Ads
related to: original toronto harbour house
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Telus Harbour, formerly Telus House, formerly Union Tower, is a 30-storey office skyscraper at 25 York Street, on the south side of the traditionally defined financial district of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. [4] Anchor tenant Telus will occupy 60 percent of the rentable area. [needs update]
The bay was drained, and dredging from the Toronto Harbour was used to fill an area from the harbour to the bay, creating the Toronto Port Lands. [5]: 123–124 Only a small portion of the original bay remained, and the home which was once next to the shore was now located some distance away from the water. [5]: 126
The original M/V Miss Toronto began operating in the Inner Toronto Harbour in 1955. Since then three successive ships have carried the name. Since then three successive ships have carried the name. The current ship was built in British Columbia and is the first Miss Toronto to be constructed entirely out of aluminum.
Old Toronto 18 Alex Leslie House 1873 10 Prince Arthur Avenue The Annex: Old Toronto 18 Maple Cottage 1873 62 Laing Street (Maple Leaf Forever Park) Leslieville: Old Toronto 6 St. Andrew's Manse 1873 73 Simcoe Street Entertainment District: Old Toronto 18 St. Mary's Rectory 1873 589 Adelaide Street West Niagara: Old Toronto 18 Somerset House 1873
The fort was used to house members of the British and Canadian militaries, and to defend the entrance of the Toronto Harbour. The fort features stone-lined earthwork walls and eight historical buildings within them, including two blockhouses. The fort forms a part of Fort York National Historic Site, a 16.6 ha (41-acre) site that includes the ...
John Cox Cottage, at 469 Broadview Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, is the oldest known house in the city still used as a residence, and it still resides on its original site. The property, immediately to the east of what was John Scadding's original lot, [1] was deeded to John Cox by Governor Simcoe in 1796. [2] [3]
It is now well inland, illustrating infill of the harbour over the years. The Toronto Harbour Commission Building is a six-storey building erected in 1917 in Toronto by Alfred Chapman and McGiffin (Clare V. McGiffin and Robert B. McGiffin) for the joint municipal-federal agency Toronto Harbour Commission.
York's 5th (Toronto's second) Custom House – 1 storey building 1835 Front Street, east of Yonge Elmsley Villa 1837 1875 Bay St at Grosvenor Freeland's Soap Factory c. 1837 1865 Yonge St at Front St, then on the harbour Home District Gaol John George Howard, architect. 1837–1841 1887 Southeast corner of Front and Berkeley Streets