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Text
GIVEEXPLORE & LEARN
MAP Indigenous Roots: A Living History. Discover Toronto’s Indigenous heritage, from the earliest inhabitants utilizing the area’s rich natural resources, to prominent figures who made an impact in the city, to the community that exists and prospers today.HERITAGE TORONTO
The Tours program is curated by Heritage Toronto, but driven by over 100 volunteers, 25 community partners, and an annual cohort of Emerging Historians. Together, we have reshaped and shared the stories of Toronto and connected communities across both time and place. Didyou know?
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Truth and Reconciliation Commission was formed in 2008 to bring public awareness of residential schools so the community can then work towards healing. Ryerson University is working towards truth and reconciliation regarding the colonial past of their namesake. They have erected a plaque beside their statue of E. Ryerson that explainshis
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Williams Treaties were signed on October 31 and November 15, 1923, by seven Anishinaabe First Nations and representatives of the governments of Canada and Ontario. Participating First Nations included the Mississaugas of Alderville, Curve Lake, Hiawatha, and Scugog Island. In 1923, the governments of Ontario and Canada appointed a three-manHERITAGE TORONTO
Eglinton West: Little Jamaica. The neighbourhood's businesses are at the heart of this cultural hub for Toronto’s Caribbean population. Learn about its history, and impacts resulting from one of the largest transit construction projects in the country and a global pandemic.HERITAGE TORONTO
The Wallace Avenue Footbridge, also known as the Wallace Avenue Pedestrian Bridge, was built in 1907. Constructed so that local residents could easily cross the Canadian Pacific Railway tracks that ran through the neighbourhood, the style of bridge is a rare type of steel, multi-span pony truss and riveted truss bridge that was common and easy to construct in the early part of the twentiethHERITAGE TORONTO
Reports of unexplained bright lights and floating objects date back thousands of years. In ancient times around the world, comets, meteors, and even certain rare cloud phenomena have been interpreted as signs from the gods or accepted as religious omens. The bulk of modern UFO sightings have occurred in the decades since the SecondWorld War.
HERITAGE TORONTO
Opened in the late 1950s by Al Steiner, Club Bluenote was located at 372 ½ Yonge Street (its address reflected its second-storey location). Club Bluenote has been called the incubator of the Toronto Sound, a specific style of rock and roll and blues. The sound was fast-paced, scratchy, and raw: a blend of Motown influence, southernAmerican
HERITAGE TORONTO
Steele’s Tavern was opened in1936 by Basil Steele, and in 1948, it was one of the first establishments in Toronto to be licensed to serve cocktails. By the early 1950s, Steele’s Tavern offered an international mix of live music acts, from Venetian accordion to Hawaiian melodies. In 1963, a renovation to the Tavern’s upstairsVenetian Room
HERITAGE TORONTO
Osgoode Hall has been the seat of the Law Society of Ontario since 1832. Named for William Osgoode, the first Chief Justice of Upper Canada, the building housed the first accredited law school in Ontario and provided a training ground for lawyers and jurists for over onehundred years.
HERITAGE TORONTOWHAT'S ONTOURSHERITAGE TORONTO AWARDSWHAT WE DOJOIN &GIVEEXPLORE & LEARN
MAP Indigenous Roots: A Living History. Discover Toronto’s Indigenous heritage, from the earliest inhabitants utilizing the area’s rich natural resources, to prominent figures who made an impact in the city, to the community that exists and prospers today.HERITAGE TORONTO
The Tours program is curated by Heritage Toronto, but driven by over 100 volunteers, 25 community partners, and an annual cohort of Emerging Historians. Together, we have reshaped and shared the stories of Toronto and connected communities across both time and place. Didyou know?
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Truth and Reconciliation Commission was formed in 2008 to bring public awareness of residential schools so the community can then work towards healing. Ryerson University is working towards truth and reconciliation regarding the colonial past of their namesake. They have erected a plaque beside their statue of E. Ryerson that explainshis
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Williams Treaties were signed on October 31 and November 15, 1923, by seven Anishinaabe First Nations and representatives of the governments of Canada and Ontario. Participating First Nations included the Mississaugas of Alderville, Curve Lake, Hiawatha, and Scugog Island. In 1923, the governments of Ontario and Canada appointed a three-manHERITAGE TORONTO
Eglinton West: Little Jamaica. The neighbourhood's businesses are at the heart of this cultural hub for Toronto’s Caribbean population. Learn about its history, and impacts resulting from one of the largest transit construction projects in the country and a global pandemic.HERITAGE TORONTO
The Wallace Avenue Footbridge, also known as the Wallace Avenue Pedestrian Bridge, was built in 1907. Constructed so that local residents could easily cross the Canadian Pacific Railway tracks that ran through the neighbourhood, the style of bridge is a rare type of steel, multi-span pony truss and riveted truss bridge that was common and easy to construct in the early part of the twentiethHERITAGE TORONTO
Reports of unexplained bright lights and floating objects date back thousands of years. In ancient times around the world, comets, meteors, and even certain rare cloud phenomena have been interpreted as signs from the gods or accepted as religious omens. The bulk of modern UFO sightings have occurred in the decades since the SecondWorld War.
HERITAGE TORONTO
Opened in the late 1950s by Al Steiner, Club Bluenote was located at 372 ½ Yonge Street (its address reflected its second-storey location). Club Bluenote has been called the incubator of the Toronto Sound, a specific style of rock and roll and blues. The sound was fast-paced, scratchy, and raw: a blend of Motown influence, southernAmerican
HERITAGE TORONTO
Steele’s Tavern was opened in1936 by Basil Steele, and in 1948, it was one of the first establishments in Toronto to be licensed to serve cocktails. By the early 1950s, Steele’s Tavern offered an international mix of live music acts, from Venetian accordion to Hawaiian melodies. In 1963, a renovation to the Tavern’s upstairsVenetian Room
HERITAGE TORONTO
Osgoode Hall has been the seat of the Law Society of Ontario since 1832. Named for William Osgoode, the first Chief Justice of Upper Canada, the building housed the first accredited law school in Ontario and provided a training ground for lawyers and jurists for over onehundred years.
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Tours program is curated by Heritage Toronto, but driven by over 100 volunteers, 25 community partners, and an annual cohort of Emerging Historians. Together, we have reshaped and shared the stories of Toronto and connected communities across both time and place. Didyou know?
HERITAGE TORONTO
For information on the preservation and heritage designation status of Toronto’s buildings, contact: Heritage Planning. Phone: 416-392-1975. Email: yasmina.shamji@toronto.ca.HERITAGE TORONTO
The shift of our 2020 tour season to a digital platform was made possible by the generous support of our Tours Program Presenting Sponsor, TD Bank and The Ready Commitment. This online tour was developed by Heritage Toronto’s Indigenous Content Coordinator, Mnawaate Gordon-Corbiere, with the support of Miziwe Biik AboriginalEmployment and
HERITAGE TORONTO
The new discovery found that treating a potent diphtheria toxin with formaldehyde and heat could make it non-toxic. The resulting “toxoid’ could then be safely injected. Connaught launched field trials in several cites in September 1925. In Toronto, 36,000 children were vaccinated between December 1926 and June 1929.HERITAGE TORONTO
Plaques commemorate the people who lived in our homes and once walked our streets; the communities, events and streetscapes they shaped; and the world they faced and changed. The program encourages Torontonians to apply for plaques and find funding support within their communities to make them happen. Heritage Toronto provides expertise inHERITAGE TORONTO
Colonial Tavern, 201 Yonge Street during 1973 Yonge Street Mall. City of Toronto Archives, Fonds 1118, Series 377, Item 782. By the late 1970s, disco and rock music could be heard from the Colonial Tavern. But new music wasn’t enough to sustain the Tavern, which closed as a music venue in 1980. Attempts to revive the Tavern included a shortHERITAGE TORONTO
A New Beginning: Filipino Heritage in Toronto. In the 1960s, a group of Filipino healthcare workers immigrated to Toronto in search of employment. Nearly 60 years later, Toronto’s Filipino community makes up 62% of Canada’s total Filipino population. Read the story of how the Filipino community came together to aid those around them.HERITAGE TORONTO
The Town Tavern opened in 1949 on Queen Street, just east of Yonge. One of the most popular downtown theatre restaurants, the Town Tavern boasted a revolving stage with dining and live shows available every day from noon to 2 a.m. The Saphire Tavern, located at the northwest corner of Victoria and Richmond Streets, Toronto, 1972.HERITAGE TORONTO
Osgoode Hall has been the seat of the Law Society of Ontario since 1832. Named for William Osgoode, the first Chief Justice of Upper Canada, the building housed the first accredited law school in Ontario and provided a training ground for lawyers and jurists for over onehundred years.
