This Scarborough historical marker, The McCowan Log Home, is located in Thompson Park at Lawrence and Brimley, perhaps familiar to folks who have taken their kids to the playgrounds and other recreational opportunities located in the park.
The Guild, as it came to be known, expanded both the main building, increased the number of outbuildings, increased its holdings to cover 500 acres, and spanned almost two and a half kilometers of coastline along Lake Ontario.
The 800 year old ossuary, or cemetery, was inadvert unearthed when soil was being removed in preparation of an overpass for Highway 401 in 1956.
Young students don’t always enjoy the possibility of excursions to an art gallery so bringing original art and historical examples to students right in their own educational institution is a bonus to their education.
… a name coined by Scarborough renowned artist Doris McCarthy, sits sedately on a plot of land, now part of the Ontario Heritage Trust, (…). It has become a property used for “Artists in Residence” programs administered by the trust.
Nestled at the edge of the forest within a stone’s throw of the beautiful Guild Inn Estate’s main building, is a tiny gem – the new Clark Centre for the Arts.