NomoreaTorontonian
Active Member
The building at King and Berkeley, NE corner has a Heritage Toronto plaque saying it was originally a pharmacy.
Mitchell's Directory of 1864 has a tavern run by Hugh Taylor on that corner.
The building at King and Berkeley, NE corner has a Heritage Toronto plaque saying it was originally a pharmacy.
Houses extended all the way to the lake in that area until the Gardiner was built.
There's not much left by the time the picture in this link was taken, but it's no less interesting.
http://www.bricoleurbanism.org/whimsicality/gardiners-no-innocent/
There's not much left by the time the picture in this link was taken, but it's no less interesting.
http://www.bricoleurbanism.org/whimsicality/gardiners-no-innocent/
More on 'Lost' Parkdale... here's a series of equally well done Then and Now style photo illustrated articles:
http://rightinniagara.blogspot.com/2009/03/toronto-then-and-now-old-parkdale.html
The last two pictures on this lost webpage also show what one of the streets used to look like
http://web.archive.org/web/20070618063217/www.parkdale.tv/street.html
Then: Circa 1960??
I don't think that little flapper by the light post would have been afraid of anything.
Mitchell's Directory of 1864 has a tavern run by Hugh Taylor on that corner.
The plaque says that the building dates from 1859 when it housed a druggist and tavern. Now there's a good combination!
With a bit further investigation I think I have now found the original family who anonymously found their way on to the plaque on the house at King and Berkeley.
In Caverhill's Directory (1859-60) John Henry lives at 53 Berkeley Street and he is a porter. The census says Henry is 41--the eldest of 3 sons living at home with their widowed mother. The occupations are porter, labourer and storekeeper. I can just about conjure up a store that sold anything and everything from patent medicines to alcoholic beverages.
Some time between the census and Mitchell's directory of 1863-64, they sold out to Hugh Taylor who made the store into a tavern. Either the mother died or one of them got married and the Henry family's nice little enterprise disappeared.
I hope this premise is as good as our thoughts about the flapper at the Ex in 1929.
September 11 addition.
Yonge. Looking SE from just S of Gerrard.
Then: Circa 1980?
Now: July 2009.