One connection to agriculture is that, in 1852, Algernon Sidney Whiting and other stockholders formed the Oshawa Manufacturing Co.
“The company manufactured agricultural implements such as farming hand tools, scythes and forks,” Jennifer Weymark, the archivist at the Oshawa Museum, told Farms.com.
Farmers could buy a set of one dozen tools for anywhere between CAD$9.00 and CAD$17.75. When adjusted for inflation in 2019, those numbers balloon to between CAD$393 (US$296) and CAD$775 (US$583) per dozen hand tools.
The company produced hand tools in the Whiting Ave. building until the business closed around 1858.
Between 1858 and 1898, either other companies occupied the building or it sat vacant.
In December 1898, James Robson, who owned the South Oshawa Tannery on Cedar Dale Creek, bought the building with expansion in mind. He moved tanning operations to Whiting Ave. after a fire destroyed his first property.
The tannery manufactured multiple varieties of leather used for shoes. During the Second World War, it supplied the Canadian army with boot leather.
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