DUNDAS + CARLAW: MADE IN TORONTO 9. Jefferson Glass Co. 1 0. Toronto Hydro Building. 1 1. Carlaw and Gerrard. * Tour Safety. Learn about the adaptive reuse of this east-end neighbourhood’s industrial buildings and the stories of the people who worked, lived, and played here. This tour takes place in a busy urban environment with car traffic. HERITAGE TORONTOWHAT'S ONTOURSHERITAGE TORONTO AWARDSWHAT WE DOJOIN &GIVEEXPLORE & LEARN
MAP Indigenous Roots: A Living History. Discover Toronto’s Indigenous heritage, from the earliest inhabitants utilizing the area’s rich natural resources, to prominent figures who made an impact in the city, to the community that exists and prospers today.HERITAGE TORONTO
The Truth and Reconciliation Commission was formed in 2008 to bring public awareness of residential schools so the community can then work towards healing. Ryerson University is working towards truth and reconciliation regarding the colonial past of their namesake. They have erected a plaque beside their statue of E. Ryerson that explainshis
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Williams Treaties were signed on October 31 and November 15, 1923, by seven Anishinaabe First Nations and representatives of the governments of Canada and Ontario. Participating First Nations included the Mississaugas of Alderville, Curve Lake, Hiawatha, and Scugog Island. In 1923, the governments of Ontario and Canada appointed a three-manHERITAGE TORONTO
Plaques commemorate the people who lived in our homes and once walked our streets; the communities, events and streetscapes they shaped; and the world they faced and changed. The program encourages Torontonians to apply for plaques and find funding support within their communities to make them happen. Heritage Toronto provides expertise inHERITAGE TORONTO
The Wallace Avenue Footbridge, also known as the Wallace Avenue Pedestrian Bridge, was built in 1907. Constructed so that local residents could easily cross the Canadian Pacific Railway tracks that ran through the neighbourhood, the style of bridge is a rare type of steel, multi-span pony truss and riveted truss bridge that was common and easy to construct in the early part of the twentiethHERITAGE TORONTO
Opened in the late 1950s by Al Steiner, Club Bluenote was located at 372 ½ Yonge Street (its address reflected its second-storey location). Club Bluenote has been called the incubator of the Toronto Sound, a specific style of rock and roll and blues. The sound was fast-paced, scratchy, and raw: a blend of Motown influence, southernAmerican
HERITAGE TORONTO
Reports of unexplained bright lights and floating objects date back thousands of years. In ancient times around the world, comets, meteors, and even certain rare cloud phenomena have been interpreted as signs from the gods or accepted as religious omens. The bulk of modern UFO sightings have occurred in the decades since the SecondWorld War.
HERITAGE TORONTO
Steele’s Tavern was opened in1936 by Basil Steele, and in 1948, it was one of the first establishments in Toronto to be licensed to serve cocktails. By the early 1950s, Steele’s Tavern offered an international mix of live music acts, from Venetian accordion to Hawaiian melodies. In 1963, a renovation to the Tavern’s upstairsVenetian Room
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Town Tavern opened in 1949 on Queen Street, just east of Yonge. One of the most popular downtown theatre restaurants, the Town Tavern boasted a revolving stage with dining and live shows available every day from noon to 2 a.m. The Saphire Tavern, located at the northwest corner of Victoria and Richmond Streets, Toronto, 1972.HERITAGE TORONTO
Osgoode Hall has been the seat of the Law Society of Ontario since 1832. Named for William Osgoode, the first Chief Justice of Upper Canada, the building housed the first accredited law school in Ontario and provided a training ground for lawyers and jurists for over onehundred years.
HERITAGE TORONTOWHAT'S ONTOURSHERITAGE TORONTO AWARDSWHAT WE DOJOIN &GIVEEXPLORE & LEARN
MAP Indigenous Roots: A Living History. Discover Toronto’s Indigenous heritage, from the earliest inhabitants utilizing the area’s rich natural resources, to prominent figures who made an impact in the city, to the community that exists and prospers today.HERITAGE TORONTO
The Truth and Reconciliation Commission was formed in 2008 to bring public awareness of residential schools so the community can then work towards healing. Ryerson University is working towards truth and reconciliation regarding the colonial past of their namesake. They have erected a plaque beside their statue of E. Ryerson that explainshis
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Williams Treaties were signed on October 31 and November 15, 1923, by seven Anishinaabe First Nations and representatives of the governments of Canada and Ontario. Participating First Nations included the Mississaugas of Alderville, Curve Lake, Hiawatha, and Scugog Island. In 1923, the governments of Ontario and Canada appointed a three-manHERITAGE TORONTO
Plaques commemorate the people who lived in our homes and once walked our streets; the communities, events and streetscapes they shaped; and the world they faced and changed. The program encourages Torontonians to apply for plaques and find funding support within their communities to make them happen. Heritage Toronto provides expertise inHERITAGE TORONTO
The Wallace Avenue Footbridge, also known as the Wallace Avenue Pedestrian Bridge, was built in 1907. Constructed so that local residents could easily cross the Canadian Pacific Railway tracks that ran through the neighbourhood, the style of bridge is a rare type of steel, multi-span pony truss and riveted truss bridge that was common and easy to construct in the early part of the twentiethHERITAGE TORONTO
Opened in the late 1950s by Al Steiner, Club Bluenote was located at 372 ½ Yonge Street (its address reflected its second-storey location). Club Bluenote has been called the incubator of the Toronto Sound, a specific style of rock and roll and blues. The sound was fast-paced, scratchy, and raw: a blend of Motown influence, southernAmerican
HERITAGE TORONTO
Reports of unexplained bright lights and floating objects date back thousands of years. In ancient times around the world, comets, meteors, and even certain rare cloud phenomena have been interpreted as signs from the gods or accepted as religious omens. The bulk of modern UFO sightings have occurred in the decades since the SecondWorld War.
HERITAGE TORONTO
Steele’s Tavern was opened in1936 by Basil Steele, and in 1948, it was one of the first establishments in Toronto to be licensed to serve cocktails. By the early 1950s, Steele’s Tavern offered an international mix of live music acts, from Venetian accordion to Hawaiian melodies. In 1963, a renovation to the Tavern’s upstairsVenetian Room
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Town Tavern opened in 1949 on Queen Street, just east of Yonge. One of the most popular downtown theatre restaurants, the Town Tavern boasted a revolving stage with dining and live shows available every day from noon to 2 a.m. The Saphire Tavern, located at the northwest corner of Victoria and Richmond Streets, Toronto, 1972.HERITAGE TORONTO
Osgoode Hall has been the seat of the Law Society of Ontario since 1832. Named for William Osgoode, the first Chief Justice of Upper Canada, the building housed the first accredited law school in Ontario and provided a training ground for lawyers and jurists for over onehundred years.
HERITAGE TORONTO
Discover Toronto’s heritage anywhere, and at your fingertips. During these challenging times, we’ve focused on online programming to ensure continued public engagement with the city’s heritage. Here, you can explore stories, recorded #HTLive and other events, self-guided tours, and digital exhibits that we’ve developed in therecent past.
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Tours program is curated by Heritage Toronto, but driven by over 100 volunteers, 25 community partners, and an annual cohort of Emerging Historians. Together, we have reshaped and shared the stories of Toronto and connected communities across both time and place. Didyou know?
