The Toronto Story

This is the story of a city and how it grew from an unknown and sparsely populated place to the sprawling, colorful metropolis that more than three million people call home.
An example of Georgian architecture and built by Upper Canada chief justice Sir William Campbell, the Campbell House Museum is the oldest remaining house from the Town Of York (which became the incorporated City of Toronto). Facing possible destruction, the house was moved 1.6 km from its original location in 1972 and now serves as a historic museum.
This is the story of a city and how it grew from an unknown and sparsely populated place to the sprawling, colorful metropolis that more than three million people call home.
For a quarter century, Glenn Cochrane, of CFTO's six o'clock news, left viewers with a smile by scouring the city for the genuine eccentrics and landmark fests that put Hogtown on the map.
Inside the Museums tells the stories of ten of Toronto's heritage properties, their history, and some of the secrets held within their historic walls. It is the perfect companion for any walk through Toronto's old world, providing wondrous context for a world often passed-by.
Mike Filey’s column “The Way We Were” first appeared in the Toronto Sunday Sun not long after the first edition of the paper hit the newsstands on September 16, 1973. Now, almost four decades later, Filey’s column has enjoyed an uninterrupted stretch as one of the newspaper’s most widely read features. In 1992 a number of his columns were reprinted in Toronto Sketches: “The Way We Were.” Since then another nine volumes have been published, each of which has attained great success.
Twenty-five fascinating images that offer a 360º panorama of the Toronto's downtown in 1856-57 mark the beginning of the use of photographs to document Toronto's growth, its achievements, its great civic works, and its citizenry. Since 1856, the City of Toronto has been commissioning photographs to document and to promote it.
This book, published to celebrate the 175th anniversary of the city's incorporation, brings together more than 100 of these images, selected by city archivists from their collection of hundreds of thousands.
Tours featuring this location.
John Goddard's Inside the Museums is the perfect book to accompany this tour of all the designated heritage sites of Toronto. Toronto, as one would guess, is a culturally alive city that has not only lived through but helped foster some of the watershed moments in Ontario history.