- Fort Rouillé
Fort Rouillé was a French
trading post located inToronto, Ontario , which was established around 1750 but abandoned in 1759. The fort was also called Fort Toronto. The fort site is now part of the public lands ofExhibition Place . It is also the name of a street, located approx. 1 km north of the fort site, running south from Springhurst Avenue to the railroad tracks.It was one of two French fortifications in Toronto.
Magasin Royale was built nearOld Mills by Phillipe Dourville, sieur de la Saussaye in 1720. The wooden magazine was similar to the one built inLewiston, New York .History
Its construction was ordered by the Marquis de la Jonquière, then governor of
New France , in order to further establish a French presence in the area, and to intercept the trade of Indians traveling towards an English fur-trading post in present-dayOswego . It was a small palisaded fort with a bastion at each of its four corners, and containing five main buildings: a corps de garde, storeroom, barracks, blacksmithy, and a building for the officers. A drawing [http://www.canadianheritage.org/reproductions/21907.htm] purported to date from 1749 shows the fort adjacent toLake Ontario , whereas today it is situated on top of a small hill a hundred meters or so from the lake's current shoreline.The fort was abandoned and burned by the French garrison in July 1759, who were retreating from invading English forces. Vestiges of the fort remained for many years afterwards, but the site was graded over and sodded in preparation for the establishment of the nearby Scadding Cabin in 1879.
The fort was named for
Antonie-Louis Rouille , comte de Jouy and French Minister of Marine and Colonies.tructure
A wall surrounded the fort with an entrance to the south facing
Lake Ontario and a small road (chemin).The 180 ft x 180 ft fort consisted of five buildings:
* Smithy
* Soldiers' Quarters
* Senior Officers' Quarters
* Magazine House
* KitchenFort Rouillé Monument
Today a large
obelisk marks the spot where the original French-built Fort Rouillé was erected.The grounds were excavated in 1979 and 1980 by the
Toronto Historical Board , and again in 1982 by the Youth Committee of the TorontoSesquicentennial Board. The outline of the original fort has been marked out in concrete around the obelisk. Two commemorative plaques – one in English, and one in French – are attached to the base of the obelisk, placed there by theOntario Heritage Foundation . To the north a third plaque commemorates the excavation done on the site, and to the west a fourth plaque commemorates a visit to the site byBertrand Delanoë , mayor ofParis , onSeptember 6 ,2003 .A concrete outline of the original fort is marked on the ground and is clearly visible here [http://maps.google.ca/maps?f=q&hl=en&q=fort+rouille&sll=43.630589,-79.42339&sspn=0.001751,0.003648&ie=UTF8&z=18&ll=43.630453,-79.423497&spn=0.001751,0.005407&t=k&om=1&iwloc=addr|Google Maps] .
The obelisk is flanked by a cannon and a mortar, dating from the 1850s. Perhaps ironically, they are all British. A second cannon, present on the west side of the obelisk as recently as 2005, has since been removed.
ee also
*
Coureur des bois
*Fur trade
*Fort York - a much larger fort built by the British.External links
* [http://www.archives.gov.on.ca/english/exhibits/franco_ontarian/big/big_59_fort_toronto.htm Fort Toronto]
* [http://www.uottawa.ca/academic/crccf/passeport/I/IB1a/IB1a02-3-3.html La Presence Francaise en Ontario]
* [http://www.ontarioplaques.com/Plaques_Toronto/Plaque_Toronto52.html Ontario Plaques - Fort Rouillé]
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