Where Two Streets Now Meet
The landscape where Elvins Gardens and Elvins Street meet in Belleville, Ont. has changed dramatically over the past century. In fact, the two streets didn’t even exist 100 years ago. It was, for many years, a small family farm named Market Gardens, which was owned by the Elvins family from approximately 1915 until 1949, when the property was divided into 33 separate lots and the two streets were formed.
The Elvins kept a few pigs, a small herd of dairy cows, a couple horses, a rhubarb patch, and alfalfa fields. They had a farmhouse where the family lived, a greenhouse which they used to grow vegetables and a small barn for storing livestock and farming equipment. The total property covered just over 100 acres alongside the Moira River on the west bank.
Today, the property looks very different. There is no barn, no greenhouse, no rhubarb patch or alfalfa field. The original farmhouse still sits tucked at the back of the lot along what was once Old Garden’s Road, but is now just a long private lane bordered by fences and two willow trees.
It is, on first glance, a typical middle-class suburban neighbourhood, with neatly manicured lawns and late ’80s-style model homes. Minivans are parked in almost every driveway, and the faint screams of children at play can be heard from the schoolyard of Prince of Wales Public school around the corner. It’s late fall, and the great maple trees litter the front lawns with rust coloured leaves blown loose by strong winds through the boughs.Few people can remember this little piece of Belleville history, except for the Elvins family members that still live in the community. Bob Elvins, 72, spent a large portion of his childhood growing up on the farm, and has distinct memories from living in the farmhouse for 12 years.
Elvins was born on Sept. 18, 1940 in Toronto, Ont. and moved back to Belleville with his parents and older sister in 1941 to live on the farm with his grandmother. He lived in the farmhouse until he was 13 when the family moved again to a house that his father built on Moira Street.
“Everybody in the family would sing, and Aunt Maude would play the piano by ear. She could play anything, just hum her the first couple of lines and she’d have it. Jeez we remember those days as kids.”
“I can remember we never had hydro in this house when I was a kid. We wanted to put hydro in, and my uncle Harry worked for the hydro company. They said that we could have hydro, but we had to put our own poles in. So Uncle Ken, Uncle Harry, and my dad went into the woods that used to border the farm and cut down a bunch of cedar trees, trimmed them down, and we had hydro,” recalls Elvins.
During the summers, the farmhouse would be filled with relatives and music, as Aunt Maude would play the piano in the front room, and big parties were thrown. The children would creep down the hall and sit just outside the door, listening to the laughter, feeling the vibrations of the music and dancing in the floor.
“Everybody in the family would sing, mom and dad would sing a song together, dad would sing a song by himself, and Aunt Maude would play the piano by ear. She could play anything, just hum her the first couple of lines and she’d have it. Jeez we remember those days as kids,” recounts Elvins.
Elvins continued to live in the farmhouse for another four years after the farm was divided. His father built a house on Moira Street, which they moved into in 1953, and then built a second house on Elvins Gardens in 1961. Elvins parents continued to live in the house on Elvins Gardens until their passing, when Elvins bought the house from their estate. He has been living in the house for the past four years, and can still see the old farmhouse from his backyard, which holds so many fond memories.Story by Kaitlin Abeele