How shocking photos transformed Toronto's poorest neighbourhood
'The Ward' was filled with poverty and disease. How a doctor and a photographer worked together for change.
In the early 1900s, immigrants from China, Italy and Eastern Europe arrive in Toronto en masse.
They're looking for a better life in Canada and they need an affordable place to live. St. John's Ward (nicknamed "the Ward"), a 0.5 km² slum in the middle of the city, becomes a popular spot where many immigrants settle.
The Ward is packed with thousands of people. Deadly diseases like diphtheria and typhoid are rampant — they spread through close contact, tainted water and unpasteurized milk.
Most of the Ward's residents have no indoor plumbing and no toilets. Sanitation standards and public health regulations don't exist.
Dr. Charles Hastings, the city's Medical Officer of Health, sees the need for standardized health regulations. He knows Toronto requires safe running water and a proper sewage system to keep its citizens healthy.
The problem? Toronto's changemakers, the middle and upper classes, turn a blind eye to the Ward's abysmal living conditions.
Hastings needs to make the problem stand out — so it can no longer be ignored. He tasks the city's official photographer, Arthur Goss, with gathering photographic evidence of the suffering in the Ward.
Hastings shows the photos at exhibitions across Toronto, shocking the middle and upper classes. They can't look away any longer. Living conditions in the Ward become one of City Hall's top concerns.
Thanks to Hastings' and Goss' work, diphtheria infections and typhoid fever rates plummet, Toronto becomes the first Canadian city to require pasteurization of milk and the city sets the standard for nation-wide public health regulations.