Since its earliest days, the facilities on this site have addressed the most pressing public issues of the time. In the 1860s, planning and construction begin for a new, more progressive jail. A House of Refuge was built to shelter Toronto's "poor, needy, and disabled." This was converted to serve as an isolation hospital when a smallpox epidemic began in the 1870s. Over the years, the hospital grew. Today it has evolved into the campus of Bridgepoint Active Healthcare.
The Bridgepoint Site: A Timeline
1793 - Toronto's founder, Governor General John Graves Simcoe, grants 98 ha of land to his estate manager, John Scadding.
1856 - Scadding's family sells 47 ha to the City of Toronto.
1860 - The House of Refuge is built for Toronto's "poor, needy, and disabled."
1864 - The Toronto Jail, which came to be known as the Don Jail, is built as a more
humane and orderly alternative to Toronto's previous three jails.
1865 - A gate house is built for the jail's Gatekeeper.
1872 - The House of Refuge is converted to the Smallpox Hospital.
1888 - The Governor's house is built when the south centre block of the Don Jail is
converted to cells and other facilities.
1891 - The Smallpox Hospital is renamed the Isolation Hospital. This was in response to new epidemics, such as scarlet fever and diphtheria.
1893 - A new Isolation Hospital is built.
1904 - The Isolation Hospital is renamed Riverdale Isolation Hospital.
1910 - Riverdale Public Library is built.
1957 - The Riverdale Isolation Hospital is renamed Riverdale Hospital.
1958 - The new east wing of the Don Jail is built.
1963 - The new Riverdale Hospital opens.
1964 - The Don Valley Parkway opens.
1977 - The Don Jail closes.
2002 - Riverdale Hospital is renamed Bridgepoint Hospital.
2013 - The new Bridgepoint Hospital and the children's hospice Emily's House open.