Toronto Feature: Casa Loma's Stables | The Canadian Encyclopedia

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Toronto Feature: Casa Loma's Stables

This article is from our Toronto Feature series. Features from past programs are not updated.

This content is from a series created in partnership with Museum Services of the City of Toronto and Heritage Toronto. We gratefully acknowledge funding from the Ontario Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Sport, and the Department of Canadian Heritage.

Casa Loma Stables, Exterior, 1915
The Ontario Gardeners' Association at Casa Loma Stables, circa 1915 (courtesy City of Toronto Archives/Fonds 1568, Item 401).
Casa Loma Stables, Interior, 1920s
The interior of Casa Loma Stables, circa 1920s (courtesy City of Toronto Archives/Fonds 1568, Series 568, Item 371).
Casa Loma Stables, Exterior, 2012
Casa Loma Stables (photo 2012 by James Marsh).

Toronto Feature: Casa Loma's Stables

"Castle Stable Hides Military Secret"

If Sir Henry Pellatt's famous Casa Loma's human accommodations show how luxurious the life of the wealthy can be, its stables show that horses could also live the gilded life. Its stalls are of solid Spanish mahogany, and its floors are paved with Spanish tiles in a herringbone pattern to prevent hooves from slipping. Each horse had its name in gold leaf at the head of its stall. But during the Second World War these lush equine digs hid a secret operation vital to the Allied war effort.

During the war, German U-boats terrorized the shipping lanes between North America and Britain (see U-Boat Operations). British scientists met the crisis by developing the ASDIC device, predecessor of today's sonar, to help ships locate and attack the U-boats. But when German planes bombed the British plant making the device, a new location for developing the technology had to be found.

A Canadian engineer [William Corman] was put in charge of finding a new, secret location. He hit on the Casa Loma stables, whose tunnel connected them to the castle itself. "Who would suspect a freak castle with dances every Saturday night?"

The secret was safe. Even Toronto city councillors did not know of the wartime project until a decade later, long after the Casa Loma stables had done their part to help the Allied victory.