zanthope
New Member
Great pics.
I love the Studebaker Sales and Service sign.
I remember looking at that sign and wondering what it was, and how to pronounce it.
Great pics.
I love the Studebaker Sales and Service sign.
------ Its been a while since I had a look at this thread. Keep telling stories Zanthorpe always like to hear about the area back in the day . I went to Midland Ave Collegiate myself , and before that Norman Cook. All of us could write a book of short stories about our own neighborhoods.Hello again ... more stuff from the fifties. The apartment building in that Midland/Eglinton photo was built when I was 9 years old, in 1958 during the spring and summer. When I felt ambitious during the no-school summer months of construction, I could go over there and hang around with the workers who would usually send me for cold sodas. I would gather up as many empty returnable bottles as I could carry in a bag or box, take the drink orders and change and hump the load to the Highway Grocery, or possibly Groceteria, which was located further east on Eglinton about exactly halfway to the Knob Hill Plaza, on the south side of Eglinton. I'd hump the sodas back, and the workers gave me the left-over change or the valuable empty bottles as a reward! That was my first ever "job."
The Grocery/Groceteria sat there in maybe a one acre lot pretty much all by itself, as I recall, with a small gravel parking lot in front. It seemed totally ancient to me, very old-timey, small in comparison to modern stores, maybe 2000 square feet or so. It stocked some refrigerated food, canned goods, candy, ice cream, some hardware items like nails and screws and such, and I think I remember a small display of work clothing. It smelt fabulous! My mother and grandmother would walk down there a couple of times a week for odds & ends for dinner. The bulk of our shopping was done at the Dominion by the Golden Mile.
More later
That's an amazing and touching story.
Is the house still be occupied?
How such a structure could remain untouched in that area for so many years is the stuff of fiction.
Could this be the cheapest 'real estate' in Toronto today?
Hello again everyone. I made the trip to Toronto and stayed a couple of days and loved every second of it. I hadn't been there since 2002 and it certainly has changed immensely since then. I was accidentally on hand for the Cody Simpson performance on Dundas Square Thursday evening, and although I really don't appreciate "bubble-gum" music very much I found him to be quite good, and the energy of the huge young audience was magical.
In post 223 of this thread, I told of a poor kid that lived on Commonwealth who unfortunately lived in a shacky sort of a home with an outhouse out back that we kids enjoyed often while also somewhat enjoying his embarrassment of its existence. I toured Scarborough last Wednesday, drove up Commonwealth just for curiosity, and lo and behold, their "house" is still standing at number 114, looking much the same as it was then, abandoned in a totally incongruous setting among beautiful and expensive newer homes. Pics are attached. The outhouse is gone, residents are long gone, but the shacky-ness remains.
View attachment 17379View attachment 17380
A photo for you from 1974, lrookies
Wow...that is interesting to me. My best friend lived right across the street at 113 Commonwealth. They lived there in 1972 to about 1974, if my memory serves me right. Their house (a rental) was torn down a while back and a new house was built. While my friend lived there, the house next door was put on stilts to rebuild the basement. The work got delayed and everyone on the street was complaining to the building inspectors about the possibility of the house collapsing.
Speaking of early, minimal housing in Scarborough, I recall that some Scarborough residents who built their own homes (c.1940s) often began with the basement only. It was a common sight to discover many pioneers (on Scarborough's early streets) who lived in their 'basement-only' properties until they could afford to construct the walls and roof - often after a delay of many years.
I've searched the web for a photographic record of these unique structures without success. Does anyone else remember these "basement-only" homes and know of any visual record?
A photo for you from 1974, lrookies
I guess that's just about the tail end for the Supertest brand.