HERITAGE TORONTO
For information on the preservation and heritage designation status of Toronto’s buildings, contact: Heritage Planning. Phone: 416-392-1975. Email: yasmina.shamji@toronto.ca.HERITAGE TORONTO
The shift of our 2020 tour season to a digital platform was made possible by the generous support of our Tours Program Presenting Sponsor, TD Bank and The Ready Commitment. This online tour was developed by Heritage Toronto’s Indigenous Content Coordinator, Mnawaate Gordon-Corbiere, with the support of Miziwe Biik AboriginalEmployment and
HERITAGE TORONTO
The new discovery found that treating a potent diphtheria toxin with formaldehyde and heat could make it non-toxic. The resulting “toxoid’ could then be safely injected. Connaught launched field trials in several cites in September 1925. In Toronto, 36,000 children were vaccinated between December 1926 and June 1929.HERITAGE TORONTO
Plaques commemorate the people who lived in our homes and once walked our streets; the communities, events and streetscapes they shaped; and the world they faced and changed. The program encourages Torontonians to apply for plaques and find funding support within their communities to make them happen. Heritage Toronto provides expertise inHERITAGE TORONTO
The Distillery District is the former site of the Gooderham and Worts, one of the largest distillers in the British Empire from the 1830s to the 1890s. Today the site comprises over 40 Victorian buildings, representing the finest surviving group of 19th-century industrial buildings in Ontario. Malt House, Distillery District, 2017.HERITAGE TORONTO
A New Beginning: Filipino Heritage in Toronto. In the 1960s, a group of Filipino healthcare workers immigrated to Toronto in search of employment. Nearly 60 years later, Toronto’s Filipino community makes up 62% of Canada’s total Filipino population. Read the story of how the Filipino community came together to aid those around them.HERITAGE TORONTO
Colonial Tavern, 201 Yonge Street during 1973 Yonge Street Mall. City of Toronto Archives, Fonds 1118, Series 377, Item 782. By the late 1970s, disco and rock music could be heard from the Colonial Tavern. But new music wasn’t enough to sustain the Tavern, which closed as a music venue in 1980. Attempts to revive the Tavern included a shortHERITAGE TORONTO
The Town Tavern opened in 1949 on Queen Street, just east of Yonge. One of the most popular downtown theatre restaurants, the Town Tavern boasted a revolving stage with dining and live shows available every day from noon to 2 a.m. The Saphire Tavern, located at the northwest corner of Victoria and Richmond Streets, Toronto, 1972. HERITAGE TORONTOWHAT'S ONTOURSHERITAGE TORONTO AWARDSWHAT WE DOJOIN &GIVEEXPLORE & LEARN
MAP Indigenous Roots: A Living History. Discover Toronto’s Indigenous heritage, from the earliest inhabitants utilizing the area’s rich natural resources, to prominent figures who made an impact in the city, to the community that exists and prospers today.HERITAGE TORONTO
The Truth and Reconciliation Commission was formed in 2008 to bring public awareness of residential schools so the community can then work towards healing. Ryerson University is working towards truth and reconciliation regarding the colonial past of their namesake. They have erected a plaque beside their statue of E. Ryerson that explainshis
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Williams Treaties were signed on October 31 and November 15, 1923, by seven Anishinaabe First Nations and representatives of the governments of Canada and Ontario. Participating First Nations included the Mississaugas of Alderville, Curve Lake, Hiawatha, and Scugog Island. In 1923, the governments of Ontario and Canada appointed a three-manHERITAGE TORONTO
Plaques commemorate the people who lived in our homes and once walked our streets; the communities, events and streetscapes they shaped; and the world they faced and changed. The program encourages Torontonians to apply for plaques and find funding support within their communities to make them happen. Heritage Toronto provides expertise inHERITAGE TORONTO
The Wallace Avenue Footbridge, also known as the Wallace Avenue Pedestrian Bridge, was built in 1907. Constructed so that local residents could easily cross the Canadian Pacific Railway tracks that ran through the neighbourhood, the style of bridge is a rare type of steel, multi-span pony truss and riveted truss bridge that was common and easy to construct in the early part of the twentiethHERITAGE TORONTO
Opened in the late 1950s by Al Steiner, Club Bluenote was located at 372 ½ Yonge Street (its address reflected its second-storey location). Club Bluenote has been called the incubator of the Toronto Sound, a specific style of rock and roll and blues. The sound was fast-paced, scratchy, and raw: a blend of Motown influence, southernAmerican
HERITAGE TORONTO
Reports of unexplained bright lights and floating objects date back thousands of years. In ancient times around the world, comets, meteors, and even certain rare cloud phenomena have been interpreted as signs from the gods or accepted as religious omens. The bulk of modern UFO sightings have occurred in the decades since the SecondWorld War.
HERITAGE TORONTO
Steele’s Tavern was opened in1936 by Basil Steele, and in 1948, it was one of the first establishments in Toronto to be licensed to serve cocktails. By the early 1950s, Steele’s Tavern offered an international mix of live music acts, from Venetian accordion to Hawaiian melodies. In 1963, a renovation to the Tavern’s upstairsVenetian Room
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Town Tavern opened in 1949 on Queen Street, just east of Yonge. One of the most popular downtown theatre restaurants, the Town Tavern boasted a revolving stage with dining and live shows available every day from noon to 2 a.m. The Saphire Tavern, located at the northwest corner of Victoria and Richmond Streets, Toronto, 1972.HERITAGE TORONTO
Osgoode Hall has been the seat of the Law Society of Ontario since 1832. Named for William Osgoode, the first Chief Justice of Upper Canada, the building housed the first accredited law school in Ontario and provided a training ground for lawyers and jurists for over onehundred years.
HERITAGE TORONTOWHAT'S ONTOURSHERITAGE TORONTO AWARDSWHAT WE DOJOIN &GIVEEXPLORE & LEARN
MAP Indigenous Roots: A Living History. Discover Toronto’s Indigenous heritage, from the earliest inhabitants utilizing the area’s rich natural resources, to prominent figures who made an impact in the city, to the community that exists and prospers today.HERITAGE TORONTO
The Truth and Reconciliation Commission was formed in 2008 to bring public awareness of residential schools so the community can then work towards healing. Ryerson University is working towards truth and reconciliation regarding the colonial past of their namesake. They have erected a plaque beside their statue of E. Ryerson that explainshis
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Williams Treaties were signed on October 31 and November 15, 1923, by seven Anishinaabe First Nations and representatives of the governments of Canada and Ontario. Participating First Nations included the Mississaugas of Alderville, Curve Lake, Hiawatha, and Scugog Island. In 1923, the governments of Ontario and Canada appointed a three-manHERITAGE TORONTO
Plaques commemorate the people who lived in our homes and once walked our streets; the communities, events and streetscapes they shaped; and the world they faced and changed. The program encourages Torontonians to apply for plaques and find funding support within their communities to make them happen. Heritage Toronto provides expertise inHERITAGE TORONTO
The Wallace Avenue Footbridge, also known as the Wallace Avenue Pedestrian Bridge, was built in 1907. Constructed so that local residents could easily cross the Canadian Pacific Railway tracks that ran through the neighbourhood, the style of bridge is a rare type of steel, multi-span pony truss and riveted truss bridge that was common and easy to construct in the early part of the twentiethHERITAGE TORONTO
Opened in the late 1950s by Al Steiner, Club Bluenote was located at 372 ½ Yonge Street (its address reflected its second-storey location). Club Bluenote has been called the incubator of the Toronto Sound, a specific style of rock and roll and blues. The sound was fast-paced, scratchy, and raw: a blend of Motown influence, southernAmerican
HERITAGE TORONTO
Reports of unexplained bright lights and floating objects date back thousands of years. In ancient times around the world, comets, meteors, and even certain rare cloud phenomena have been interpreted as signs from the gods or accepted as religious omens. The bulk of modern UFO sightings have occurred in the decades since the SecondWorld War.
HERITAGE TORONTO
Steele’s Tavern was opened in1936 by Basil Steele, and in 1948, it was one of the first establishments in Toronto to be licensed to serve cocktails. By the early 1950s, Steele’s Tavern offered an international mix of live music acts, from Venetian accordion to Hawaiian melodies. In 1963, a renovation to the Tavern’s upstairsVenetian Room
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Town Tavern opened in 1949 on Queen Street, just east of Yonge. One of the most popular downtown theatre restaurants, the Town Tavern boasted a revolving stage with dining and live shows available every day from noon to 2 a.m. The Saphire Tavern, located at the northwest corner of Victoria and Richmond Streets, Toronto, 1972.HERITAGE TORONTO
Osgoode Hall has been the seat of the Law Society of Ontario since 1832. Named for William Osgoode, the first Chief Justice of Upper Canada, the building housed the first accredited law school in Ontario and provided a training ground for lawyers and jurists for over onehundred years.
