The history of Toronto's shoreline

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  • Опубліковано 17 чер 2021
  • Old Toronto Series & Bosley Real Estate present: The history of Toronto's Shoreline.
    www.oldtorontoseries.com
    www.bosleyrealestate.com
    Researched, hosted, filmed by Morgan Cameron Ross

КОМЕНТАРІ • 57

  • @QuestforaMeaningfulLife
    @QuestforaMeaningfulLife 3 роки тому +25

    Best Toronto history content on youtube. Thank you for doing this.

    • @OldTorontoSeries
      @OldTorontoSeries  3 роки тому

      Glad you enjoy it!

    • @blairwilliams136
      @blairwilliams136 3 роки тому +1

      I completely agree , I feel like this show should be featured on TVO on Sunday mornings or something.

  • @TalD
    @TalD 3 роки тому +9

    It would be fantastic to see a museum somewhere on the waterfront to showcase items from around the city but also anything interesting developers have dug up or found from the harbourfront as well. I've heard rumours for years the city is looking into it, and that they have many items in storage. They should put it on display here!

  • @johnpatterson4272
    @johnpatterson4272 Рік тому +4

    Front St. was the original shoreline historically, as there is a noticeable decline on the roadway going southbound on York, Bay, Yonge and Parliament Sts. The Island airport now deserves a 'jet' runway with direct routes across Canada and the US, maybe the UK. Turn the old Ontario Place into a state-of-the-art amusement park, with its own radio and TV stations, camping ground, hotels and refurb the Budweiser Stage. I'm thinking a Toronto Great Lakes Cruise Lines terminal where the old Rochester Hydrofoil Port still is. Lots of possibilities.

  • @mgo2372
    @mgo2372 3 роки тому +7

    Agreed! Take a look at the map. From 1834 to 1858 - 1860- In a 24 year the city more than doubled in size with magnificent buildings. It exponential growth to 1860. Who were these people who lived here that could build so quickly. Simply amazing!

  • @Sean-rm1in
    @Sean-rm1in 3 роки тому +8

    The effort you put into each video you make is incredible

  • @RyanFlyinHigh
    @RyanFlyinHigh 3 роки тому +4

    These videos are phenomenal. I absolutely love them. Thanks so much for producing them. Haven't lived there in 4 years now but every time I go back, I feel at home.

  • @cinthia9602
    @cinthia9602 2 роки тому +2

    Great video! I absolutely love the waterfront. It is my favourite part of Toronto!

  • @georgejetson1025
    @georgejetson1025 2 роки тому +3

    Dude , your channel is damn interesting !
    Well researched and presented . Your subscriber count should be much higher.
    Subscribed

  • @dougiebee8504
    @dougiebee8504 2 роки тому +3

    Wow. This is incredible.

  • @murrayscott3513
    @murrayscott3513 Рік тому

    Interesting series. Thanks for sharing. Cheers!

  • @captfrank3785
    @captfrank3785 2 роки тому +1

    Excellent.....Bravo.

  • @samjones1954
    @samjones1954 3 роки тому +6

    once again, excellent. I still want to know if there really is a tunnel from castle loma to the harbour

    • @RyanFlyinHigh
      @RyanFlyinHigh 3 роки тому

      That would be cool to find out about!

    • @TheXenProject
      @TheXenProject 3 роки тому +2

      no but there is a tunnel from Casa Loma to, I believe, the Spadina (spa-dee-nah) house... or something nearby Casa Loma

  • @JustFluffyQuiltingYarnCrafts

    Great information. Love Toronto. ❤

  • @andrew_91
    @andrew_91 Рік тому +1

    Thank you sir! amazing work!!!!

  • @stewartgillis4851
    @stewartgillis4851 2 роки тому +1

    Small point but that man in the skiff near the HCB was not paddling.He was ROWING . The history of the sport and pastime of rowing along the Toronto lakeshore might be a worthy topic on its own in this excellent series.

    • @davegreenlaw5654
      @davegreenlaw5654 Рік тому

      Agreed. Especially when you consider that our CFL football team originated from a rowing club.

  • @coplini
    @coplini 3 роки тому +2

    Great stuff! Wwould be nice if you tied some more people into these vids

  • @dmytroshemshur3709
    @dmytroshemshur3709 3 роки тому +2

    Great content

  • @cinthia9602
    @cinthia9602 2 роки тому +3

    How stable can the buildings south of the commission building be then? Just a thought

  • @andrewseguin9443
    @andrewseguin9443 3 роки тому +7

    I’ve always felt the eastern waterfront has been such a wasted opportunity. Wouldn’t parks or condos be better than mounds of dirt and weird old factories

    • @TheXenProject
      @TheXenProject 3 роки тому

      There's plenty of plans for the portlands, but for the most part it has become the home of Hollywood North

  • @drlatham22
    @drlatham22 3 роки тому +3

    Most people are not aware of the amount of alteration has occurred to the land along the harbor. Am I correct in understanding that Fort York was originally at the edge of the lake until the fill and extension of land was done?

