway403 east to Winston Churchill Boulevard, was made a connecting link through the municipal boundary area between Mississauga and Oakville, and maintenance was transferred to these municipalities.As the connecting links were technically still part of Highway5, shields continued to be posted along it and marked on the Official Ontario Road Map through Mississauga and Metropolitan Toronto up until 1998 when the highway designation was dropped altogether [31]

As part of a series of budget cuts initiated by premier Mike Harris under his Common Sense Revolution platform in 1995, numerous highways deemed to no longer be of significance to the provincial network were downloaded to a lower level of government. As it generally served as a local arterial road through the growing suburbs of Oakville and Burlington, Highway5 was downloaded from Highway6 at Clappison's Corners to Highway403, and transferred to the Regional Municipalities of Hamilton–Wentworth and Halton on January1, 1998. On the same day, the portions of the route west of Peters Corners were transferred to Hamilton–Wentworth and the County of Brant. This removed from the length of the highway, leaving only the portion between Peters Corners and Clappison's Corners in the provincial highway network.[32]

Nonetheless the MTO continues to maintain short segments of Dundas Street (former Highway 5) at interchanges with provincial freeways, including a 400m (1,300feet) portion at Highway403, as well as a 1.9km (01.2miles) portion at Highway427.

Since 1998

In July 2001, a new interchange with Highway 407 ETR was opened, connecting the extension of the toll highway with former Highway5 in Burlington.[33]

An operational and safety review of the three intersections at Peters Corners near Hamilton was undertaken in February 2001. Studies, including an environmental assessment were conducted between 2004 and 2009, and settled upon a roundabout as the ideal replacement, with traffic signals at the two intersections with Westover Road (former Highway 52).[34] Construction began in the spring of 2012, and the C$6.3 million roundabout was opened on September25, 2012.[35]

