CBC: Toronto's First Subway 1954 TTC

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  • Опубліковано 3 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 58

  • @ClintScottFischer
    @ClintScottFischer 12 років тому +5

    I love watching these kinds of videos, wish I could go back in a time machine to each decade and look at how Toronto has changed. 2 things stood out to me in this video, 3 tokens for 25 cents - and trains were guaranteed in 2.5 minutes! Haha - less population=less trains=less waiting time. I must say, after living in Toronto all of my life - and mistakenly leaving to live and work in Kitchener/Waterloo - now coming back to Toronto - KW is like Toronto in the 40's and 50's with their transit.

  • @briansokoloski776
    @briansokoloski776 7 років тому +7

    At least the Gloucester's Subway cars had Windows you could open up this helped in the summertime

  • @johnslobodin7931
    @johnslobodin7931 12 років тому +5

    TORONTO HAS THE BEST SUBWAY SYSTEM AROUND THAT I HAVE BEEN RIDING ON. CHANGES HAVE TO COME, BECAUSE EQUIPMENT DOES WEAR OUT AFTER OPERATING FOR ALMOST 40 YEARS STRAIGHT. KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK TTC.

  • @elizabethhollowaye7494
    @elizabethhollowaye7494 4 місяці тому

    Happy 70th birthday, Toronto subway. In March of 1954, the first stretch of TTC's subway system opened, and it ran under Yonge Street from Eglinton Station in the North to Union station (not to be confused with Union Station) in the south. The opening ceremonies took place at the TTC headquarters near Davisville station, with Toronto mayor Allan Lamport and Ontario premier Leslie Frost in attendance.

  • @torontosubway
    @torontosubway 16 років тому +2

    Thanks for posting that. First time I saw inside a G-1 subway car.

  • @likemikey93
    @likemikey93 12 років тому +3

    You have to remember that Toronto wasn't anywhere near as big as it is today back then. My grandma would tell me that most of the area north of Eglinton was nothing but farmland back then.

    • @spm116
      @spm116 7 років тому +1

      Wrong. Old "North Toronto" within the old Toronto city limits, up to the Glen Echo loop (just before you go down the hill to York Mills Rd., was mostly built up area by the 1940s. North York was building up quite steadily in the 1950s, but there was still some farmland there into the 1960s. I was around back then, so I certainly know what I'm talking about..

  • @jayvonnoelsmith8445
    @jayvonnoelsmith8445 Рік тому +1

    TTC is doing a good job toronto subway is amazing

  • @mwkmn
    @mwkmn 17 років тому +1

    Thanks for sharing this great video. It is amazing how many of what you see in this video is still intact today, very well in use.

  • @Erle_The_Pearl
    @Erle_The_Pearl 16 років тому +1

    Great Footage I love the way he keeps saying Really! Like No one watching the news footage would ever believe it was real.

  • @camperjohn6464
    @camperjohn6464 13 років тому +2

    Later, the TTC was offering $1,000 to anyone that had a transfer from the opening day.

  • @GlitzPianoman
    @GlitzPianoman 12 років тому +2

    I actually regularly took the subway from Wellesley to Union when I lived in that area a few years ago, especially if I had a lot of things to take with me on the GO Train.

  • @argopunk
    @argopunk 15 років тому +3

    The only station with the original glass tile is Eglinton. Some, like Dundas, College, and Union, are horrifyingly ugly since their '70s and 80s era renos. I miss the old red cars and their open windows.

  • @noahrp777
    @noahrp777 11 років тому +5

    If only tokens today were 3 for 25¢

  • @staypuft42
    @staypuft42  13 років тому +1

    That is the Bloor station. The video shows the surface streetcar platforms which, until the Bloor subway line opened, were located just east of Yonge street

  • @TrainmasterCurt
    @TrainmasterCurt 14 років тому +2

    The old Peter Witt's are in this!!

  • @HurricaneNWG
    @HurricaneNWG 13 років тому +2

    @breakonthrough72 of course, YUS started with 12 stops and grew as time passed, and of course sheppard is only new, but will likely expand as time goes on, so simply calling it something like a "waste of money" or being "useless" is completely nonsense when you look at what it may be in the future.

  • @louisea9607
    @louisea9607 9 років тому +1

    Wow, very nice.

  • @streetcarjay
    @streetcarjay 14 років тому +1

    It was removed in 1966 for the opening of the Bloor/Danforth Subway between Keele and Woodbine.

  • @SeanSudolD
    @SeanSudolD 16 років тому +1

    Perhaps. But with today's prices, I don't know many reasons to ride from Bloor to Wellesley unless you have a pass. So that was how the infamous transfer machine worked that I heard about. I have never actually seen it in use. And of course, it was before my time.

  • @mistahimaskwa
    @mistahimaskwa 16 років тому +2

    Aw...tokens. 3 for 25c
    Great video!

  • @djtoomuch230
    @djtoomuch230 9 років тому +3

    TheOntarioguy666 soon to be Sheppard-Yonge-Don Mills Kipling-Mcowan and Finch to Vaughan Metropolitain Centre!
    It's expanding AND FAST!

