Cooksville, Mississauga

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Cooksville
neighbourhood
At the original corners of the settlement, Dundas Street and Hurontario Street, looking south-east (the McClelland-Copeland building seen in the left of the image)
At the original corners of the settlement, Dundas Street and Hurontario Street, looking south-east (the McClelland-Copeland building seen in the left of the image)
CountryCanada
ProvinceOntario
Regional MunicipalityPeel
CityMississauga
First settled1807 (1807)
Present name1836
Named forJacob Cook
Population
 (2016)[1]
 • Total36,000
Time zoneUTC-5 (Eastern Time Zone)
 • Summer (DST)UTC-4 (Eastern Time Zone)
Postal code FSA
L5A, L5B
Area code(s)905, 289, and 365

Cooksville is a neighbourhood in the city of Mississauga, Regional Municipality of Peel, in the Greater Toronto Area region of Ontario, Canada.[2] It is located at the intersection of Dundas Street and Hurontario Street near the eponymous Cooksville Creek.

History[]

Cooksville was an important stage coach stop along the Dundas highway,[citation needed] which was carved out of the wilderness after a survey by Asa Danforth Jr. in 1798.[citation needed]

The settlement was originally named Harrisville in honour of Daniel Harris, Cooksville's first settler, who immigrated from the United States in 1807. Later in 1836, the settlement was renamed to the present name Cooksville after Jacob Cook.[3]

The entrepreneur, Jacob Cook, won the contract to deliver the mail from York to Niagara, operated several stage coach lines, was the local magistrate and built the , the first licensed tavern in the area at the northwest corner of Dundas and Hurontario streets in 1829.[4] A heritage Mississauga sign on Hurontario Street north of the intersection claims it was the first Canadian location of winemaking in 1836.[4]

Cooksville grew in size and influence until the Great Fire of 1852 razed much of it.[4] That year, the McClelland-Copeland General store opened and is now the areas longest surviving building.[5] A severe tornado hit the area on June 24, 1923 destroying mostly rural farmhouses around the town. On the west side of the town there was a 182 acre brickyard that sprawled south of the CP rail line from 1912 until its closure in 1995, employing many Cooksville residents over that period. The Italian Heavyweight champion boxer, Primo Carnera had worked at the yard for a short period during his youth.[citation needed] Today, the converted site is a medium density residential and retail zone along Shoreline Dr., just south of the infamous 1979 Mississauga train derailment site at the CP crossing (Mavis Road).

Cooksville was the residence of HIH Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna of Russia while in exile in Canada.

Although never incorporated and not being the city's largest historic community, its central crossroads location meant much of the new suburban growth in Mississauga before amalgamation in the 1960s occurred in areas around Cooksville. For much of that time it had the highest concentration of high-rise condominium and rental buildings in Mississauga, and was originally proposed to be the location of Mississauga's City Centre. However, lobbying by prominent developer Bruce McLaughlin to build a new municipal office after a fire in 1969 badly damaged the original township hall and the opening of Square One Shopping Centre to the north, resulted in the city centre growing around the mall, and in Cooksville being overtaken in density by the City Centre.[6]

Transportation[]

Cooksville is a main transportation hub in Mississauga, with GO Transit rail, and bus service; and express city buses to Toronto's Union Station. Cooksville GO Station is near the corner of Dundas Street and Hurontario Street, the original centre of Cooksville.

Dundas Street, a five-lane road; and Hurontario Street, a six-lane road, are the main thoroughfares in Cooksville, and intersect at the heart of the community. Locally this intersection was known as, and still often referred to by locals as "five and ten" in reference to previous provincial roadway designations (Hwy. 5 for Dundas Street, Hwy. 10 for Hurontario Street).

Demographics[]

According to the Canada 2016 Census[a][7]
Ethnic Groups
Ethnicity Population Percentage
Total 33,200 100
White 16,705 50.3
South Asian 6,380 19.2
Filipino 2,005 6.0
Black 1,735 5.2
Chinese 1,405 4.2
Arab 1,305 3.9
Southeast Asian 820 2.4
Latin American 804 2.4
West Asian 615 1.8
Korean 335 1.0
Japanese 55 0.1
Not Included Elsewhere 430 1.2
Multiple 570 1.7

There is a plethora of South Asian and Arab textile/clothing shops, restaurants, and grocery stores in the area. There is also a significant number of Afro-Caribbean take-out restaurants and barber shops; the area is known to cater towards Mississauga's black community because of the large number of barber shops in close proximity to one another. Nevertheless, the area is multicultural and most cultures are represented in the area.

The census tracts for the area, include 3 separate neighbourhood designations by the City of Mississauga: Cooksville NHD (Neigbourhood), DT Cooksville (Downtown) and DT Hospital (site of the large Trillium Health Partners) Hospital. The area in the southwest part of Cooksville, closer to the Credit River, is a more exclusive enclave of mostly large, detached homes on larger, treed lots. It is colloquially referred to as Gordon Woods. Fairview is sometimes considered to be part of Cooksville, but is actually the neighbourhood located north of the CP rail line/Cooksville GO Station.[8]

Notes[]

  1. ^ The figures were calculated using Cooksville NHD (East), Cooksville NHD (West), and DT Cooksville.

References[]

  1. ^ "City of Mississauga - Population, Demographics & Housing" (PDF). mississauga.ca. September 2018. Archived (PDF) from the original on 14 February 2019. Retrieved 26 March 2021.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b "Cooksville". Geographical Names Data Base. Natural Resources Canada. Retrieved 2014-04-17.
  3. ^ Hicks, Kathleen A. (2005). Cooksville: Country to City. Friends of the Mississauga Library System. pp. XVIII, 3, 66. ISBN 0969787375.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b c "Cooksville". Heritage Mississauga. 2009. Retrieved 2014-04-17.
  5. ^ "How Dundas & Hurontario Looked Back in the Day". inSauga. 2021. Retrieved 2021-01-27.
  6. ^ "The Rise of the Shopping Centre". Heritage Mississauga. Mississauga Heritage Foundation. Retrieved December 27, 2020.
  7. ^ "Neighbourhood Comparison Dashboard". Retrieved 26 March 2021.
  8. ^ http://www7.mississauga.ca/documents/business/2017/Population_Demographics_Housing.pdf
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