Fashion & Women Entrepreneurs, Part 3: The Forgotten Black Dressmaker, 14 December | Event in Toronto

Fashion & Women Entrepreneurs, Part 3: The Forgotten Black Dressmaker

Back Lane Studios

Highlights

Sun, 14 Dec, 2025 at 02:00 pm

2 hours

Back Lane Studios

Starting at CAD 15

Advertisement

Date & Location

Sun, 14 Dec, 2025 at 02:00 pm to 04:00 pm (GMT-05:00)

Back Lane Studios

9 Neepawa Avenue, Toronto, Canada

Save location for easier access

Only get lost while having fun, not on the road!

About the event

Fashion & Women Entrepreneurs, Part 3: The Forgotten Black Dressmaker
If Mary Augusta hadn't run an ad in an 1854 newspaper, we would not have known about her store offering the latest fashions to Black women!

About this Event

For the last in her series of illustrated talks about corsets, fashion and dressmaking in 19th century Toronto, historian and fashion expert Dr. Alanna McKnight introduces us to Mary Augusta and the pre-industrial needle trade in Toronto.

Had it not been for an 1854 ad in The Provincial Freeman, a newspaper serving the Black population in Upper Canada, Mary’s career as a Black dressmaker and shop owner would have remained forgotten.

In contrast, much is written about her husband Alexander Augusta, who trained in. in medicine at Trinity College, became Toronto’s second Black doctor, had a surgical practice and owned a drugstore. He returned to the U.S. during the Civil War, where he became the highest-ranking Black officer in the Union army, the first Black hospital administrator and the first Black medical professor.

In her ad, Mary Augusta advertises her "New Fancy Dry Goods and Dress Making Establishment" on York St. between Richmond and Adelaide. Her dress-making deparment offers the "Latest Paris and London Patterns" for dresses, mantillas, cloaks, sacks and children's clothing.

Who were the people making these clothes in the mid-18th century in Toronto? Where did the patterns come from? How large and prosperous was the Black community, which Mary Augusta would have been serving?

Alanna well delve into these topics as well, thus setting the context for Mrs. Augusta's business.

The talks take place at Back Lane Studios, 9 Neepawa Ave. in Roncesvalles Village (a block south of Howard Park Ave. and just east of Roncesvalles Ave. Tickets: $15 for each lecture (refreshments included). Only 30 tickets available for each session.



https://cdn-az.allevents.in/events9/banners/bfaf5ae0-983e-11f0-ad1b-55de7555dd35-rimg-w1200-h502-dcd6d6d7-gmir.jpg


Also check out other Business events in Toronto, Nonprofit events in Toronto.

interested
Stay in the loop for updates and never miss a thing. Are you interested?
Yes
No

Ticket Info

Tickets for Fashion & Women Entrepreneurs, Part 3: The Forgotten Black Dressmaker can be booked here.

Ticket type Ticket price
Tickets Part 3-Corsets & Fashion: Mary Augusta 15 CAD
Advertisement

Nearby Hotels

Back Lane Studios, 9 Neepawa Avenue, Toronto, Canada
Tickets from CAD 15
Ask AI if this event suits you

Host Details

Back Lane Studios

Back Lane Studios

Are you the host? Claim Event

Advertisement
Fashion & Women Entrepreneurs, Part 3: The Forgotten Black Dressmaker, 14 December | Event in Toronto
Fashion & Women Entrepreneurs, Part 3: The Forgotten Black Dressmaker
Sun, 14 Dec, 2025 at 02:00 pm
CAD 15