
Toronto, the Belfast of Canada: The Orange Order and the Shaping of Municipal Culture
William J. Smyth
In late nineteenth-century Toronto, municipal politics were so dominated by the Irish Protestants of the Orange Order that the city was known as the “Belfast of Canada.” For almost a century, virtually every mayor of Toronto was an Orangeman and the anniversary of the Battle of the Boyne was a civic holiday. Toronto, the Belfast of Canada explores the intolerant origins of today’s cosmopolitan city.
Using lodge membership lists, census data, and municipal records, William J. Smyth details the Orange Order’s role in creating Toronto’s municipal culture of militant Protestantism, loyalism, and monarchism. One of Canada’s foremost experts on the Orange Order, Smyth analyses the Orange Order’s influence between 1850 and 1950, the city’s frequent public displays of sectarian tensions, and its occasional bouts of rioting and mayhem.
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About William J. Smyth
Reviews for Toronto, the Belfast of Canada: The Orange Order and the Shaping of Municipal Culture
Donald Macraild
Times Higher Education, August 13, 2015
‘It is one of the few studies exploring Order’s interface with public power structures and contributes significantly to the growing literature of diasporic global Orangeism.’
Deborah Butcher
Journal of Historical Geography vol 30:1-2:2015
‘This is a well written and impressively researched study of the role and impact of the orange order fraternity in shaping of a civic culture in Toronto between 1850 and 1950.’
William Jenkins
Canadian Historical Review vol 97:02:2016
‘Smyth’s book is an enlightening, well-written, and rigorous exploration through the hierarchical patronage system and ethno-religious moralism of the Orange Order as it manifested in Toronto and paralleled Belfast’s history from 1850-1950.’
Tristan Sturm
American Review of Canadian Studies vol 47:02:2017
‘Smyth’s exploration of Toronto’s Orange culture is fascinating and illuminating… This is a rich and important contribution to the studies of the Irish diaspora on both a local and a transnational level.’
Jane G.V. McGaughey
Canadian Journal of Irish Studies vol 40:2017
"This is a well-written and impressively researched study of the role and impact of the Orange Order fraternity in the shaping of a civic culture in Toronto between 1850 and 1950."
William Jenkins
Historical Studies Vol 83:2017
"The wealth of demographic and statistical analysis over such a wide timeframe makes Toronto, the Belfast of Canada an important read for scholars of Protestantism and the Irish in Ontario."
Elliot Warsfold, Western University
British Journal of Canadian Studies, vol 30 no 2