George Washington Smith (1845-1921)
The Sash Our Forefathers Wore
George Washington Smith was born March 15th, 1845 in Charles Town, West Virginia to Baptist parents Washington and Sydney Smith.
In 1864, during the latter days of the American Civil War, George immigrated from West Virginia to Toronto, Ontario. On July 5th, 1866, George married Elizabeth Jane Campbell of Bowmanville, Ontario. She was the daughter of Spencer and Jane Campbell. Baptist Minister Thomas Ford Caldicott officiated the ceremony.
George and Elizabeth would go on to have five children; two daughters and three sons.
By the time of their marriage, George had already established an entrepreneurial presence in the city, having started out on King Street as a barber. By 1871 George had a shop in the Queen's Hotel on Front Street, in addition to his Colossal Shaving Parlour at King and York streets. An advertisement in the city directory of 1874 promised patrons a "good refreshing bath" and "shampooing, shaving and hairdressing done with neatness and civilty." By this juncture, Smith had clearly come into his own; his business was doing so well that he had set up stop at yet another location, the American Hotel at Yonge and Front streets.
Smith’s success set a foundation from which he was able to prosper for some years. Between the mid 1870s and the turn of the century, the Evening Telegram would note at his death, he was “well known in downtown business circles.” His barber-shops, which appeared at various times on Queen Street and in Union Station, with periodic returns to King Street, were evidently frequented by many of the city’s business elite. According to the Toronto Daily Star, his economic presence simultaneously enabled him to become “prominent . . . in Toronto’s political circles.” Though generally a staunch Conservative, he supported Robert John Fleming, a populist, Liberal-leaning mayor who ran on anti-business platforms that advocated worker’s rights and temperance. His campaigns were also infused with undertones of racial and gender equality. Smith’s affiliation with the Royal Templars of Temperance as well as his black identity likely drew him to Fleming, even though this position was arguably antithetical to his interests as a businessman. Taking to the stump in support of Fleming on several occasions between 1891 and 1897, Smith earned a reputation as an entertaining and compelling orator. His other associations helped cement his standing: he was a member of the Orange lodge, the Ancient Order of Foresters, and the York Pioneers.
Thus, through his various affiliations, he became known as a leader of Toronto’s “colored colony.”
Despite his success, Smith found himself compelled to give up barbering around 1909 or 1910, likely because he had lost his sight and perhaps because of advancing age. The death in 1907 of his wife, who owned the family home, may also have affected his state of affairs. Eliza left her property to him and four children but stipulated in her will that George was to take possession only after relinquishing all other claims to her estate. He managed to sustain himself as a newspaper dealer.
The status he had enjoyed in earlier years can be gauged from the fact that his stand, at the northwest corner of Queen Street and Spadina Avenue, was, the Globe would recall, “the first permitted on the city corners.”
George met a tragic end as during the evening of December 24th, 1921 he reportedly fell against a hot stove in his news stand. He was taken to the Toronto Western Hospital, where, after 24 hours, he died of "shock following burns", an agonizing death for a blind man of 77 years.
On December 27th, George was laid to rest at the Mount Pleasant Cemetery (plot L, section 37, lot 6) in Toronto.
The circumstances surrounding his passing made the city take note – the Globe, the Star, and the Telegram all ran brief chronicles of his life. Probate records indicate that his estate consisted of residential property, real estate, and Victory Bonds with a total value of $2,716.46, a figure that placed him in the ranks of the city’s tiny black bourgeoisie. A lifelong Baptist, he left $150 to the Beverley Street Baptist Church.
George Washington Smith’s life is intriguing. A relatively obscure figure in Canadian black history, he had nonetheless been known to contemporaries as a leader in Toronto’s black community and, later, as a stock figure of sorts at street corners. Further research is needed, however, to determine whether he was widely seen as a leader by members of the black community or whether the mantle was a result of his associations with the city’s white elite and the integrationist ethos that characterized much of his life. There is no doubt that, at his peak, Smith had managed to carve out a place for himself at a time when the majority of Toronto’s “colored colony” struggled in the face of racial slurs, Jim Crowism, and residential, social, and occupational discrimination.
With information from "Dictionary of Canadian Biography" and "Ancestry.ca".
