H I S T O R Y
Roncesvalles was originally settled by Colonel Walter O’Hara
in
1850.O’Hara was a soldier in the British army prior to immigrating
to Canada.O’Hara was wounded and captured by the French in
the Roncesvalles Gorge in northern Spain; hence the name Roncesvalles.

O’Hara,who was originally from Ireland,named the streets
here;
O ’Hara, Geoffrey, Constence, Marion and Sorauren are named
after his family members,and Fermanaugh is the province in Northern
Ireland where the O’Hara clan originated.
The development of the present-day neighbourhood was spurred on
by the street-car, which came to this area in the early 1900s. Roncesvalles
was a family-oriented neighbourhood right from the start.
Nearby industries offered employment to the many British immigrants
that settled here.The landmark St.Vincent de Paul Roman Catholic
Church on Roncesvalles was the spiritual centre of these first residents.
Following the Second World War an influx of Eastern Europeans,predominantly
Poles,settled in Roncesvalles.They built their own church:St.Casimir’s.Sir
Casimir Gzowski, a Polish patriot, settled in Toronto in the early
1850s and was instrumental in the building of Toronto’s roads
and railways.
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