  • @kirubeltedros1467
    @kirubeltedros1467 6 років тому +3

    I dont think so line 4 is still yousful for going to chukuy chesse for my birthday

  • @briansokoloski776
    @briansokoloski776 7 років тому +1

    TTC Is the Best Subway system in Canada all the original Subway cars did a good job on moving quickly

  • @FreedomLovingLoyalist
    @FreedomLovingLoyalist 4 роки тому

    their used to be another documentary on this subway but i can't find it and also its in color

  • @glen6945
    @glen6945 7 років тому +2

    damn nice

  • @CaptainFeathersword
    @CaptainFeathersword 4 роки тому

    I wish the TTC would bring back the "WAY OUT" 5:10 signs.

  • @robpineault5354
    @robpineault5354 3 роки тому

    Six gloucester cars burned down in March 1963. They were shipped by rail to hillcrest for examination. They couldnt be fixed and were scrapped october 1963,

  • @noahrp777
    @noahrp777 11 років тому +3

    But Toronto have like the first subway systems before HKG or other countries

  • @sheltv100
    @sheltv100 11 років тому +4

    So what? These major cities in Asia have beat the hell out of Toronto's subway system. I am from Toronto myself and I have been to all these cities I mentioned. London and New York had subways before Toronto, but the Asian subway systems and even Montreal's subway system are more technically advanced, and are able to reach vast areas in their urban communities way hell of a lot better than Toronto.

    • @mtlicq
      @mtlicq 5 років тому

      Beijing subway is awesome ! Our Toronto subway is very embarrassing compared to it. However, they have a totalitarian government that doesn't change plans so much due to elections, and they have 1.4 Billion people to tax to pay for it, and they cannot vote against the subway plans for that one city.

  • @EvanHyland
    @EvanHyland 13 років тому +2

    at 6:42 where was this type of station ?

    • @ppolow
      @ppolow 5 років тому

      Rosedale I believe

  • @cinthia9602
    @cinthia9602 7 років тому +1

    Neat :D

  • @jackiechan511
    @jackiechan511 13 років тому +2

    @300582228 Not unless you're willing to advocate a price ceiling or a ban on inflation. At the rate we're going, in 50 years, each token will cost $10 each. What's the point in inflation if every other wages and prices will go up simultaneously.

  • @sheltv100
    @sheltv100 11 років тому +6

    You go that right, the Sheppard line is so useless that they should have used all that money to build a new line under Queen Street in downtown Toronto.

    • @brianreed31
      @brianreed31 6 років тому +1

      sheltv100 build the Sheppard the full way

    • @ebrxh2721
      @ebrxh2721 6 років тому +1

      Sheppard Line is getting much busier now, 4 years later.

    • @mrrobot5963
      @mrrobot5963 5 років тому

      They will with the relief line

  • @PatrickTomaszewski10
    @PatrickTomaszewski10 12 років тому +1

    Actually BOB RAE CUT Funding from underneath the TTC HUGE when he became Premier of Ontario. The federal government also "Downloaded" transit funding in the early 90's under Finance minister Paul Martin.

  • @marcthibault1649
    @marcthibault1649 3 роки тому

    C est Toronto la première ville avoir eu le métro et en deuxième ville c est Montréal et en troisième c est Vancouver

  • @sheltv100
    @sheltv100 11 років тому +2

    Toronto subway the best? No way. I have been to Hong Kong, Tokyo, Seoul, London, and Osaka, and the subways and rapid transit system in these cities beats the hell out of Toronto!

    • @mrrobot5963
      @mrrobot5963 5 років тому

      It was at the time the best but politicians these days

  • @Will87
    @Will87 13 років тому +1

    @breakonthrough72 not in 1954

  • @melsvids73
    @melsvids73 14 років тому +1

    TTC still uses tokens! haha

    • @mrrobot5963
      @mrrobot5963 5 років тому

      Who cares it's still better than PRESTO!

  • @jjbrien
    @jjbrien 15 років тому +1

    king got some new seats about 10 years ago

  • @glen6945
    @glen6945 2 роки тому

    the red rocket arrives in toronto

  • @CaptainFeathersword
    @CaptainFeathersword 4 роки тому

    Such a cheesy nonsensical commentary....I felt 5 years old listening lol.

  • @WestboundPromo416
    @WestboundPromo416 4 роки тому

    such a trash subway line so far behind from new york or london

  • @Neville6000
    @Neville6000 12 років тому

    So what? Big deal.

  • @glen6945
    @glen6945 5 місяців тому

    OOOHHHHYES

  • @fartamplifer
    @fartamplifer 13 років тому +1

    $59 million dollars? The Sheppard line, which has 5 stations and was abuilt almost 50 years later, cost just over $1 billion to build. : (

    • @TorontoTransitFan
      @TorontoTransitFan 6 років тому

      fartamplifer that’s because when they were building the subway they didn’t use the borrowing machine which would cost heavily, while the Sheppard subway used the borrowing machine.

    • @ppolow
      @ppolow 6 років тому

      According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics consumer price index, prices in 2017 are 811.23% higher than prices in 1954. The dollar experienced an average inflation rate of 3.57% per year. So basiccally in other words, $59,000,000 in 1954 is equivalent in purchasing power to $537,623,791.82 in 2017, a difference of $478,623,791.82 over 63 years.The 1954 inflation rate was 0.75% unlike the inflation rate in 2017 was 2.13%. So, ya.