In 1864, during the latter days of the American Civil War, George immigrated from West Virginia to Toronto, Ontario. On July 5th, 1866, George married Elizabeth Jane Campbell of Bowmanville, Ontario. She was the daughter of Spencer and Jane Campbell. Baptist Minister Thomas Ford Caldicott officiated the ceremony.
George and Elizabeth would go on to have five children; two daughters and three sons.
By the time of their marriage, George had already established an entrepreneurial presence in the city, having started out on King Street as a barber. By 1871 George had a shop in the Queen's Hotel on Front Street, in addition to his Colossal Shaving Parlour at King and York streets. An advertisement in the city directory of 1874 promised patrons a "good refreshing bath" and "shampooing, shaving and hairdressing done with neatness and civilty." By this juncture, Smith had clearly come into his own; his business was doing so well that he had set up stop at yet another location, the American Hotel at Yonge and Front streets.
Smith’s success set a foundation from which he was able to prosper for some years. Between the mid 1870s and the turn of the century, the Evening Telegram would note at his death, he was “well known in downtown business circles.” His barber-shops, which appeared at various times on Queen Street and in Union Station, with periodic returns to King Street, were evidently frequented by many of the city’s business elite. According to the Toronto Daily Star, his economic presence simultaneously enabled him to become “prominent . . . in Toronto’s political circles.” Though generally a staunch Conservative, he supported Robert John Fleming, a populist, Liberal-leaning mayor who ran on anti-business platforms that advocated worker’s rights and temperance. His campaigns were also infused with undertones of racial and gender equality. Smith’s affiliation with the Royal Templars of Temperance as well as his black identity likely drew him to Fleming, even though this position was arguably antithetical to his interests as a businessman. Taking to the stump in support of Fleming on several occasions between 1891 and 1897, Smith earned a reputation as an entertaining and compelling orator. His other associations helped cement his standing: he was a member of the Orange lodge, the Ancient Order of Foresters, and the York Pioneers.
Thus, through his various affiliations, he became known as a leader of Toronto’s “colored colony.”
Despite his success, Smith found himself compelled to give up barbering around 1909 or 1910, likely because he had lost his sight and perhaps because of advancing age. The death in 1907 of his wife, who owned the family home, may also have affected his state of affairs. Eliza left her property to him and four children but stipulated in her will that George was to take possession only after relinquishing all other claims to her estate. He managed to sustain himself as a newspaper dealer.
The status he had enjoyed in earlier years can be gauged from the fact that his stand, at the northwest corner of Queen Street and Spadina Avenue, was, the Globe would recall, “the first permitted on the city corners.”
George met a tragic end as during the evening of December 24th, 1921 he reportedly fell against a hot stove in his news stand. He was taken to the Toronto Western Hospital, where, after 24 hours, he died of "shock following burns", an agonizing death for a blind man of 77 years.
On December 27th, George was laid to rest at the Mount Pleasant Cemetery (plot L, section 37, lot 6) in Toronto.
The circumstances surrounding his passing made the city take note – the Globe, the Star, and the Telegram all ran brief chronicles of his life. Probate records indicate that his estate consisted of residential property, real estate, and Victory Bonds with a total value of $2,716.46, a figure that placed him in the ranks of the city’s tiny black bourgeoisie. A lifelong Baptist, he left $150 to the Beverley Street Baptist Church.
George Washington Smith’s life is intriguing. A relatively obscure figure in Canadian black history, he had nonetheless been known to contemporaries as a leader in Toronto’s black community and, later, as a stock figure of sorts at street corners. Further research is needed, however, to determine whether he was widely seen as a leader by members of the black community or whether the mantle was a result of his associations with the city’s white elite and the integrationist ethos that characterized much of his life. There is no doubt that, at his peak, Smith had managed to carve out a place for himself at a time when the majority of Toronto’s “colored colony” struggled in the face of racial slurs, Jim Crowism, and residential, social, and occupational discrimination.
With information from "Dictionary of Canadian Biography" and "Ancestry.ca".
Please note that Orange Archives is looking for a photograph of George Washington Smith to add to this article. If you have access to a photograph and would be willing to share please contact us.