    • @TheXenProject
      @TheXenProject 3 роки тому

      Not sure if it was still on the shoreline in 1911, but the southern wall was in the 1800s.
      www.fortyork.ca/resources/fort-york-maps.html

  • @Ferda1964
    @Ferda1964 4 місяці тому +1

    Great show.Does anybody know why the spelling on the TO Harbor Commission building bears US spelling?

  • @davegreenlaw5654
    @davegreenlaw5654 Рік тому +1

    You missed the chance to talk about the whale bones found when they excavated for the Skydome. I guess that could also fill an entire video by itself.

  • @karihartikainen2147
    @karihartikainen2147 4 місяці тому

    Why no mention of the promenade? The original intent of Toronto's waterfront was to be for the people. Either 100 feet or metres (likely feet), of a strip of land south of front Street was to be forever saved for the public's use of the lake. The allure of trains and the corporations/trusts that ran and built them, ultimately won the use. The logistics of the location, made converting the land for use by railroads and accompanying industries made great value and sense.
    Sourcing of the fact, likely came from the book: 'the historical atlas of Toronto's'.

  • @sukhbirgrewal2992
    @sukhbirgrewal2992 2 роки тому +1

    Toronto's shoreline is an example of how not to develop a lakefront. Anyone who says otherwise, likely hasn't lived in a large city which has done it properly. Chicago is almost identical to Toronto in size and geographic layout, yet is a prime example of how the lakeshore can be developed to be enjoyed by the residents of the city. It's a shame we don't have politicians in this city that care

    • @BasementEngineer
      @BasementEngineer 7 місяців тому

      I don't think that Chicago is a good axample for any city to follow!

  • @nameredacted1979
    @nameredacted1979 Рік тому +1

    Yes, SkyDome! 👏🙌👏🙌

  • @alessandrapirelli7040
    @alessandrapirelli7040 5 місяців тому

    Outstanding presentation! ex-pat

  • @RB-im5mk
    @RB-im5mk 2 місяці тому

    Sadly, when I was younger you could see the lake from Front Street; it's now all covered by buildings and bridges.

  • @2.5chainz
    @2.5chainz 2 роки тому +3

    it’s soooo disappointing they made Toronto’s waterfront so ugly. I look at places like Chicago to reminisce about what we could’ve had

  • @Alsatiagent
    @Alsatiagent Рік тому

    A common sight in the 1970's was that of large slicks of dead fish (smelt, I think). There was always one sorry and doomed individual still desperately gasping for air at the surface.

  • @TheSofaSessions
    @TheSofaSessions 3 роки тому +2

    Mmmmm you can almost smell the dead horses on a warm morning! Jks :P

    • @OldTorontoSeries
      @OldTorontoSeries  3 роки тому +1

      not an ideal smell

    • @travisazzopardi5383
      @travisazzopardi5383 3 роки тому +1

      I grew up in the Junction and it smelled like dead animals all year round. But much much worse in the summer. Lol!

    • @samjones1954
      @samjones1954 3 роки тому

      @@travisazzopardi5383 just a thought... where not the slaughter yards located there?

  • @thet3504
    @thet3504 3 місяці тому

    So everything south of Harbour Street is NOT indigenious lands..

  • @annmarsolais1171
    @annmarsolais1171 2 місяці тому

    When I was a child , 50ies/ 60ies, l remember the garbage trucks would line up to dump on the shoreline where the bulldozers would spread it all out

  • @charlesrb3898
    @charlesrb3898 Рік тому +1

    Please drop the background music as it is distracting.

  • @kermitfrog593
    @kermitfrog593 2 роки тому +5

    Not much you can do about the waterfront. You wouldn't know Toronto had a lake unless you were right by the shore - too many ugly buildings cover the view, and the water is polluted you can't go in it. Looked better in the eighties.

    • @johnandrews3568
      @johnandrews3568 Рік тому +2

      My parents told me of the shit storm over the Gardiner and how it would cut the city off from the lake (even though industry and politics did that 100 years before).... but the forest of condo towers has destroyed the waterfront with unaffordable ugly glass monoliths

  • @christrudell7966
    @christrudell7966 3 місяці тому

    Too many spongies now

  • @leddred2078
    @leddred2078 3 роки тому

    With Core Development Group limited a billion dollar company going to spend billions on 4000 or more residential detached homes in Toronto ( that's almost same number of under 450000 single detached residential homes available for sale in the entire Edmonton Alberta area.) More companies are starting to look at doing this as well. And then corporate companies will own them all and plan to rent top and bottom for upto 3000 a month. There will be no residential single detached homes for sale in Canada as they will be held by big multi billion dollar companies. More billion dollar companies and investors will soon follow as well. There will be no jobs for realtors and no where for people to afford to live. In the United States hedge funds are buying whole neighborhoods, President Biden is passing legislation to stop - it will PM Trudeau do the same?