The Friends of Fort York

Mission Statement

The Friends of Fort York and Garrison Common exist to preserve, enhance, and promote Fort York and the Garrison Common for the education and enjoyment of visitors.

What We Are

The Friends of Fort York, incorporated in 1995, is a volunteer, federally-registered charitable organization whose mandate includes promoting the preservation of the 43-acre Fort York National Historic Site (Fort York, Garrison Common, the Fort York Armoury and Victoria Memorial Square) and recognizing its importance in the history of Toronto, Ontario and Canada.

Board of Directors

The articles of The Friends of Fort York authorize a board of up to twenty-five directors, who also constitute the corporation’s membership. Click here to view the current members.

What We Do

While defending the integrity of the site has always been our first priority, support for programming has come next. Convinced of the need to rebuild an active military presence at the fort, which had been a casualty of budget cuts in the early 1990s, we took over responsibility for the Fort York Guard from the City in 1999, and founded the Fife and Drum Corps the following year. Not only do we recruit, train and outfit annually the 20 to 25 young men and women who make up these squads, but we also cover their wages through our own funds and fundraising and grants that we secure. We help raise funds for Fort York’s Indigenous Arts Festival each year and have supported other initiatives, such as expert study of the schooner that was excavated near Fort York and came into the City’s possession in 2015, resulting in the completion of an MSc thesis on its construction by Texas A&M University student Julia Herbst in 2019.

Land-planning and development continue to be strong interests. We prepared and published Fort York: Setting It Right, and Fort York: Adding New Buildings. We have also taken positions such as advocating safe, open connections under the Bathurst Street bridge when it is rebuilt, and supporting strongly the City’s position in urging Metrolinx to lower the Georgetown rail corridor at Strachan Avenue so the bridge to be constructed there doesn’t disrupt the street-grid in the Niagara Neighbourhood. We successfully opposed plans to elevate the Front Street extension on columns, like the Gardiner, which were moot when the project was cancelled. In addition to our quarterly, The Fife and Drum, we published Fort York: Stories from the Birthplace of Toronto, edited by Adrian Gamble (2018). We supported publication of Fort York: a Short History and Guide (2008) as well as two cook books by the Volunteer Historic Cooks at Fort York: Setting a Fine Table: Historic Desserts and Drinks from the Officers’ Kitchens at Fort York (2013) and Recipes for Victory: Great War Food from the Front and Kitchens Back Home in Canada (2018), both published by Whitecap.

We are active in protecting and enhancing Fort York through ongoing lobbying efforts with all levels of government. For example, in association with the fort staff we had Canada’s National Historic Sites Board confirm new boundaries for the site. We also support the efforts of the staff through exhibits, programs, live interpreters, and historic settings to encourage a new level of understanding about the War of 1812 era and Fort York’s role in the development of modern-day Toronto.

Accomplishments

To date our accomplishments have included:

  • operating and largely funding the Fort York Guard and the Fife & Drum Corps, employing students seasonally each year;

  • helping pay for new exhibits, acquisitions and artifact conservation; 

  • working with the Fort’s management and like-minded partners to support programs and events, including the Historic Foodways Programme;

  • maintaining, on a volunteer basis, the Fort York Library/Research Centre;

  • educating the public and advocating on behalf of the Fort regarding its preservation and promotion through publications, our website and social media;

  • advocating for neighbourhood development and land-planning that recognizes the importance of the Fort to the City;

  • accepting gifts of artifacts (through the Fort York Foundation) that help the Fort interpret its history;

  • accepting and providing funds for capital projects and operations.
The Friends of Fort York and Garrison Common

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