Monday, September 15, 2014

Last moments in liminal spaces

Within the urban environment, rivers are often considered liminal space; a place for marginal activities that must be conducted off the urban grid. We could argue that the homosocial swimming and heterosocial courting that filled the Humber River both fell under the rubric of marginal activities. But there were also darker moments along both the Don and Humber Rivers.

In 1926, police found the body of a woman, aged about 40, along the banks of the Humber River. She had a fair complexion, grey-bluish eyes and was about 5’8” tall.[1] She was dressed in a blue serge dress, grey stockings with shoes and galoshes. Nearby were a blue felt hat and a brown coat. She was probably wearing some of her best clothes because in the note she left she asked that she be buried in them. She signed her note as Sylvia and she had used carbolic acid to take her own life.

The banks of the Humber River would have offered seclusion for this act; below the city and out of sight. But I’d like to believe this was more than just a marginal act carried out in a marginal space; an act, that in academic terms, we like to say helps to construct and fortify the marginal space of the river.

I’d like to believe she went to the Humber River because she wanted to spend her last moments some place beautiful.


[1] “Body of woman found on Humber River bank,” The Toronto Daily Star, Monday, March 22, 1926, Page 4.

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