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Miscellany Toronto Photographs: Then and Now

Another example of "infill" on Sherbourne, further south:

439 Sherbourne (centre of 1910 map with a number "5" underneath):

That picture refers to Fudger House, which was named after H.H. Fudger, an executive with Simpsons. "Mr. Fudger had set up a foundation and purchased a large mansion on Sherbourne St. in Toronto. Sherbourne House Club was to be a home away from home for those young women, mostly from rural areas, whose work helped to advance the fortunes of the Company."
http://www.hbc.com/hbcheritage/history/people/builders/fudger.asp

That building was torn down and a long-term care facility built, which is just north of those two apartment buildings.
http://www.toronto.ca/ltc/fudger.htm
 
thedeepend, this reminds me that the practice of some business owners of claiming descendance from a long unbroken line of heritage is pushed a bit sometimes for marketing. Indian Motorcycles comes to mind.



Thanks Stumack. What's the rear diff ratio on a 64 Comet then? :)



I love aerials. Really lets you see the Big Picture.







November 7 addition.

Then: 1909? Even the person writing the caption of the old photo is guessing. Spadina looking N from the then lake, as landfill operations are going on in a big way. By horse and wagon.

fo1244_f1244_it7168.jpg


Now: October 2009. Note that the warehouse on the right is till there. On the left of the picture, Loretto Abbey looms like a ghost, and that's what it is, as it's long gone.

DSC_0005.jpg

That's a remarkable evolution.
 
That picture refers to Fudger House, which was named after H.H. Fudger, an executive with Simpsons. "Mr. Fudger had set up a foundation and purchased a large mansion on Sherbourne St. in Toronto. Sherbourne House Club was to be a home away from home for those young women, mostly from rural areas, whose work helped to advance the fortunes of the Company."
http://www.hbc.com/hbcheritage/history/people/builders/fudger.asp

That building was torn down and a long-term care facility built, which is just north of those two apartment buildings.
http://www.toronto.ca/ltc/fudger.htm

You're right, Anna. But the house referred to in your quote is the one in the photograph, also labelled Senator Cox's house. The Society Blue Book lists a Hon. George A. Cox residing at 439 Sherbourne which matches the Goad map, both in building outline and address. My mistake in using the photos of the two apartment buildings outlines a shortcoming in Google Streetview, namely that the addresses (at least on this stretch of Sherbourne) only show the even street numbers and imply that 439 is further south. For accuracy, I should have double-checked with TO Maps which correctly identified the location of 439.

439sherbournemap.jpg
sherbournemap-1-1-1.jpg
 
More interesting Then and Now pics of Toronto...

Mustapha: 11/5 That Bay Street Bus Terminal pic is interesting-with that preserved stained glass Gray Coach Lines Limited logo. it has changed inside-but not that much!

11/6 King/Bathurst pics-The autos mentioned are correctly described as far as I know...

11/6 - Build Up's skyline pics are quite interesting to me-I visited Toronto for the first time in 1979. These pics note building changes since then well...

LI MIKE
 
That's a remarkable evolution.

It certainly is, isn't it?. The date spread between old and new in this pair of pictures is a little more than usual; 100 years in this case. Dirt roads, not a car in sight, a wharf that looks like it's dropped in from cottage country make for a picture that doesn't evoke the usual sense of urban building loss but the loss of a way of life. Even the worker in a suit and hat wielding a shovel ... one imagines that a manual labourer back then still wanted to look respectable.







November 8 addition.



Then: October 9, 1903. The building on the right is the City Dairy Stables, later the Borden Building. The street no longer exists; it's now a walkway between various University of Toronto buildings.

ser376_fl0003_s0376_fl0003_it0092.jpg


I can't get in the same position as the original photographer did - there was a building right behind me when I tried to get into the original position to take the 'Now' picture. The Borden building is still there; all freshened up and looking mighty nice.

Now: October 2009.

DSC_0011.jpg
 
City Dairy ice cream

My father worked in the City Dairy building during the 1940s.
Occasionally he took me to work with him on weekends and it was always a thrill to be invited into the huge freezer for free ice cream.
 
Then: October 9, 1903. The building on the right is the City Dairy Stables, later the Borden Building. The street no longer exists; it's now a walkway between various University of Toronto buildings.

Google Streetview managed to cover this 'street':confused:
 
The street in question is Bancroft Street, (formerly Orchard Street) closed by U of T when they built the Earth Sciences Building in the mid-80's. Interesting to note that the Romanesque-Revival home that stood on the NW corner of Huron and Bancroft was moved westerly in order to preserve it.

1910:
spadinacircle-1.jpg
Today:
bancroft.jpg
 
They made Bancroft Avenue into some sort of early New Urban pedestrian street, not just a walkway. Cars can enter, but pedestrians have the right of way. It's not a connection for cars to Spadina though.
 
November 9 addition.



Then: Queen West. South side between Peter and Spadina. June 1959. Barney's restaurant lasted until quite recently. Anyone eat there?


ser372_ss0100_s0372_ss0100_it0390.jpg



Now: September 2009. Barney's successor, the BBQ restaurant, is quite nice. Large servings - one dinner is big enough for a light dinner for two, fast food prices, friendly family ownership. The dishes have a Korean BBQ slant, quite tasty.

The Pepsi sign in the 'Then' picture... its base coat is still there.

DSC_0008.jpg
 
Bancroft is certainly a gem in this city.
 
Once, the road to heaven.

Seminary survives 96 years.
 

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I know we've seen this view a million time, but this one by William Notman, 1897, is particularly evocative. The pedestrian makes the background almost seem like an operatic stage set.

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As is this one, also by Notman, with the two ladies on the sidewalk to the right:

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In The Way Of Progress

The title says it all!
 

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Queen West between Peter and Spadina...11/9

Mustapha: Another good comparison pic here...I like that new Ford Fairlane or Mercury product parked in the center with a Chevy right behind...those 50s era pics can be quite interesting...LI MIKE
 

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