HERITAGE TORONTO
Discover Toronto’s heritage anywhere, and at your fingertips. During these challenging times, we’ve focused on online programming to ensure continued public engagement with the city’s heritage. Here, you can explore stories, recorded #HTLive and other events, self-guided tours, and digital exhibits that we’ve developed in therecent past.
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Tours program is curated by Heritage Toronto, but driven by over 100 volunteers, 25 community partners, and an annual cohort of Emerging Historians. Together, we have reshaped and shared the stories of Toronto and connected communities across both time and place. Didyou know?
HERITAGE TORONTO
For information on the preservation and heritage designation status of Toronto’s buildings, contact: Heritage Planning. Phone: 416-392-1975. Email: yasmina.shamji@toronto.ca.HERITAGE TORONTO
The shift of our 2020 tour season to a digital platform was made possible by the generous support of our Tours Program Presenting Sponsor, TD Bank and The Ready Commitment. This online tour was developed by Heritage Toronto’s Indigenous Content Coordinator, Mnawaate Gordon-Corbiere, with the support of Miziwe Biik AboriginalEmployment and
HERITAGE TORONTO
The new discovery found that treating a potent diphtheria toxin with formaldehyde and heat could make it non-toxic. The resulting “toxoid’ could then be safely injected. Connaught launched field trials in several cites in September 1925. In Toronto, 36,000 children were vaccinated between December 1926 and June 1929.HERITAGE TORONTO
Plaques commemorate the people who lived in our homes and once walked our streets; the communities, events and streetscapes they shaped; and the world they faced and changed. The program encourages Torontonians to apply for plaques and find funding support within their communities to make them happen. Heritage Toronto provides expertise inHERITAGE TORONTO
The Distillery District is the former site of the Gooderham and Worts, one of the largest distillers in the British Empire from the 1830s to the 1890s. Today the site comprises over 40 Victorian buildings, representing the finest surviving group of 19th-century industrial buildings in Ontario. Malt House, Distillery District, 2017.HERITAGE TORONTO
A New Beginning: Filipino Heritage in Toronto. In the 1960s, a group of Filipino healthcare workers immigrated to Toronto in search of employment. Nearly 60 years later, Toronto’s Filipino community makes up 62% of Canada’s total Filipino population. Read the story of how the Filipino community came together to aid those around them.HERITAGE TORONTO
Colonial Tavern, 201 Yonge Street during 1973 Yonge Street Mall. City of Toronto Archives, Fonds 1118, Series 377, Item 782. By the late 1970s, disco and rock music could be heard from the Colonial Tavern. But new music wasn’t enough to sustain the Tavern, which closed as a music venue in 1980. Attempts to revive the Tavern included a shortHERITAGE TORONTO
The Town Tavern opened in 1949 on Queen Street, just east of Yonge. One of the most popular downtown theatre restaurants, the Town Tavern boasted a revolving stage with dining and live shows available every day from noon to 2 a.m. The Saphire Tavern, located at the northwest corner of Victoria and Richmond Streets, Toronto, 1972. HERITAGE TORONTOWHAT'S ONTOURSHERITAGE TORONTO AWARDSWHAT WE DOJOIN &GIVEEXPLORE & LEARN
MAP Indigenous Roots: A Living History. Discover Toronto’s Indigenous heritage, from the earliest inhabitants utilizing the area’s rich natural resources, to prominent figures who made an impact in the city, to the community that exists and prospers today.HERITAGE TORONTO
The Truth and Reconciliation Commission was formed in 2008 to bring public awareness of residential schools so the community can then work towards healing. Ryerson University is working towards truth and reconciliation regarding the colonial past of their namesake. They have erected a plaque beside their statue of E. Ryerson that explainshis
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Williams Treaties were signed on October 31 and November 15, 1923, by seven Anishinaabe First Nations and representatives of the governments of Canada and Ontario. Participating First Nations included the Mississaugas of Alderville, Curve Lake, Hiawatha, and Scugog Island. In 1923, the governments of Ontario and Canada appointed a three-manHERITAGE TORONTO
Plaques commemorate the people who lived in our homes and once walked our streets; the communities, events and streetscapes they shaped; and the world they faced and changed. The program encourages Torontonians to apply for plaques and find funding support within their communities to make them happen. Heritage Toronto provides expertise inHERITAGE TORONTO
The Wallace Avenue Footbridge, also known as the Wallace Avenue Pedestrian Bridge, was built in 1907. Constructed so that local residents could easily cross the Canadian Pacific Railway tracks that ran through the neighbourhood, the style of bridge is a rare type of steel, multi-span pony truss and riveted truss bridge that was common and easy to construct in the early part of the twentiethHERITAGE TORONTO
Opened in the late 1950s by Al Steiner, Club Bluenote was located at 372 ½ Yonge Street (its address reflected its second-storey location). Club Bluenote has been called the incubator of the Toronto Sound, a specific style of rock and roll and blues. The sound was fast-paced, scratchy, and raw: a blend of Motown influence, southernAmerican
HERITAGE TORONTO
Reports of unexplained bright lights and floating objects date back thousands of years. In ancient times around the world, comets, meteors, and even certain rare cloud phenomena have been interpreted as signs from the gods or accepted as religious omens. The bulk of modern UFO sightings have occurred in the decades since the SecondWorld War.
HERITAGE TORONTO
Steele’s Tavern was opened in1936 by Basil Steele, and in 1948, it was one of the first establishments in Toronto to be licensed to serve cocktails. By the early 1950s, Steele’s Tavern offered an international mix of live music acts, from Venetian accordion to Hawaiian melodies. In 1963, a renovation to the Tavern’s upstairsVenetian Room
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Town Tavern opened in 1949 on Queen Street, just east of Yonge. One of the most popular downtown theatre restaurants, the Town Tavern boasted a revolving stage with dining and live shows available every day from noon to 2 a.m. The Saphire Tavern, located at the northwest corner of Victoria and Richmond Streets, Toronto, 1972.HERITAGE TORONTO
Osgoode Hall has been the seat of the Law Society of Ontario since 1832. Named for William Osgoode, the first Chief Justice of Upper Canada, the building housed the first accredited law school in Ontario and provided a training ground for lawyers and jurists for over onehundred years.
HERITAGE TORONTOWHAT'S ONTOURSHERITAGE TORONTO AWARDSWHAT WE DOJOIN &GIVEEXPLORE & LEARN
MAP Indigenous Roots: A Living History. Discover Toronto’s Indigenous heritage, from the earliest inhabitants utilizing the area’s rich natural resources, to prominent figures who made an impact in the city, to the community that exists and prospers today.HERITAGE TORONTO
The Truth and Reconciliation Commission was formed in 2008 to bring public awareness of residential schools so the community can then work towards healing. Ryerson University is working towards truth and reconciliation regarding the colonial past of their namesake. They have erected a plaque beside their statue of E. Ryerson that explainshis
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Williams Treaties were signed on October 31 and November 15, 1923, by seven Anishinaabe First Nations and representatives of the governments of Canada and Ontario. Participating First Nations included the Mississaugas of Alderville, Curve Lake, Hiawatha, and Scugog Island. In 1923, the governments of Ontario and Canada appointed a three-manHERITAGE TORONTO
Plaques commemorate the people who lived in our homes and once walked our streets; the communities, events and streetscapes they shaped; and the world they faced and changed. The program encourages Torontonians to apply for plaques and find funding support within their communities to make them happen. Heritage Toronto provides expertise inHERITAGE TORONTO
The Wallace Avenue Footbridge, also known as the Wallace Avenue Pedestrian Bridge, was built in 1907. Constructed so that local residents could easily cross the Canadian Pacific Railway tracks that ran through the neighbourhood, the style of bridge is a rare type of steel, multi-span pony truss and riveted truss bridge that was common and easy to construct in the early part of the twentiethHERITAGE TORONTO
Opened in the late 1950s by Al Steiner, Club Bluenote was located at 372 ½ Yonge Street (its address reflected its second-storey location). Club Bluenote has been called the incubator of the Toronto Sound, a specific style of rock and roll and blues. The sound was fast-paced, scratchy, and raw: a blend of Motown influence, southernAmerican
HERITAGE TORONTO
Reports of unexplained bright lights and floating objects date back thousands of years. In ancient times around the world, comets, meteors, and even certain rare cloud phenomena have been interpreted as signs from the gods or accepted as religious omens. The bulk of modern UFO sightings have occurred in the decades since the SecondWorld War.
