People strolling along Front, southern Berkeley and Parliament Sts., downtown Toronto, would
find a car wash, a parking lot, and a car rental agency and a Porsche dealership. However, if it
was possible to peek underneath the pavement, one would find an impressive
relict of our national history-Upper Canada’s First and Second Parliament
buildings (1797-1824).

ASI archaeologists excavate Upper Canada's first and second parliament buildings.
Although the land overlying the Parliament site has been used for private and
industrial purposes for over a century, historians have always been aware of the
area’s importance. Indeed, the Canadian Club had commemorated the parliament
buildings with a stone tablet on this property in 1899 and almost a century later in
1997, the Old City of Toronto designated the property under the Ontario Heritage Act.
In the fall of 2000, a proposed change in land use made it possible for the Culture
Division, Economic Development, Culture and Tourism Department, City of Toronto, in partnership
with the to ask
Archaeological Services Inc. to conduct an archaeological assessment of the site. Our
objective was to determine whether or not any buried remnants of the Parliament
buildings still survived.

Brick impressed with P.R.M. & M.Co. St. Louis XXX.
Built between 1795 and 1797, the brick structures of Upper Canada’s first Parliament
buildings housed what would eventually become Ontario’s Legislature. Sadly, these
buildings were destroyed by American troops in 1813. In response, British troops
invaded the U.S., eventually burning the American Capitol in Washington, D.C. in
retaliation. In 1819, building of the second Parliament complex commenced on the same
site. Coincidentally, these structures were also destroyed
by fire in 1824-the result of an over heated chimney flue.

3d reconstruction of the fire .
Although the south wing was
saved from complete destruction, it was decided not to rebuild and the property was
abandoned until 1838, when construction began on the Home District Gaol. Since then,
the site has been used as a gasworks by Consumers’ Gas, and also by various
small-scale automotive companies.

Consumer's gas building.
ASI’s investigations took the form of three trenches dug in areas of
high potential, based on historic documentation and archival research.
Trench 2 was the richest in terms of archaeological evidence, and is believed
to have uncovered the east wall of the southern building of the first
Parliament buildings.

Parliament trench.
Our analyses of historic building techniques discovered
that the structural remains located in the trench were typical of late
eighteenth and early nineteenth century construction methods. In fact,
the footings uncovered at the Parliament site follow similar construction
methods as the footings of certain late eighteenth century buildings at
the Fort York garrison. Along with indicating their date of construction,
this corroborates the archival evidence of military involvement with the
construction of the first Parliament buildings. Even more startling was
the discovery of charred floor joists and floorboards overlying soil that had bean reddened by fire, probably
remnants of the American military visit.

Sherds of hand painted pearlware ceramic.
Taken together, the combined evidence proves that the remains of the parliamentary
buildings of Upper Canada-a site of local, provincial, national, and international
significance-still exist beneath the pavement of the modern city.
For further reading about the First Parliament site check out Government On Fire.
