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H I S T O R Y
Allenby was first settled in the 1400's by the Huron Tribe
which had a village here until sometime in the early 1700's.
This village is described in Lyman B. Jackes Tales of
North Toronto as "a well organized and extensive community
that had its centre in an artesian spring of pure water. The
spring flowed where the modern water tower rears its head on
Roselawn Avenue, just to the west of Avenue Road. The great
tribal huts were on the site of the present day Allenby Public
School."
Jackes goes on to say that the Allenby school hill is not
natural but was man-made, the result of the Huron's practice of
burrowing food stocks underground.
The present day neighbourhood was developed when Allenby
Public School opened in 1927. The school was named after Lord
Allenby, a British World War One hero.
Ed. Note - The water tower Jackes refers to on Roselawn
Avenue, is now a police communications tower.
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