HERITAGE TORONTO
Steele’s Tavern was opened in1936 by Basil Steele, and in 1948, it was one of the first establishments in Toronto to be licensed to serve cocktails. By the early 1950s, Steele’s Tavern offered an international mix of live music acts, from Venetian accordion to Hawaiian melodies. In 1963, a renovation to the Tavern’s upstairsVenetian Room
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Town Tavern opened in 1949 on Queen Street, just east of Yonge. One of the most popular downtown theatre restaurants, the Town Tavern boasted a revolving stage with dining and live shows available every day from noon to 2 a.m. The Saphire Tavern, located at the northwest corner of Victoria and Richmond Streets, Toronto, 1972.HERITAGE TORONTO
Osgoode Hall has been the seat of the Law Society of Ontario since 1832. Named for William Osgoode, the first Chief Justice of Upper Canada, the building housed the first accredited law school in Ontario and provided a training ground for lawyers and jurists for over onehundred years.
HERITAGE TORONTO
Discover Toronto’s heritage anywhere, and at your fingertips. During these challenging times, we’ve focused on online programming to ensure continued public engagement with the city’s heritage. Here, you can explore stories, recorded #HTLive and other events, self-guided tours, and digital exhibits that we’ve developed in therecent past.
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Tours program is curated by Heritage Toronto, but driven by over 100 volunteers, 25 community partners, and an annual cohort of Emerging Historians. Together, we have reshaped and shared the stories of Toronto and connected communities across both time and place. Didyou know?
HERITAGE TORONTO
For information on the preservation and heritage designation status of Toronto’s buildings, contact: Heritage Planning. Phone: 416-392-1975. Email: yasmina.shamji@toronto.ca.HERITAGE TORONTO
The shift of our 2020 tour season to a digital platform was made possible by the generous support of our Tours Program Presenting Sponsor, TD Bank and The Ready Commitment. This online tour was developed by Heritage Toronto’s Indigenous Content Coordinator, Mnawaate Gordon-Corbiere, with the support of Miziwe Biik AboriginalEmployment and
HERITAGE TORONTO
The new discovery found that treating a potent diphtheria toxin with formaldehyde and heat could make it non-toxic. The resulting “toxoid’ could then be safely injected. Connaught launched field trials in several cites in September 1925. In Toronto, 36,000 children were vaccinated between December 1926 and June 1929.HERITAGE TORONTO
Plaques commemorate the people who lived in our homes and once walked our streets; the communities, events and streetscapes they shaped; and the world they faced and changed. The program encourages Torontonians to apply for plaques and find funding support within their communities to make them happen. Heritage Toronto provides expertise inHERITAGE TORONTO
The Distillery District is the former site of the Gooderham and Worts, one of the largest distillers in the British Empire from the 1830s to the 1890s. Today the site comprises over 40 Victorian buildings, representing the finest surviving group of 19th-century industrial buildings in Ontario. Malt House, Distillery District, 2017.HERITAGE TORONTO
A New Beginning: Filipino Heritage in Toronto. In the 1960s, a group of Filipino healthcare workers immigrated to Toronto in search of employment. Nearly 60 years later, Toronto’s Filipino community makes up 62% of Canada’s total Filipino population. Read the story of how the Filipino community came together to aid those around them.HERITAGE TORONTO
Colonial Tavern, 201 Yonge Street during 1973 Yonge Street Mall. City of Toronto Archives, Fonds 1118, Series 377, Item 782. By the late 1970s, disco and rock music could be heard from the Colonial Tavern. But new music wasn’t enough to sustain the Tavern, which closed as a music venue in 1980. Attempts to revive the Tavern included a shortHERITAGE TORONTO
The Town Tavern opened in 1949 on Queen Street, just east of Yonge. One of the most popular downtown theatre restaurants, the Town Tavern boasted a revolving stage with dining and live shows available every day from noon to 2 a.m. The Saphire Tavern, located at the northwest corner of Victoria and Richmond Streets, Toronto, 1972. HERITAGE TORONTOWHAT'S ONTOURSHERITAGE TORONTO AWARDSWHAT WE DOJOIN &GIVEEXPLORE & LEARN
MAP Indigenous Roots: A Living History. Discover Toronto’s Indigenous heritage, from the earliest inhabitants utilizing the area’s rich natural resources, to prominent figures who made an impact in the city, to the community that exists and prospers today.HERITAGE TORONTO
Reports of unexplained bright lights and floating objects date back thousands of years. In ancient times around the world, comets, meteors, and even certain rare cloud phenomena have been interpreted as signs from the gods or accepted as religious omens. The bulk of modern UFO sightings have occurred in the decades since the SecondWorld War.
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Williams Treaties were signed on October 31 and November 15, 1923, by seven Anishinaabe First Nations and representatives of the governments of Canada and Ontario. Participating First Nations included the Mississaugas of Alderville, Curve Lake, Hiawatha, and Scugog Island. In 1923, the governments of Ontario and Canada appointed a three-manHERITAGE TORONTO
The Truth and Reconciliation Commission was formed in 2008 to bring public awareness of residential schools so the community can then work towards healing. Ryerson University is working towards truth and reconciliation regarding the colonial past of their namesake. They have erected a plaque beside their statue of E. Ryerson that explainshis
HERITAGE TORONTO
The magic of an idiom is that the words do not mean what they should. This saying became a bit of a joke with us, and we went on to have a brief conversation on the strange local sayings in pockets of Ontario and Toronto, as well as other places across Canada: different provinces, different backgrounds, and different experiences and histories lead us to sayings and words that have since becomeHERITAGE TORONTO
The Wallace Avenue Footbridge, also known as the Wallace Avenue Pedestrian Bridge, was built in 1907. Constructed so that local residents could easily cross the Canadian Pacific Railway tracks that ran through the neighbourhood, the style of bridge is a rare type of steel, multi-span pony truss and riveted truss bridge that was common and easy to construct in the early part of the twentiethHERITAGE TORONTO
A New Beginning: Filipino Heritage in Toronto. In the 1960s, a group of Filipino healthcare workers immigrated to Toronto in search of employment. Nearly 60 years later, Toronto’s Filipino community makes up 62% of Canada’s total Filipino population. Read the story of how the Filipino community came together to aid those around them.HERITAGE TORONTO
Opened in the late 1950s by Al Steiner, Club Bluenote was located at 372 ½ Yonge Street (its address reflected its second-storey location). Club Bluenote has been called the incubator of the Toronto Sound, a specific style of rock and roll and blues. The sound was fast-paced, scratchy, and raw: a blend of Motown influence, southernAmerican
HERITAGE TORONTO
Osgoode Hall has been the seat of the Law Society of Ontario since 1832. Named for William Osgoode, the first Chief Justice of Upper Canada, the building housed the first accredited law school in Ontario and provided a training ground for lawyers and jurists for over onehundred years.
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Town Tavern opened in 1949 on Queen Street, just east of Yonge. One of the most popular downtown theatre restaurants, the Town Tavern boasted a revolving stage with dining and live shows available every day from noon to 2 a.m. The Saphire Tavern, located at the northwest corner of Victoria and Richmond Streets, Toronto, 1972. HERITAGE TORONTOWHAT'S ONTOURSHERITAGE TORONTO AWARDSWHAT WE DOJOIN &GIVEEXPLORE & LEARN
MAP Indigenous Roots: A Living History. Discover Toronto’s Indigenous heritage, from the earliest inhabitants utilizing the area’s rich natural resources, to prominent figures who made an impact in the city, to the community that exists and prospers today.HERITAGE TORONTO
Reports of unexplained bright lights and floating objects date back thousands of years. In ancient times around the world, comets, meteors, and even certain rare cloud phenomena have been interpreted as signs from the gods or accepted as religious omens. The bulk of modern UFO sightings have occurred in the decades since the SecondWorld War.
