- Humber River (Ontario)
:"This article is about the river in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Links to other rivers of the same name can be found here. For the two colleges named after this particular river, visit
Humber College ."Geobox River
name = Humber River
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country =Canada
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state =Ontario
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city =Toronto
city1 = Vaughan
city2 = Brampton
city3 = Caledon
city4 = King
city5 = Richmond Hill
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length = 100
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discharge_location =Lake Ontario
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source_name =Oak Ridges Moraine
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source_region =York Region
source_state =Ontario
source_country =Canada
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mouth_district =Toronto
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mouth_state =Ontario
mouth_country =Canada
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map_caption = The Humber River is one of two major rivers on either side ofToronto , Ontario, Canada, the other being the Don River to the east. It was designated a Canadian Heritage River onSeptember 24 ,1999 .The Humber collects from about 750 creeks and tributaries in a fan-shaped area north of the city. One main branch runs for about 100 km from the
Niagara Escarpment to the northwest, while the other major branch starts in the Lake St. George in theOak Ridges Moraine nearAurora, Ontario to the northeast. They join north of Toronto and then flow in a generally southeasterly direction intoLake Ontario at what was once the far western portions of the city. The river mouth is flanked bySir Casimir Gzowski Park andHumber Bay Park East.History
The Humber has a long history of human settlement along its banks. Native settlement of the area is well documented
archaeological ly and occurred in three waves. The first settlers were the Palaeo-Indians who lived in the area from 10,000 to 7000 BC. The second wave, people of the Archaic period, settled the area between 7000 and 1000 BC and began to adopt seasonal migration patterns to take advantage of available plants, fish, and game. The third wave of native settlement was the Woodland period, which saw the introduction of the bow and arrow and the growing of crops which allowed for larger, more permanent villages. The Woodland period was also characterized by movement of native groups along what is known today as theToronto Carrying-Place Trail , running from Lake Ontario up the Humber toLake Simcoe and eventually to the northernGreat Lakes .Étienne Brûlé was the first European to encounter the Humber while travelling the Toronto Carrying-Place Trail. Brûlé passed through the watershed in 1615 on a mission fromSamuel de Champlain to build alliances with native peoples. The Trail became a convenient shortcut to the upper Great Lakes for traders, explorers, and missionaries. A major landmark on the northern end of the trail in Lake Simcoe was used to describe the trail as a whole, and eventually the southern end became known simply as "Toronto" to the Europeans.A fort, Fort Toronto, was constructed about 1 km inland from the mouth of the Humber to protect the Trail, which eventually became the modern city of Toronto. During the 1660s this was the site of
Teiaiagon , a permanent settlement of the Seneca used for trading with the Europeans. Popple's map of 1733 shows a prominent river beside "Tejajagon" which we can only assume was the Humber. Its name is given as the Tanaovate River. French missionaries used the area for many years, includingJean de Brébeuf andJoseph Chaumonot in 1641,Louis Hennepin in 1678, andRene-Robert Cavelier de La Salle in 1680.However, no permanent European settlement occurred until the arrival of Jean-Baptiste Rousseau (not the famous author) in the late 1700s. Rousseau piloted
John Graves Simcoe 's ship into Toronto Bay to officially begin the British era of control in 1793. Most of the British attention was focussed to the east of the Humber, around the protected Toronto Bay closer to the Don River. Settlement was scattered until after theWar of 1812 when many loyalists moved to the area, who were joined by immigrants fromIreland andScotland who chose to remain in British lands.By the 1840s, agriculture had developed suffiently to support a grist mill and a sawmill, both built by Joseph Rowntree.
As the Toronto area grew, the lands around the Humber became important farming areas and were extensively deforested; in addition, some areas of the river's
flood plain were developed as residential. This led to serious runoff problems in the 1940s, which the Humber Valley Conservation Authority was established to address. But in1954 ,Hurricane Hazel raised the river to devastating flood levels, destroying buildings andbridge s; on one street, Raymore Drive, 60 homes were destroyed and 32 people killed.The Metropolitan Toronto and Region Conservation Authority succeeded the Humber Valley authority in 1957 (the word "Metropolitan" was dropped in 1998). More recently, a task force within the TRCA was formed to further clear the Humber as a part of the Great Lakes 2000 Cleanup Fund.
Environment
Unlike the Don to the east, the Humber remained relatively free from industrialization as Toronto grew, mainly because it is much flatter and does not provide a large river valley to build in. Since
Hurricane Hazel showed the land to be unsuitable for housing, it has been largely developed or redeveloped as parkland, with the extensive and important wetlands on its southern end remaining unmolested. Whereas the mouth of the Don is often clogged with flotsam and is obstructed by low bridges, the Humber is navigable and a major sporting and fishing area.Today the majority of the Toronto portion of the Humber is parkland, with paved trails running from the lakeshore all the way to the northern border of the city some 30 km away. Trails following the various branches of the river form some 50 km of
bicycling trails, much of which are excellent. Similar trails on the Don tend to be narrower and in somewhat worse condition, but the complete set of trails is connected along the lakeshore, for some 100 km of off-road paved trails.Humber watershed
The Humber Watershed is a hydrological feature of south-central
Ontario ,Canada , principally in north and westToronto . It has an area of 908 km², flowing through numerous physiographic regions, including theOak Ridges Moraine and theNiagara Escarpment .Tributaries
* Albion Creek
* Black Creek
* Humber Creek
* Humber River West Branch
* Cold Creek
* Centreville Creek
* Salt Creek
* Silver Creekee also
*
List of Ontario rivers
*List of rivers of Canada
*Humber Bay Arch Bridge
*Etobicoke
*Humber Valley Village
*Bolton, Ontario
*Etienne Brule Park
*King's Mill Park External links
* [http://www.trca.on.ca/water_protection/strategies/humber/ The Humber Watershed] , the TRCA's site for the Humber Watershed Task Force
* [http://www.ec.gc.ca/water/en/manage/floodgen/e_ont.htm Flooding events in Canada - Ontario] , anEnvironment Canada page
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