Friday, December 31, 2010
Oakleaf Steam Baths/Then and Then
King and Bathurst/Then and Now
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Now the Thompson Hotel and the former showroom is the Counter diner,open 24 Hours.
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Toronto's Worst House
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The empty lot to the left was the previous site of Toronto's Worst House. The new one on the right is quite tasteful.
Little Old House/Ontario Cottage
remain. The first photo is by Patrick Cummins from 1998, note the original window above the door. This house is a good example of a house style known as an Ontario Cottage or an Ontario Gothic Revival Cottage. In this case though the decorative wood trim no longer exists.
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King and John/Then and Now
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The Eclipse Whitewear Building (1903) is significant as one of the earliest warehouses constructed on the former Upper Canada College campus on Russell Square, where the company produced children's and ladies' underwear for over half a century.
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Thursday, December 30, 2010
Wednesday, December 29, 2010
Trinity Gates/Then and Now
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This from Now and Then Toronto.
"Much of the current park land was originally purchased from a Mrs. Cameron of Gore Vale in 1851 by Scottish-Canadian Bishop John Strachan, an influential Anglican deacon who wanted Toronto to have a private school with strong Anglican ties, partly in opposition to the recently secularized University of Toronto. Buildings were soon constructed and students began attending Trinity College in 1852. After federation with the University of Toronto in 1904 and completion of the downtown Trinity campus in 1925, the school left this location. The original buildings were then sold to the City of Toronto and most were demolished in 1956. Of the college itself, only the stone and iron gates now remain, at the Queen Street park entrance facing south on Strachan Avenue, although the former St. Hilda's College building, (the women's residence of Trinity College) still overlooks the northern half of the park on the western edge. It is now a seniors' residence, John Gibson House."
Parliament and St. David Street/Then,Then and Now
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