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George Corsan Plaque Unveiling

11/21/2019

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On Saturday November 16, twenty-one hardy people came out on a cold wintery day to unveil a plaque commemorating George Corsan. The plaque is located in Echo Valley Park in Islington – the original site of Corsan’s unique farm of nut trees which earned him the nickname “The Nut Man of Islington”. Corsan was also an accomplished swimmer, and in the early 1900s became renowned as an innovator in techniques for swimming instruction and lifesaving widely used throughout North America. The plaque project was a collaboration between Heritage Toronto and the Etobicoke Historical Society.

On hand to officiate the unveiling was Toronto Ward 2 Councillor Stephen Holyday; Chris Bateman, Heritage Toronto; Brian Yawney, Etobicoke Urban Forest Activist; EHS President Joel Winter and EHS Chief Historian Denise Harris. The unveiling was witnessed by EHS members and some residents from the local neighbourhood.

​Some in attendance had grown up in the area and remembered George Corsan as an eccentric character who made a connection with local children who played on his property. He distributed the nuts from his Black Walnut trees to the children with the instructions they should take them home and plant them. There are many large Black Walnuts in the Village of Islington neighbourhood today which are most likely a lasting legacy of this unique former resident of Islington.
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(Left to Right: Denise Harris, EHS Chief Historian; Joel Winter, EHS President; Brian Yawney , Etobicoke Urban Forest Activist; Stephen Holyday, Toronto Councillor, Ward 2 (Etobicoke-Centre)
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(At podium: Chris Bateman, Heritage Toronto)
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(At podium: Stephen Holyday, Toronto Councillor, Ward 2)
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