Bonnell Jennifer
Can Hist Rev. 2011;92(4):607-36. doi: 10.3138/chr.92.4.607.
Every summer from 1927 to 1968, Toronto conservationist Charles Sauriol and his family moved from their city home to a rustic cottage just a few kilometres away, within the urban wilderness of Toronto’s Don River Valley. In his years as a cottager, Sauriol saw the valley change from a picturesque setting of rural farms and woodlands to an increasingly threatened corridor of urban green space. His intimate familiarity with the valley led to a lifelong quest to protect it. This paper explores the history of conservation in the Don River Valley through Sauriol’s experiences. Changes in the approaches to protecting urban nature, I argue, are reflected in Sauriol’s personal experience – the strategies he employed, the language he used, and the losses he suffered as a result of urban planning policies. Over the course of Sauriol’s career as a conservationist, from the 1940s to the 1990s, the river increasingly became a symbol of urban health – specifically, the health of the relationship between urban residents and the natural environment upon which they depend. Drawing from a rich range of sources, including diary entries, published memoirs, and unpublished manuscripts and correspondence, this paper reflects upon the ways that biography can inform histories of place and better our understanding of individual responses to changing landscapes.
从1927年到1968年的每个夏天,多伦多的自然资源保护主义者查尔斯·索里奥和他的家人都会从他们位于城市的家中搬到几公里外一个质朴的小屋,那里位于多伦多唐河谷的城市荒野之中。在作为小屋居住者的那些年里,索里奥目睹了山谷从一个有着乡村农场和林地的风景如画的地方,变成了一个受到日益威胁的城市绿色空间走廊。他对山谷的深入了解促使他一生都致力于保护它。本文通过索里奥的经历探索唐河谷的保护历史。我认为,保护城市自然方式的变化反映在索里奥的个人经历中——他采用的策略、他使用的语言以及他因城市规划政策而遭受的损失。在索里奥作为自然资源保护主义者的职业生涯中,从20世纪40年代到90年代,这条河越来越成为城市健康的象征——具体来说,是城市居民与他们所依赖的自然环境之间关系的健康象征。本文借鉴了丰富多样的资料来源,包括日记、已出版的回忆录、未出版的手稿和信件,反思了传记可以如何为地方历史提供信息,以及如何增进我们对个人对不断变化的景观的反应的理解。