Fallowfield, Ottawa

Fallowfield
Coordinates: 45°16′03″N 75°49′47″W / 45.26750°N 75.82972°W / 45.26750; -75.82972Coordinates: 45°16′03″N 75°49′47″W / 45.26750°N 75.82972°W / 45.26750; -75.82972
Country  Canada
Province  Ontario
1st Municipality Carleton County (1852-1969)
2nd Municipality Regional Municipality of Ottawa-Carleton (1969-2001)
3rd Municipality City of Ottawa (2001-present)
Elevation 110 m (350 ft)
Time zone EST (UTC−5)
  Summer (DST) EDT (UTC−4)
Postal code span K2R 1G2-6, K2R 1C8-9, K2R 1E1-3
Area code(s) (613)

Fallowfield is an unincorporated village,[1] (also known as Fallowfield Village) in the city of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. Located south-west of Bells Corners, west of Barrhaven and the 416 and north-east of Richmond within the southwest area of the city.

Fallowfield is located in the triangle of Fallowfield Road, Richmond Road and Steeple Hill Crescent and also includes Richmond Road north up to Hope Side Road.[2] The village serves as a bedroom community for the larger urban area of Ottawa as there are no retail or commercial enterprises in the village.[2] It assumes a rather prominent position over the surrounding countryside as the major part of the Village is located on a gently terraced escarpment.[2] Population for the village is estimated at about 366 people[3] as of 2004. Public high school students in this area go to South Carleton High School in Richmond.

History

Road Gang extending Fallowfield Road to the West at Richmond Road, circa 1880 The Edward Monaghan house, pictured behind the workers, still stands and is designated under the Ontario Heritage Act.

Fallowfield Village was originally settled in the 1820s[2] by Irish immigrants from Tipperary and Cork Counties[4] at which time the majority of Carleton County was similarly settled. There are two churches, both along Steeple Hill; St. Patrick's Roman Catholic Church built in 1833[5] with the current stone chapel completed in 1866 and the Fallowfield United Church built in 1868 with the current chapel completed in 1886.[6] The cornerstone for the United (then Methodist) church was laid by Canada's first Prime Minister, Sir John A. Macdonald. The name for the area was Piety Hill but the village name was not formalized to Fallowfield until June 1, 1872, with the appointment of a postmaster, P. Omeara,[7] and the opening of a post office.[7] As a direct result of this action, the village received its name, the origin of which was inspired by nearby fields that were in the process of being fallowed for the summer[2] and is not historically linked to Fallowfield, in Manchester, England. The post office was closed June 30, 1914.[7] For a timeline perspective, the Rideau Canal was built between 1826 and 1832 and the village of Richmond, to the southwest, was settled in 1818.

Fallowfield village was a strategic stop over point for travels between Perth, Richmond and Bytown (later to become Ottawa).[2] By the turn of the century, Fallowfield was a bustling village and it became a favourite stopping place for travellers, especially farmers with their produce wagons and horse teams, en route to and from the market in Ottawa. At one time there were four hotels in the village to serve the travelling public. In addition, there were three carriage shops, two blacksmiths, a grist mill, tailor shop, cheese factory, shoemaker, general store and weigh scales for the farmers to weigh their produce. The widespread use of the automobile most likely rendered the village into a bedroom community as farther distances could be travelled in one day with no need for stop overs like what Fallowfield village offered.

The majority of the development was established in the early 1980s.

Fallowfield village was originally part of Carleton County, Nepean but has been within the City of Ottawa since January 1, 2001 as part of amalgamation.[8]

Churches

L to R: St. Barnabas Anglican, St. John's Presbyterian, and Fallowfield Methodist c.1910

Old Richmond Road used to follow what is now known as Steeple Hill, the current name coming from the fact that no less than four churches were located in a one kilometer stretch of road. These churches are, from North to South: St. Patrick's Catholic (1866), St. Barnabas Anglican (1889), St. John's Presbyterian(1886) and Fallowfield Methodist(1886). In 1925 the United Church was formed between the Presbyterian, Methodist and Congregationalist and St. John's Presbyterian was vacated and demolished in the 1940s. St. Barnabas Anglican was also demolished in the 1940s and only two churches of the original churches remain today.

2002 Tornado

June 23, 2002 saw numerous tragedies in the Ottawa area. The Lady Duck sank,[9][10] the OPG Barrett Chute dam overflowed into the Madawaska river killed a mother and son[11] and Fallowfield village had a late day F1 tornado at around 5:15pm.[12][13] Many trees were uprooted and homes damaged. Barns were leveled and garages damaged to the point of demolition. Very few residents were spared from some sort of damage. Mowat's silos, just east of the intersection of Fallowfield Road and Steeple Hill Crescent, were heavily damaged as well.

Public Transit

The community is served by OC Transpo bus route 283 with the only stop located at the intersection of Steeple Hill and Fallowfield. The morning direction is located on the south side of Fallowfield (stop #0870) and the afternoon direction is located on the north side of Fallowfield (stop #2227).

References

  1. City of Ottawa Planning Department (2007). "City of Ottawa Official Plan, Volume 2c, Village Plans" (PDF). Ottawa: City of Ottawa: 12.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 City of Nepean Planning Department (September 12, 1980). "Village of Fallowfield Secondary Plan". Nepean: City of Nepean: 4–31.
  3. City of Ottawa (2004). "City of Ottawa Data Handbook".
  4. "Migration and Settlement in the Ottawa, Canada area in the 1800s - Table 2". Retrieved 2007-10-23.
  5. "St. Patrick's Fallowfield, History of the church". Retrieved 2007-10-23.
  6. "Fallowfield United Church 1886 to the present". Archived from the original on 2009-10-23. Retrieved 2007-10-23.
  7. 1 2 3 "Some Early Post Offices and Postmasters in Carleton County". Retrieved 2007-10-23.
  8. http://www.nepeanmuseum.on.ca/ The Nepean Museum
  9. "Being Safety Conscious". Transportation Safety Board of Canada (TSB). Retrieved 2007-10-23.
  10. "Lax safety measures cited in Lady Duck sinking". Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. 2004-06-03.
  11. "'Wall of water' kills mother, son". Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. 2002-06-24.
  12. Environment Canada (October 1, 2002). "ONTARIO SEVERE WEATHER SUMMARY". Retrieved 2008-09-30.
  13. "Ontario Tornados of 2002". Retrieved 2008-09-30.

External links

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