Asa Danforth Jr.


title: "Asa Danforth Jr." type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["1768-births", "19th-century-deaths", "pre-confederation-ontario-people", "people-from-brookfield,-massachusetts"] topic_path: "people/1760s" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asa_Danforth_Jr." license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

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FieldValue
nameAsa Danforth Jr.
birth_date
birth_placeBrookfield, Massachusetts, United States
death_datec. 1818 or 1821
death_placeUnited States
occupationEarly settler, land speculator, highway engineer
spouseOlivia Langdon
parentsAsa Danforth Sr. and Hannah Wheeler
childrenAmanda Danforth
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| name = Asa Danforth Jr. | image = | caption = | birth_date = | birth_place = Brookfield, Massachusetts, United States | death_date = c. 1818 or 1821 | death_place = United States | occupation = Early settler, land speculator, highway engineer | spouse = Olivia Langdon | parents = Asa Danforth Sr. and Hannah Wheeler | children = Amanda Danforth | signature =

Asa Danforth Jr. (June 29, 1768 – c. 1818 to 1821) was one of the first citizens of Onondaga County, New York, United States, when he arrived there with his father, Asa Danforth in 1788. Danforth incurred heavy debts speculating in land in New York State. Hoping to reverse his fortunes, he invested in the especially risky land titles of nearby Upper Canada and later was a highway engineer.

In Toronto, Ontario, Canada, Danforth Road, Danforth Village and Danforth Avenue (built by the Danforth Plank Road Company), which is a major east-end thoroughfare in Toronto, are named for him.

Biography

Later years

Danforth's Road was extended in 1802 from Trenton to reach the Bay of Quinte at Stone Mills (now Glenora). From there, a primitive ferry crossing to Adolphustown provided access to an early Loyalist colonisation road, the Bath Road, built in 1784 from Bath to Kingston.

In 1817, the York Road (Kingston Road) bypassed through traffic between Trenton and Kingston away from Danforth's 1802 Bay of Quinte extension onto an inland route through Belleville and Napanee, eliminating a ferry crossing.

He left Upper Canada in 1802, was in hiding in New York City and died in or after 1821.

Recognition and memorials

Danforth Avenue, a major east-end thoroughfare in Toronto, in turn lends its name to the main east-west TTC Bloor-Danforth subway line (1966). Colonel Danforth Trail is a short residential road beginning south of Highway 2A at Lawson Road to a cul de sac near Meadowvale Road and Lawrence Avenue East.

A Glenora Road which closely follows Danforth's 1802 path to Trenton was designated part of the Loyalist Parkway (1984). Asa Danforth Sr. didn't raise any Loyalists, but the road connects by ferry to an established 1784 Loyalist colonisation road through Bath to Kingston.

References

Notes

References

  1. (September 12, 1915). "Plan to Place More Tablets To Mark Spot Where First White Settler Lived". [[Syracuse Herald]].
  2. (17 December 2002). "The revolution of 1800: democracy, race, and the new republic". University of Virginia Press, 2002.
  3. William Canniff. (1869). "History of the settlement of upper Canada (Ontario): with special reference to the bay Quinté". Dudley & Burns.
  4. Ron Brown. (2010). "From Queenston to Kingston: The Hidden Heritage of Lake Ontario's Shoreline". Dundurn Press.
  5. "Biography – DANFORTH, ASA – Volume VI (1821-1835) – Dictionary of Canadian Biography".

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1768-births19th-century-deathspre-confederation-ontario-peoplepeople-from-brookfield,-massachusetts