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Williams Treaties were signed on October 31 and November 15, 1923, by seven Anishinaabe First Nations and representatives of the governments of Canada and Ontario. Participating First Nations included the Mississaugas of Alderville, Curve Lake, Hiawatha, and Scugog Island. In 1923, the governments of Ontario and Canada appointed a three-manHERITAGE TORONTO
The Truth and Reconciliation Commission was formed in 2008 to bring public awareness of residential schools so the community can then work towards healing. Ryerson University is working towards truth and reconciliation regarding the colonial past of their namesake. They have erected a plaque beside their statue of E. Ryerson that explainshis
HERITAGE TORONTO
The magic of an idiom is that the words do not mean what they should. This saying became a bit of a joke with us, and we went on to have a brief conversation on the strange local sayings in pockets of Ontario and Toronto, as well as other places across Canada: different provinces, different backgrounds, and different experiences and histories lead us to sayings and words that have since becomeHERITAGE TORONTO
The Wallace Avenue Footbridge, also known as the Wallace Avenue Pedestrian Bridge, was built in 1907. Constructed so that local residents could easily cross the Canadian Pacific Railway tracks that ran through the neighbourhood, the style of bridge is a rare type of steel, multi-span pony truss and riveted truss bridge that was common and easy to construct in the early part of the twentiethHERITAGE TORONTO
A New Beginning: Filipino Heritage in Toronto. In the 1960s, a group of Filipino healthcare workers immigrated to Toronto in search of employment. Nearly 60 years later, Toronto’s Filipino community makes up 62% of Canada’s total Filipino population. Read the story of how the Filipino community came together to aid those around them.HERITAGE TORONTO
Opened in the late 1950s by Al Steiner, Club Bluenote was located at 372 ½ Yonge Street (its address reflected its second-storey location). Club Bluenote has been called the incubator of the Toronto Sound, a specific style of rock and roll and blues. The sound was fast-paced, scratchy, and raw: a blend of Motown influence, southernAmerican
HERITAGE TORONTO
Osgoode Hall has been the seat of the Law Society of Ontario since 1832. Named for William Osgoode, the first Chief Justice of Upper Canada, the building housed the first accredited law school in Ontario and provided a training ground for lawyers and jurists for over onehundred years.
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Town Tavern opened in 1949 on Queen Street, just east of Yonge. One of the most popular downtown theatre restaurants, the Town Tavern boasted a revolving stage with dining and live shows available every day from noon to 2 a.m. The Saphire Tavern, located at the northwest corner of Victoria and Richmond Streets, Toronto, 1972.HERITAGE TORONTO
Member is a powerful word. It tells the world that you are part of something bigger, and that together we are stronger than the sum of our parts. The more members who stand with Heritage Toronto, the stronger our advocacy efforts and the louder our message that heritage is important and should be accessible to all.HERITAGE TORONTO
The shift of our 2020 tour season to a digital platform was made possible by the generous support of our Tours Program Presenting Sponsor, TD Bank and The Ready Commitment. This online tour was developed by Heritage Toronto’s Indigenous Content Coordinator, Mnawaate Gordon-Corbiere, with the support of Miziwe Biik AboriginalEmployment and
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Distillery District is the former site of the Gooderham and Worts, one of the largest distillers in the British Empire from the 1830s to the 1890s. Today the site comprises over 40 Victorian buildings, representing the finest surviving group of 19th-century industrial buildings in Ontario. Malt House, Distillery District, 2017.HERITAGE TORONTO
A New Beginning: Filipino Heritage in Toronto. In the 1960s, a group of Filipino healthcare workers immigrated to Toronto in search of employment. Nearly 60 years later, Toronto’s Filipino community makes up 62% of Canada’s total Filipino population. Read the story of how the Filipino community came together to aid those around them.HERITAGE TORONTO
Plaques commemorate the people who lived in our homes and once walked our streets; the communities, events and streetscapes they shaped; and the world they faced and changed. The program encourages Torontonians to apply for plaques and find funding support within their communities to make them happen. Heritage Toronto provides expertise inHERITAGE TORONTO
Delivery was common starting in the mid-1800s and into the first half of the 20 th century. Milk and other goods like eggs, meat, and bread were delivered in the early morning by horse-drawn carriage around Toronto, which were used up until the 1950s in places like Toronto and in Britain and the USA. Milk men often worked for local dairiesHERITAGE TORONTO
In 1701 the Anishinaabeg drove the Haudenosaunee out of the area and came to a peace. In 1701, the Haudenosaunee and Anishinaabeg committed to peace with a treaty in the form of a wampum belt. This is a belt made of clam shell beads that visually represents an agreement. The belt depicts a dish with one spoon, the Great Lakes area is the dishHERITAGE TORONTO
The Town Tavern opened in 1949 on Queen Street, just east of Yonge. One of the most popular downtown theatre restaurants, the Town Tavern boasted a revolving stage with dining and live shows available every day from noon to 2 a.m. The Saphire Tavern, located at the northwest corner of Victoria and Richmond Streets, Toronto, 1972.HERITAGE TORONTO
Shopping District. Between 1910 and 1928, the well-known Toronto Eaton family bought land on Yonge Street around College and Carlton. They believed that the shopping district would move north from Queen St. Eaton’s planned to move all operations from their Yonge andHERITAGE TORONTO
The very existence of SickKids Hospital is due to a group of women volunteers. Recognizing the significant health risks to children in the 19th century, Elizabeth McMaster wanted to establish a children’s hospital in Toronto. She led a Ladies Committee HERITAGE TORONTOWHAT'S ONTOURSHERITAGE TORONTO AWARDSWHAT WE DOJOIN &GIVEEXPLORE & LEARN
MAP Indigenous Roots: A Living History. Discover Toronto’s Indigenous heritage, from the earliest inhabitants utilizing the area’s rich natural resources, to prominent figures who made an impact in the city, to the community that exists and prospers today.HERITAGE TORONTO
Reports of unexplained bright lights and floating objects date back thousands of years. In ancient times around the world, comets, meteors, and even certain rare cloud phenomena have been interpreted as signs from the gods or accepted as religious omens. The bulk of modern UFO sightings have occurred in the decades since the SecondWorld War.
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Williams Treaties were signed on October 31 and November 15, 1923, by seven Anishinaabe First Nations and representatives of the governments of Canada and Ontario. Participating First Nations included the Mississaugas of Alderville, Curve Lake, Hiawatha, and Scugog Island. In 1923, the governments of Ontario and Canada appointed a three-manHERITAGE TORONTO
The Truth and Reconciliation Commission was formed in 2008 to bring public awareness of residential schools so the community can then work towards healing. Ryerson University is working towards truth and reconciliation regarding the colonial past of their namesake. They have erected a plaque beside their statue of E. Ryerson that explainshis
HERITAGE TORONTO
The magic of an idiom is that the words do not mean what they should. This saying became a bit of a joke with us, and we went on to have a brief conversation on the strange local sayings in pockets of Ontario and Toronto, as well as other places across Canada: different provinces, different backgrounds, and different experiences and histories lead us to sayings and words that have since becomeHERITAGE TORONTO
The Wallace Avenue Footbridge, also known as the Wallace Avenue Pedestrian Bridge, was built in 1907. Constructed so that local residents could easily cross the Canadian Pacific Railway tracks that ran through the neighbourhood, the style of bridge is a rare type of steel, multi-span pony truss and riveted truss bridge that was common and easy to construct in the early part of the twentiethHERITAGE TORONTO
A New Beginning: Filipino Heritage in Toronto. In the 1960s, a group of Filipino healthcare workers immigrated to Toronto in search of employment. Nearly 60 years later, Toronto’s Filipino community makes up 62% of Canada’s total Filipino population. Read the story of how the Filipino community came together to aid those around them.HERITAGE TORONTO
Opened in the late 1950s by Al Steiner, Club Bluenote was located at 372 ½ Yonge Street (its address reflected its second-storey location). Club Bluenote has been called the incubator of the Toronto Sound, a specific style of rock and roll and blues. The sound was fast-paced, scratchy, and raw: a blend of Motown influence, southernAmerican
HERITAGE TORONTO
Osgoode Hall has been the seat of the Law Society of Ontario since 1832. Named for William Osgoode, the first Chief Justice of Upper Canada, the building housed the first accredited law school in Ontario and provided a training ground for lawyers and jurists for over onehundred years.
