Ontario Abandoned Places will be rebranded as Ominous Abandoned Places

Top 3 Abandoned Places In Newmarket

2 years ago

There are so many abandoned places in Newmarket! This is a list of the top three abandoned places in Newmarket. Browse through all abandoned places in Newmarket

1. York Industrial Home

This location marks the only remains of the York County Industrial Home. Unofficially it was known as the poorhouse?. Constructed by the County of York in 1881-82 at the southwest corner of Yonge and Eagle streets, the Industrial Home housed society's less fortunate ?the poor, the elderly, the mentally disabled, orphans and unwed mothers. Long before the days of social programs, these unfortunate souls were housed in an institution like this.
The home was an impressive four story structure built in the Queen Anne style of architecture with an estate-like front garden, complete with a bronze fountain and ornamental gardens. It was very reminiscent of the main building of Pickering College, on the other side of Newmarket.
Those who stayed at the home also worked on the grounds, tending to daily chores, cooking, cleaning, and working the adjoining dairy farm. The "inmates" where not allowed to leave the grounds without permission and cases of punishment by solitary confinement where not unheard of.

The records show that between 1883 and 1937, that there were almost 750 deaths at the home. Most of the deceased where claimed by next of kin and buried elsewhere, others were taken by the Inspector of Anatomy for use in local universities. Any unclaimed bodies that were not taken, were buried in unmarked graves in the home's cemetery. According to records, there were about 165 lost souls buried in this unmarked cemetery.

The home was transformed over the years and eventually became a home for the elderly, and was known as York Manor. In 1959, the County purchased the land at the northwest corner of Yonge and Eagle Streets (across the road from the current location) and began construction of a new York Manor. This too was demolished in 1994 to make way for the York Region Administrative Building and its landscaped parking area. During its last few years, the poorhouse? also served as an armoury before being completely demolished in 1973. On this land now sits the current provincial courthouse.

According to local historians, the bodies from the unmarked graves had since been officially moved. However, they have found no official record of this, or when it happened, or to where the bodies would have been relocated. Perhaps they are still there in unmarked graves, lost souls in a cemetery marked only by a tall stone cairn. The property of the old cemetery is owned and managed by the Region of York, and is now surrounded by housing development on all sides.

The stone cairn makes no mention of the York Industrial Home or its sad history. To all appearances, this is simply a tidy grass buffer between backyards. The cairn itself displays some of the stone markers from the original building, including the date it was erected, the crest of York County, and pays homage to Jane Porter, the wife of a wealthy local entrepreneur who upon her death set aside $2000 to pay for a new wing on the home. No mention of home or the cemetery exists today.

York Industrial Home cover photo

2. Skeleton House

Abandoned house on a main street right by a busy intersection. Lots of damage inside, majority of walls have been smashed out. Lots of empty bottles, cigarette packs and other garbage scattered around the house, including a few garbage bags that appeared to be full of insulation. All windows were boarded so the few interiors I did get were not the best.

Skeleton House cover photo

3. Newmarket Radial Arch

The Radial Arch sits right behind the old Film Factory Movie theatre but is now the town youth rec centre with indoor skate park. When I was a teenager we used to climb up to the top of this arch and smoke cigarettes before heading into the movie theatre. The Newmarket Radial Arch was built in 1909 and replaced one section of the trestle bridge, where a section had collapsed due to rot at the log abutment. After the railway discontinued operations in 1930, the trestle bridge was demolished. The earth fill eroded from around the concrete arch and became surrounded by vegetation.
In 1978, the South Lake Simcoe Conservation Authority planned to demolish the structure as part of a scheme to deepen and straighten the Holland River to facilitate flood control. The public became aware and was in favour of saving the radial arch. In 1983, a historical plaque was dedicated to the Radial Arch and in 1997 the arch was designated by the Town of Newmarket. Easy excess to this site as a public walking trail runs right beside the arch.

Newmarket Radial Arch cover photo