Mustapha
Senior Member
If you look at the wall of the lower building, on Queen Street, there are still, painted, ads for Coleman Lanterns visible.
And interesting how that ad was painted after 1941.
If you look at the wall of the lower building, on Queen Street, there are still, painted, ads for Coleman Lanterns visible.
"the Browning 9mm Hi Power automatic pistol was made here in 1944-45. " QUOTE Mustapha.
Two books:
1) FOR ACTION
by James E Hahn.
The auto biography of a Canadian industrialist.
1954.
2) WORKING at INGLIS
by David Sobel + Susan Meurer.
The Life and Death of a Canadian Factory.
1994.
Regards,
J T
I used to make extreme-makeover jokes about that one
From the McCord Museum 1860, caption by Wikimedia Commons:
Image taken from the tower of University College (University of Toronto) looking south. The building in the foreground is the Meteorological Observatory, now relocated beside University College. This image is part of a collection of stereoscopic images of the University and the surrounding area of Toronto, Canada, taken circa 1860.
I love this building and think it's a shame that it is (from the looks of it) being left to ruin. It has the potential to be a great little café (accessible to the public) or something. Student Admin? Good grief. That pumpkin is bordering on sacrilege! Lol.
The interesting thing about this one--and the historical plaque makes it a little unclear--is that the building was originally across from Convocation Hall. What happened in 1907 is that the building was dismantled and rebuilt (more or less--there were changes) across from Hart House. The plaque makes it sound like it was a completely new building, when actually quite a few elements from the old building were retained. Stewart was considered to have "saved" the old structure.
That pumpkin is bordering on sacrilege! Lol.
"Old School of Science building after 1900"