Scarboro Beach Amusement Park
Scarboro Beach Park was a lakeside amusement park in the Beaches, Toronto, from 1907 until 1925. The park was originally in East Toronto until its annexation by the City of Toronto in 1908.
Location
The park operated on a 40-acre site south of Queen Street East to Lake Ontario between Leuty and MacLean avenues It succeeded two east end trolley parks, Victoria Park and Munro Park, which had closed the previous year.History
The park was founded by Harry and Mabel Dorsey who purchased the site from the Sisters of St. Joseph for $165,000 in 1906. It has been the site of the Order's House of Providence farm since the 1890s. The Toronto Railway Company purchased it in 1913 and invested and expanded it as well as extending the TRC's streetcar network to reach the grounds, making it a trolley park. Previously, Toronto residents had reached the park using a steamship service from the Toronto Harbour at the foot of Yonge Street.The amusement park was built at a cost of $600,000 and opened June 1, 1907. It was modelled on Coney Island's Luna Park and offered over a hundred attractions including various rides such as a Shoot the Chutes water ride, a Tunnel of Love, a roller coaster billed as a scenic train, fun houses, aerial swings, an athletic field that hosted sporting events and was the home field for a lacrosse team, and other attractions such as a freak show, daredevil acts, bathing
and dance pavilions, band concerts and other features. In 1909, the park was the site of the first public flight in Canada when Charles F. Willard took off from Scarboro Beach Park on September 7, 1909.