Rolph Clark Stone, Feb. 22, 1949
Tag Archives: Leslieville
February 21 in Leslieville’s past
Canadian Factory of William Wrigley, Jr., The American Architect, February 21, 1917
February 20th in Leslieville’s past
This week I had other things on my mind, but needed a deep distraction so I burrowed into the history of a little known builder who had a huge impact on Toronto from east to west and north to south. Meet Howard Addison Johnston and the Leslie Gardens Subdivision!
February 15th in Leslieville’s past: Featuring Boston Avenue
This is a short street, broken into two sections one south of Dundas Street East and the other a shorter section running south off Gerrard Street. It has an interesting history as it was the focus of a long-running law suite brought by John Russell against the City of Toronto which had seized the propertyContinue reading “February 15th in Leslieville’s past: Featuring Boston Avenue”
February 14th in Leslieville’s past
February 11 in Leslieville’s history: Featuring Pape Avenue
February 10 in Leslieville’s past
Featuring the Roden Bros. plant, Carlaw Avenue
February 8 in Leslieville: featuring Mallon Avenue, John Mallon & the Mallon family of butchers
Some Mallon Avenue properties, Feb. 8, 1952
February 4 in Leslieville: Heward/Holly Creek
By Joanne Doucette I hope you enjoy this short photo essay. For scholars, students and the curious, a detailed time line of Heward/Holly Creek showing the development of Carlaw Avenue follows. It is from original sources which are credited. Time Line 1874 Motion that “the new street running from King-street southward to the lake, westContinue reading “February 4 in Leslieville: Heward/Holly Creek”
February 2 in Leslieville
The Kingston Road was an Indigenous Trail, a “Moccasin Highway”, surveyed by the British military and minimally improved. It’s chief purpose was to allow troops to move quickly as an alternative to sailing on Lake Ontario. From 1815 to 1817 local settlers built the Kingston or Front Road on a new alignment, closer to theContinue reading “February 2 in Leslieville”