References

Sources
  • Bibliography
  • Notes and References

    1. Provincial Highways Distance Table . Ministry of Transportation of Ontario . Provincial Highways Distance Table: King's Secondary Highways and Tertiary Roads . Government of Ontario . April 1, 1989 . 0825-5350 . 14 - 15.
    2. Web site: Sean . Marshall . Lost Villages: Cooksville . Spacing Toronto . July 5, 2011 . April 27, 2022.
    3. Provincial Highways Now Being Numbered . Monetary Times Print . The Canadian Engineer . August 25, 1925 . 49 . 8 . 246 . Numbering of the various provincial highways in Ontario has been commenced by the Department of Public Highways. Resident engineers are now receiving metal numbers to be placed on poles along the provincial highways. These numbers will also be placed on poles throughout cities, towns and villages, and motorists should then have no trouble in finding their way in and out of urban municipalities. Road designations from "2" to "17" have already been allotted... Road No. 5 — Toronto to Jarvis, via Dundas Highway and Hamilton. Route No. 6 — Hamilton to Owen Sound..
    4. Annual Report . Department of Public Highways . 1921 . April 26, 1923 . Toronto–Hamilton Highway (via Dundas St.) . 51 . April 13, 2022 . Internet Archive.
    5. Annual Report . Department of Public Highways . 1921 . April 26, 1923 . Hamilton–Jarvis Highway . 44 . April 13, 2022 . Internet Archive.
    6. Annual Report . Department of Public Highways . 1920 . April 26, 1921 . Provincial Highways Assumed in 1920 . 42–45 . April 13, 2022 . Internet Archive.
    7. Annual Report . Department of Public Highways . 1921 . April 26, 1923 . Provincial Highways Assumed in 1921 . 23 . April 13, 2022 . Internet Archive.
    8. Toronto, Ontario. Map Sheet 30 M/11 . General Staff, Geographical Section . Department of National Defence . 1927 . 1:63,360 . April 16, 2022 . Scholars GeoPortal.
    9. Annual Report . Department of Public Highways . 1923, 1924 and 1925 . April 26, 1926 . 68 . April 18, 2022 . Internet Archive.
    10. News: Ewart . Munro . New Highways Tap Hamilton on Two Sides: Hon. F. C. Biggs Officially Opens New Bridges and Niagara Link . . August 24, 1922 . 1 . .
    11. Annual Report . Department of Public Highways . March 31, 1928 . Appendix 6 - Schedule of Assumptions and Reversions of Sections of the Provincial Highway System for the Years 1926 and 1927 . 59–60 . April 18, 2022 . Internet Archive.
    12. Annual Report . Department of Highways . October 24, 1932 . Appendix 5 - Schedule of Assumptions and Reversions of Sections of the King's Highway System for the Years 1930 and 1931 . 76 . April 19, 2022 . Internet Archive.
    13. Ontario Road Map . Department of Highways of Ontario . 1931–32 . April 19, 2022 . Archives of Ontario.
    14. Annual Report . Department of Public Highways . 1921 . April 26, 1923 . Bridges Completed on Provincial Highways During 1921 . 27 . April 20, 2022 . Internet Archive.
    15. News: Beautiful Bridge is Connecting Link on Great Highway . . November 22, 1924 . 15 . .
    16. http://ao.minisisinc.com/FS_IMAGES/I0050477.jpg Photo
    17. Annual Report . Department of Public Highways . 1928 and 1929 . March 3, 1931 . Provincial Highway Construction, 1928 . 23 . April 20, 2022 . Internet Archive.
    18. Annual Report . Department of Highways . 1930 and 1931 . October 24, 1932 . Pavement Operations during 1930, Pavement Construction on the Highway System in 1931 . 31–33 . April 20, 2022 . Internet Archive.
    19. Annual Report . Department of Highways . 1932 . March 5, 1934 . Pavement Construction in 1932 . 22 . April 20, 2022 . Internet Archive.
    20. Annual Report . Department of Highways . 1933 and 1934 . March 18, 1935 . 1933 Construction Operations . 23 . April 20, 2022 . Internet Archive.
    21. Annual Report . Department of Highways . 1936 . February 23, 1938 . King's Highway Operations: Residency No. 6—Toronto . 20 . April 21, 2022 . Internet Archive.
    22. Annual Report . Department of Highways . 1938 . October 26, 1939 . King's Highway Operations: Residency No. 6—Toronto . 26 . April 21, 2022 . Internet Archive.
    23. Annual Report . Department of Highways . 1939 . December 31, 1940 . King's Highway Operations: Summary of Construction Projects . 18 . April 21, 2022 . Internet Archive.
    24. News: Will Widen Highway 5 in Cooksville District . The Expositor . 19 July 1960 . 1 .
    25. News: Homeowners Don't Want Four Lanes . The Kingston Whig-Standard . 17 May 1961 . 12 .
    26. News: Doubts Raised About Route of New 403 . Frank . Calleja . Toronto Star . November 8, 1979 . A19 . .
    27. News: Highway 403 Section Open to Traffic Today . Brian . Dexter . Toronto Star . November 17, 1981 . A18 . . It runs west from Erin Mills Parkway north of Burnhamthorpe Road, to Highway 5 in Oakville, where a spur to the Queen Elizabeth Way at Ford Drive has been used by traffic for several months..
    28. Albert . Rose . A Decade of Metropolitan Government in Toronto . Buffalo Law Review . 13 . 3 . April 1, 1964 . 539 . October 21, 2021.
    29. Annual Report . Department of Highways . 1954 . March 31, 1954 . Appendix No. 3 – Schedule of Assumptions and Reversions of Sections of the King's Highway System for the Fiscal Year Ending March 31, 1954 . 156–157 . October 20, 2021.
    30. Web site: Annual Report . 1968 .
    31. Ontario Road Map . Surveys and Mapping Section, Surveys and Design Office . Ministry of Transportation of Ontario . 1997 . Metropolitan Toronto . April 21, 2022 . Archives of Ontario.
    32. Highway Transfers List – "Who Does What" . Ministry of Transportation of Ontario . June 20, 2001 . 2, 4.
    33. Settlement of Claim of Richard Prendiville . Ontario Superior Court of Justice . December 12, 2001 . 7 . June 30, 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140727041251/http://www.kmlaw.ca/site_documents/011240_SOC_18dec01.pdf . July 27, 2014 . mdy-all.
    34. Gonna Go 'Round in Circles . Ministry of Transportation of Ontario . Road Talk . 19 . 2 . March 6, 2022.
    35. News: Daniel . Nolan . Some doubt about new roundabout . . September 11, 2012 . March 6, 2022.