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The Village at Black Creek, previously Black Creek Pioneer Village, and before that Dalziel Pioneer Park, [1] is an open-air heritage museum in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.The village is located in the North York district of Toronto, just west of York University and southeast of the Jane and Steeles intersection. [2]
These plans were dropped due to the absence of a corresponding Steeles station on the eastern branch. In 2012, the station was named Black Creek Pioneer Village, after the nearby heritage museum; [3] this name was shortened to Pioneer Village the following year. [4] The museum itself was renamed the Village at Black Creek in 2024.
The building was dismantled at its original site and reconstructed at Black Creek Pioneer Village. Bolton Shop 1865 Bolton: 1968 1973 Originally used by a merchant tailor. Houses a 19th-century photography studio. Broom Maker's Shop Sherwood: Square log 1963 1973 May have been first school in Maple. Burwick House 1844 Woodbridge: Rural Georgian
The creek continues south in the vicinity of Jane St., before passing under Highway 7, Highway 407 and Steeles to reach Toronto at the eponymous Black Creek Pioneer Village open-air historic museum. It passes the main York University campus and heads into the Downsview area in a forested ravine.
Pioneer Village may refer to: Canada. Black Creek Pioneer Village, a historic site in Toronto, Ontario; Pioneer Village station, a subway station in Toronto, Ontario; Fanshawe Pioneer Village, London, Ontario; Kootenai Brown Pioneer Village, Pincher Creek, Alberta; Lang Pioneer Village Museum, Peterborough, Ontario; South Africa
The Dalziel Barn is an architecturally distinctive log barn built in 1809 and situated in Vaughan just north of Toronto's Black Creek Pioneer Village. Among its features, the barn had a large gable roof with a double slope on one side. Two gable roofed cupolas sat on the ridge. Although the windows and cupolas are often thought of as extraneous ...
The board and batten blacksmith shop originally built in Nobleton in the 1850s was moved to Black Creek Pioneer Village. [3] The village takes its name from Joseph Noble, an early settler of the town, and local tavern keeper. The slow urbanization of Nobleton began in the 1950s and the 1960s, with development of portions of the village's southwest.
The Roblin Mill has been relocated to Black Creek Pioneer Village in Toronto. Started in 1855, the Ameliasburgh Fall Fair is an agricultural fair held by the community every September, featuring a horse & pony show, baking and garden produce contests, [ 1 ] livestock competition and arts & crafts. [ 2 ]