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Town Tavern opened in 1949 on Queen Street, just east of Yonge. One of the most popular downtown theatre restaurants, the Town Tavern boasted a revolving stage with dining and live shows available every day from noon to 2 a.m. The Saphire Tavern, located at the northwest corner of Victoria and Richmond Streets, Toronto, 1972. HERITAGE TORONTOWHAT'S ONTOURSHERITAGE TORONTO AWARDSWHAT WE DOJOIN &GIVEEXPLORE & LEARN
MAP Indigenous Roots: A Living History. Discover Toronto’s Indigenous heritage, from the earliest inhabitants utilizing the area’s rich natural resources, to prominent figures who made an impact in the city, to the community that exists and prospers today.HERITAGE TORONTO
Reports of unexplained bright lights and floating objects date back thousands of years. In ancient times around the world, comets, meteors, and even certain rare cloud phenomena have been interpreted as signs from the gods or accepted as religious omens. The bulk of modern UFO sightings have occurred in the decades since the SecondWorld War.
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Williams Treaties were signed on October 31 and November 15, 1923, by seven Anishinaabe First Nations and representatives of the governments of Canada and Ontario. Participating First Nations included the Mississaugas of Alderville, Curve Lake, Hiawatha, and Scugog Island. In 1923, the governments of Ontario and Canada appointed a three-manHERITAGE TORONTO
The Truth and Reconciliation Commission was formed in 2008 to bring public awareness of residential schools so the community can then work towards healing. Ryerson University is working towards truth and reconciliation regarding the colonial past of their namesake. They have erected a plaque beside their statue of E. Ryerson that explainshis
HERITAGE TORONTO
The magic of an idiom is that the words do not mean what they should. This saying became a bit of a joke with us, and we went on to have a brief conversation on the strange local sayings in pockets of Ontario and Toronto, as well as other places across Canada: different provinces, different backgrounds, and different experiences and histories lead us to sayings and words that have since becomeHERITAGE TORONTO
The Wallace Avenue Footbridge, also known as the Wallace Avenue Pedestrian Bridge, was built in 1907. Constructed so that local residents could easily cross the Canadian Pacific Railway tracks that ran through the neighbourhood, the style of bridge is a rare type of steel, multi-span pony truss and riveted truss bridge that was common and easy to construct in the early part of the twentiethHERITAGE TORONTO
A New Beginning: Filipino Heritage in Toronto. In the 1960s, a group of Filipino healthcare workers immigrated to Toronto in search of employment. Nearly 60 years later, Toronto’s Filipino community makes up 62% of Canada’s total Filipino population. Read the story of how the Filipino community came together to aid those around them.HERITAGE TORONTO
Opened in the late 1950s by Al Steiner, Club Bluenote was located at 372 ½ Yonge Street (its address reflected its second-storey location). Club Bluenote has been called the incubator of the Toronto Sound, a specific style of rock and roll and blues. The sound was fast-paced, scratchy, and raw: a blend of Motown influence, southernAmerican
HERITAGE TORONTO
Osgoode Hall has been the seat of the Law Society of Ontario since 1832. Named for William Osgoode, the first Chief Justice of Upper Canada, the building housed the first accredited law school in Ontario and provided a training ground for lawyers and jurists for over onehundred years.
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Town Tavern opened in 1949 on Queen Street, just east of Yonge. One of the most popular downtown theatre restaurants, the Town Tavern boasted a revolving stage with dining and live shows available every day from noon to 2 a.m. The Saphire Tavern, located at the northwest corner of Victoria and Richmond Streets, Toronto, 1972.HERITAGE TORONTO
Member is a powerful word. It tells the world that you are part of something bigger, and that together we are stronger than the sum of our parts. The more members who stand with Heritage Toronto, the stronger our advocacy efforts and the louder our message that heritage is important and should be accessible to all.HERITAGE TORONTO
The shift of our 2020 tour season to a digital platform was made possible by the generous support of our Tours Program Presenting Sponsor, TD Bank and The Ready Commitment. This online tour was developed by Heritage Toronto’s Indigenous Content Coordinator, Mnawaate Gordon-Corbiere, with the support of Miziwe Biik AboriginalEmployment and
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Distillery District is the former site of the Gooderham and Worts, one of the largest distillers in the British Empire from the 1830s to the 1890s. Today the site comprises over 40 Victorian buildings, representing the finest surviving group of 19th-century industrial buildings in Ontario. Malt House, Distillery District, 2017.HERITAGE TORONTO
A New Beginning: Filipino Heritage in Toronto. In the 1960s, a group of Filipino healthcare workers immigrated to Toronto in search of employment. Nearly 60 years later, Toronto’s Filipino community makes up 62% of Canada’s total Filipino population. Read the story of how the Filipino community came together to aid those around them.HERITAGE TORONTO
Plaques commemorate the people who lived in our homes and once walked our streets; the communities, events and streetscapes they shaped; and the world they faced and changed. The program encourages Torontonians to apply for plaques and find funding support within their communities to make them happen. Heritage Toronto provides expertise inHERITAGE TORONTO
Delivery was common starting in the mid-1800s and into the first half of the 20 th century. Milk and other goods like eggs, meat, and bread were delivered in the early morning by horse-drawn carriage around Toronto, which were used up until the 1950s in places like Toronto and in Britain and the USA. Milk men often worked for local dairiesHERITAGE TORONTO
In 1701 the Anishinaabeg drove the Haudenosaunee out of the area and came to a peace. In 1701, the Haudenosaunee and Anishinaabeg committed to peace with a treaty in the form of a wampum belt. This is a belt made of clam shell beads that visually represents an agreement. The belt depicts a dish with one spoon, the Great Lakes area is the dishHERITAGE TORONTO
The Town Tavern opened in 1949 on Queen Street, just east of Yonge. One of the most popular downtown theatre restaurants, the Town Tavern boasted a revolving stage with dining and live shows available every day from noon to 2 a.m. The Saphire Tavern, located at the northwest corner of Victoria and Richmond Streets, Toronto, 1972.HERITAGE TORONTO
Shopping District. Between 1910 and 1928, the well-known Toronto Eaton family bought land on Yonge Street around College and Carlton. They believed that the shopping district would move north from Queen St. Eaton’s planned to move all operations from their Yonge andHERITAGE TORONTO
The very existence of SickKids Hospital is due to a group of women volunteers. Recognizing the significant health risks to children in the 19th century, Elizabeth McMaster wanted to establish a children’s hospital in Toronto. She led a Ladies Committee HERITAGE TORONTOWHAT'S ONTOURSHERITAGE TORONTO AWARDSWHAT WE DOJOIN &GIVEEXPLORE & LEARN
MAP Indigenous Roots: A Living History. Discover Toronto’s Indigenous heritage, from the earliest inhabitants utilizing the area’s rich natural resources, to prominent figures who made an impact in the city, to the community that exists and prospers today.HERITAGE TORONTO
Reports of unexplained bright lights and floating objects date back thousands of years. In ancient times around the world, comets, meteors, and even certain rare cloud phenomena have been interpreted as signs from the gods or accepted as religious omens. The bulk of modern UFO sightings have occurred in the decades since the SecondWorld War.
