160 Unusual Things to See in Ontario ~ Taber Hill Ossuary
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Taber Hill, also spelled Tabor Hill, is a Wyandot (Huron) burial mound in Toronto, Ontario. It is located northeast of the intersection of Lawrence Avenue and Bellamy Road in Scarborough. It is estimated to date from the 14th century and contain the skeletons of over 500 Huron/Wendat. It is believed to be the only First Nations ossuary protected as a cemetery in Canada.
The site was declared a historical site on August 22, 1956, by Bryan Cathcart, Ontario Minister of Travel and Publicity, invoking the Protection of Archeological and Historic Sites Act. The site was then put under police guard to prevent loss of artifacts after a copper bead was taken away by a child. The Government of Ontario purchased the 35 acres (14 ha) site, exchanging it for land elsewhere in the area.[12]
Representatives of the Iroquois Six Nations were invited to supervise an Iroquois Feast of the Dead reburial ceremony.[1] The ceremony was held over three days from October 19–21, supervised by Chief Joseph Logan[13] and was attended by more than 200 indigenous people and several thousand local residents and visitors. The Iroquois ritual was by tradition a closed ceremony and some Iroquois did not attend for that reason.[9] A new hole was dug for re-interment of the bones five deep and the bones re-interred with wolf pelts on top.[9] A banquet was subsequently held at the Scarborough Golf Club, where Jack Pickersgill, then the federal minister of citizenship and immigration addressed the crowd.[9] Iroquois representatives held annual Feast of the Dead ceremonies from 1957 until 1966.[9]
In 1961, a memorial was installed at the top of the mound. It has a Scarborough Township historical plaque on one side. The other side has a plaque with a prayer incorrectly attributed to "White Cloud" and a statement that reads "Approved by Iroquois Council 3-3-60" - however, the origin of this prayer is the Lakota Nation,[14] translated to English by Chief Yellow Lark in 1887 and published in the collection Native American Prayers, by the Episcopal Church. The site is designated as a cemetery and is administered by the City of Toronto government. The surrounding area is known as Tabor Hill Park. While designated a cemetery, there have been concerns that the area is often used as a park.[15]
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