Toronto Star

Golf club unearths human remains

Small grave uncovered near proposed pool site after province forces archeologi­cal assessment

- NOOR JAVED STAFF REPORTER

Cathy Pearson never thought her words would come true.

The longtime parishione­r at Holy Trinity Anglican Church in Thornhill sent an odd letter to the City of Vaughan over the summer. Protesting plans by the Thornhill Golf and Country Club to construct an in-ground pool and cabana just a few metres away from Holy Trinity Cemetery, one of the oldest in the city, she ended her letter with a unique wish: for the project to unearth human remains.

This fall, when the club began digging as part of a provincial­ly mandated archeologi­cal assessment, workers made the discovery Pearson had hoped for: bone fragments, a well as a piece of jewelry and the outline of a small grave.

“We have no real advocate at the city on this important heritage issue.” ERIC PRESTON WARDEN, HOLY TRINITY ANGLICAN CHURCH

“It stands to reason they will find something because this is where the original settlers of this area would have been buried,” said Pearson, who has friends who lie buried in the private church cemetery.

“And this is a sacred place; we still have funerals here.”

The discovery of remains and the location of the proposed pool have upset churchgoer­s, who say the sound of “cannonball­s diving into the pool” will disrupt the sanctity of the active cemetery, which runs along Yonge St., and is where the founders and original settlers of Thornhill are buried.

But their real grievance is with the city, which they say has not been transparen­t through the approvals process and has been unsympathe­tic to their efforts to preserve and protect the cemetery, which is marking its 185th anniversar­y this year. Parishione­rs were so upset they asked the province to force the archeologi­cal assessment.

“The process is not terribly transparen­t, and it seems like the rules change at the last minute,” said church warden Eric Preston, who said Holy Trinity is in regular contact with the club. “And we have no real advocate at the city on this important heritage issue.”

Church members contacted Councillor Alan Shefman, who said he was “sympatheti­c to the church’s concerns” but preferred not to get involved in matters that go to the citizen-run committee of adjustment.

The golf and country club has been around since 1922. Two years ago, it approved a plan to upgrade its facilities, including constructi­on of an inground pool.

At issue are the city’s requiremen­ts for buffer zones and whether a pool is a “structure” under city bylaws.

Over the summer, the club applied to reduce the buffer zone, or distance between the pool and the cemetery, to five metres. City requiremen­ts set the size of this zone at 15 metres for structures. But before a committee of adjustment hearing even took place, the church was told city rules say an in-ground pool is not a structure and thus requires no buffer.

The remains were found 10 metres from the cemetery.

Club president Adrian Hartog says the club has offered to put noise-dampening material on the threemetre fence that divides the cemetery property from the club. It also says that, with 24 hours’ notice, it will close the pool if a burial service is to take place.

According to the initial approval documents, the city said an assessment was not required, even though officials acknowledg­ed the area had “high archeologi­cal potential.”

“Archaeolog­ical assessment­s are generally not required when the area of disturbanc­e is limited to a small area,” the city said.

That decision shocked church pa- rishioners, who then asked the Ministry of Government and Consumer Services, which manages cemeteries, to intervene. The province sent the city a letter requiring the club to do an archeologi­cal assessment within 10 metres of the cemetery as part of the applicatio­n permit. That’s when the remains were found.

“If this assessment hadn’t been done, that bone could have easily landed up in landfill,” Pearson said.

When the bones were found in early October, the police, coroner and registrar were called to the scene. Hartog says the archeologi­cal investigat­ion was completed recently, and no other discoverie­s were made.

He said the age and details of the bone are not known. But the closest grave to where the bone fragments were found belonged to 2-year-old Martha Bowes, who died in 1848.

The registrar will decide how best to inter the bones, either on-site or at the cemetery. Once that’s done, the final report will be sent to the province and the city for approval of a pool permit, Hartog said.

Pearson said this case sets a bad precedent for how the city values its heritage. “It’s been a really difficult time for many people in our parish because this cemetery is so beloved and many people have family buried here . . . It just shows a lack of interest and lack of respect for heritage from our local government.”

 ?? BERNARD WEIL/TORONTO STAR ?? The grave of 2-year-old Martha Bowes, who died in 1848, is closest to the location of bone fragments found near the proposed site of an in-ground pool.
BERNARD WEIL/TORONTO STAR The grave of 2-year-old Martha Bowes, who died in 1848, is closest to the location of bone fragments found near the proposed site of an in-ground pool.

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