Hi friend,
What if success looked less like movement and more like staying put?
What if wisdom sometimes meant building slowly instead of chasing the next opportunity?
This is the story of Sarah Ashbridge.
In the late 1700s, Sarah Ashbridge was a Quaker widow living in Pennsylvania.
She had lost her husband and was responsible for a large extended family.
They came from modest farming backgrounds and were used to hard physical work.
In 1793, Sarah led her family north into Upper Canada (now Ontario).
They were not chasing wealth or status.
They were seeking stability, peace, and the ability to live according to their convictions.
At the time, York was a small frontier settlement that would later become Toronto.
The land east of the Don River was heavily forested and marshy.
There were few roads, little infrastructure, and no certainty of success.
The Ashbridge family’s first winter was difficult.
Shelter was basic.
Supplies were limited.
Survival required discipline, cooperation, and persistence.
In 1794, the family began clearing land near the Lake Ontario shoreline.
This area would later be known as Ashbridge’s Bay, a name that still appears on Toronto maps today.
Over time, the Crown granted the family 600 acres stretching north from the lake.
Rather than moving on, the Ashbridges stayed.
They farmed the land year after year.
They fished the nearby waters.
They served the growing community as pathmasters, helping maintain early roads.
Sarah Ashbridge died in 1807.
But her decision to build where she was did not die with her.
For more than 200 years, six generations of the Ashbridge family lived on the same land.
Few families in Toronto can say the same.
Continuity, not speed, became their defining trait.
The farmhouse that still stands today was built in 1854 by later generations.
A portion of the original estate remains.
It is now preserved by the Ontario Heritage Trust as a reminder of Toronto’s early years.
Sarah Ashbridge did not live in a world of constant choice and mobility.
But she understood something that still applies today.
A meaningful life is often built by committing deeply to one place and one responsibility at a time.
Her story challenges the assumption that progress always means moving on.
Sometimes progress looks like tending what is already in your care.
The question her life leaves us with is simple: where are you being called to build rather than move on?
Three suggested action items:
- Take stock of one responsibility in your life that you have been tempted to abandon too quickly.
- Reflect on how you can invest intentionally in your friends and local community.
- Attend the #ExperienceTO: Leslieville Historical Tour on Saturday, February 21st to see how long-term commitment shaped one of Toronto’s oldest neighbourhoods.
Thank you for taking the time to read and reflect.
Until next time,
Alex Rășcanu
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