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Williams Treaties were signed on October 31 and November 15, 1923, by seven Anishinaabe First Nations and representatives of the governments of Canada and Ontario. Participating First Nations included the Mississaugas of Alderville, Curve Lake, Hiawatha, and Scugog Island. In 1923, the governments of Ontario and Canada appointed a three-manHERITAGE TORONTO
The Truth and Reconciliation Commission was formed in 2008 to bring public awareness of residential schools so the community can then work towards healing. Ryerson University is working towards truth and reconciliation regarding the colonial past of their namesake. They have erected a plaque beside their statue of E. Ryerson that explainshis
HERITAGE TORONTO
The magic of an idiom is that the words do not mean what they should. This saying became a bit of a joke with us, and we went on to have a brief conversation on the strange local sayings in pockets of Ontario and Toronto, as well as other places across Canada: different provinces, different backgrounds, and different experiences and histories lead us to sayings and words that have since becomeHERITAGE TORONTO
The Wallace Avenue Footbridge, also known as the Wallace Avenue Pedestrian Bridge, was built in 1907. Constructed so that local residents could easily cross the Canadian Pacific Railway tracks that ran through the neighbourhood, the style of bridge is a rare type of steel, multi-span pony truss and riveted truss bridge that was common and easy to construct in the early part of the twentiethHERITAGE TORONTO
A New Beginning: Filipino Heritage in Toronto. In the 1960s, a group of Filipino healthcare workers immigrated to Toronto in search of employment. Nearly 60 years later, Toronto’s Filipino community makes up 62% of Canada’s total Filipino population. Read the story of how the Filipino community came together to aid those around them.HERITAGE TORONTO
Opened in the late 1950s by Al Steiner, Club Bluenote was located at 372 ½ Yonge Street (its address reflected its second-storey location). Club Bluenote has been called the incubator of the Toronto Sound, a specific style of rock and roll and blues. The sound was fast-paced, scratchy, and raw: a blend of Motown influence, southernAmerican
HERITAGE TORONTO
Osgoode Hall has been the seat of the Law Society of Ontario since 1832. Named for William Osgoode, the first Chief Justice of Upper Canada, the building housed the first accredited law school in Ontario and provided a training ground for lawyers and jurists for over onehundred years.
HERITAGE TORONTO
The Town Tavern opened in 1949 on Queen Street, just east of Yonge. One of the most popular downtown theatre restaurants, the Town Tavern boasted a revolving stage with dining and live shows available every day from noon to 2 a.m. The Saphire Tavern, located at the northwest corner of Victoria and Richmond Streets, Toronto, 1972. HERITAGE TORONTOWHAT'S ONTOURSHERITAGE TORONTO AWARDSWHAT WE DOJOIN &GIVEEXPLORE & LEARN
MAP Indigenous Roots: A Living History. Discover Toronto’s Indigenous heritage, from the earliest inhabitants utilizing the area’s rich natural resources, to prominent figures who made an impact in the city, to the community that exists and prospers today.HERITAGE TORONTO
Reports of unexplained bright lights and floating objects date back thousands of years. In ancient times around the world, comets, meteors, and even certain rare cloud phenomena have been interpreted as signs from the gods or accepted as religious omens. The bulk of modern UFO sightings have occurred in the decades since the SecondWorld War.
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The Williams Treaties were signed on October 31 and November 15, 1923, by seven Anishinaabe First Nations and representatives of the governments of Canada and Ontario. Participating First Nations included the Mississaugas of Alderville, Curve Lake, Hiawatha, and Scugog Island. In 1923, the governments of Ontario and Canada appointed a three-manHERITAGE TORONTO
The Truth and Reconciliation Commission was formed in 2008 to bring public awareness of residential schools so the community can then work towards healing. Ryerson University is working towards truth and reconciliation regarding the colonial past of their namesake. They have erected a plaque beside their statue of E. Ryerson that explainshis
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The magic of an idiom is that the words do not mean what they should. This saying became a bit of a joke with us, and we went on to have a brief conversation on the strange local sayings in pockets of Ontario and Toronto, as well as other places across Canada: different provinces, different backgrounds, and different experiences and histories lead us to sayings and words that have since becomeHERITAGE TORONTO
The Wallace Avenue Footbridge, also known as the Wallace Avenue Pedestrian Bridge, was built in 1907. Constructed so that local residents could easily cross the Canadian Pacific Railway tracks that ran through the neighbourhood, the style of bridge is a rare type of steel, multi-span pony truss and riveted truss bridge that was common and easy to construct in the early part of the twentiethHERITAGE TORONTO
A New Beginning: Filipino Heritage in Toronto. In the 1960s, a group of Filipino healthcare workers immigrated to Toronto in search of employment. Nearly 60 years later, Toronto’s Filipino community makes up 62% of Canada’s total Filipino population. Read the story of how the Filipino community came together to aid those around them.HERITAGE TORONTO
Opened in the late 1950s by Al Steiner, Club Bluenote was located at 372 ½ Yonge Street (its address reflected its second-storey location). Club Bluenote has been called the incubator of the Toronto Sound, a specific style of rock and roll and blues. The sound was fast-paced, scratchy, and raw: a blend of Motown influence, southernAmerican
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Osgoode Hall has been the seat of the Law Society of Ontario since 1832. Named for William Osgoode, the first Chief Justice of Upper Canada, the building housed the first accredited law school in Ontario and provided a training ground for lawyers and jurists for over onehundred years.
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The Town Tavern opened in 1949 on Queen Street, just east of Yonge. One of the most popular downtown theatre restaurants, the Town Tavern boasted a revolving stage with dining and live shows available every day from noon to 2 a.m. The Saphire Tavern, located at the northwest corner of Victoria and Richmond Streets, Toronto, 1972.HERITAGE TORONTO
Member is a powerful word. It tells the world that you are part of something bigger, and that together we are stronger than the sum of our parts. The more members who stand with Heritage Toronto, the stronger our advocacy efforts and the louder our message that heritage is important and should be accessible to all.HERITAGE TORONTO
The shift of our 2020 tour season to a digital platform was made possible by the generous support of our Tours Program Presenting Sponsor, TD Bank and The Ready Commitment. This online tour was developed by Heritage Toronto’s Indigenous Content Coordinator, Mnawaate Gordon-Corbiere, with the support of Miziwe Biik AboriginalEmployment and
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The Distillery District is the former site of the Gooderham and Worts, one of the largest distillers in the British Empire from the 1830s to the 1890s. Today the site comprises over 40 Victorian buildings, representing the finest surviving group of 19th-century industrial buildings in Ontario. Malt House, Distillery District, 2017.HERITAGE TORONTO
A New Beginning: Filipino Heritage in Toronto. In the 1960s, a group of Filipino healthcare workers immigrated to Toronto in search of employment. Nearly 60 years later, Toronto’s Filipino community makes up 62% of Canada’s total Filipino population. Read the story of how the Filipino community came together to aid those around them.HERITAGE TORONTO
Plaques commemorate the people who lived in our homes and once walked our streets; the communities, events and streetscapes they shaped; and the world they faced and changed. The program encourages Torontonians to apply for plaques and find funding support within their communities to make them happen. Heritage Toronto provides expertise inHERITAGE TORONTO
Delivery was common starting in the mid-1800s and into the first half of the 20 th century. Milk and other goods like eggs, meat, and bread were delivered in the early morning by horse-drawn carriage around Toronto, which were used up until the 1950s in places like Toronto and in Britain and the USA. Milk men often worked for local dairiesHERITAGE TORONTO
In 1701 the Anishinaabeg drove the Haudenosaunee out of the area and came to a peace. In 1701, the Haudenosaunee and Anishinaabeg committed to peace with a treaty in the form of a wampum belt. This is a belt made of clam shell beads that visually represents an agreement. The belt depicts a dish with one spoon, the Great Lakes area is the dishHERITAGE TORONTO
The Town Tavern opened in 1949 on Queen Street, just east of Yonge. One of the most popular downtown theatre restaurants, the Town Tavern boasted a revolving stage with dining and live shows available every day from noon to 2 a.m. The Saphire Tavern, located at the northwest corner of Victoria and Richmond Streets, Toronto, 1972.HERITAGE TORONTO
Shopping District. Between 1910 and 1928, the well-known Toronto Eaton family bought land on Yonge Street around College and Carlton. They believed that the shopping district would move north from Queen St. Eaton’s planned to move all operations from their Yonge andHERITAGE TORONTO
The very existence of SickKids Hospital is due to a group of women volunteers. Recognizing the significant health risks to children in the 19th century, Elizabeth McMaster wanted to establish a children’s hospital in Toronto. She led a Ladies Committee* What We Do
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HERITAGE TORONTO CELEBRATES AND COMMEMORATES THE CITY’S RICH HERITAGE AND THE DIVERSE STORIES OF ITS PEOPLE, PLACES AND EVENTS.ABOUT US
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WAS IT WORTH THE DRIVE TO ACTON? Ontario is a province of localities, each with distinct personalities, histories, and even sayings. When examined, what do they tell us of the ties that bind Toronto to its rural neighbours?Read now
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