- published: 14 Aug 2012
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Coordinates: 46°25′17″N 0°02′25″E / 46.4214°N 0.0403°E / 46.4214; 0.0403
Rouillé is a commune in the Vienne department in the Poitou-Charentes region in western France.
Fort Rouillé or Fort Toronto was a French trading post located in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, that was established around 1750 but abandoned in 1759. The fort site is now part of the public lands of Exhibition Place. It is also the name of a street, located approximately 1 km (0.62 mi) north of the fort site, running south from Springhurst Avenue to the railway tracks.
It was one of two French fortifications in Toronto. Magasin Royale was built near the Old Mill by Phillipe Dourville, sieur de la Saussaye in 1720. The wooden magazine was similar to the one built in Lewiston, New York (likely the French forts or trading post located now in Fort Niagara).
Its construction was ordered by the Marquis de la Jonquière, then governor of New France, in order to further establish a French presence in the area, and to intercept the trade of Indians travelling towards a British fur-trading post in present-day Oswego. It was a small palisaded fort with a bastion at each of its four corners, and containing five main buildings: a corps de garde, storeroom, barracks, blacksmithy, and a building for the officers. A drawing [1] purported to date from 1749 shows the fort adjacent to Lake Ontario, whereas today it is situated on top of a small hill a hundred metres or so from the lake's current shoreline.