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.
Toronto's Hockey Hall of Fame is a iconic stop for both sports lovers and architectural buffs alike. Originally established in Kingston back in 1943, it moved to Toronto in 1958. Its first permanent location was at the Canadian National Exhibition, but was relocated to a former Bank of Montreal building in downtown Toronto.
The Bank of Montreal building's architecture is well-known in Toronto, and has been featured in Terry Murray's Faces on Places for its exerior sculptures. In particular, the statue of Hermes holding up one of the building's walls.
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.
Faces on Places takes us up into the the sky to the fascinating world of creatures and icons that watch over Toronto and its inhabitants. Terry Murray invites readers to delve into the little-know and often overlooked grotesque world of gargoyles and cherubs and caricuatures that adorn some of Toronto's most prominent buildings.
In Becoming Modern in Toronto, Keith Walden shows how the Toronto Industrial Exhibition, from its founding in 1879 to 1903 (when it was renamed the Canadian National Exhibition), influenced the shaping and ordering of the emerging urban culture. Unlike other studies of its kind, it fully integrates experiences on and off the fairground by viewing the fair as a microcosm of developing structures in the city and surrounding rural areas.
Ontario Boys explores the preoccupation with boyhood in Ontario during the immediate postwar period, 1945–1960. It argues that a traditional version of boyhood was being rejuvenated in response to a population fraught with uncertainty, and suffering from insecurity, instability, and gender anxiety brought on by depression-era and wartime disruptions in marital, familial, and labour relations, as well as mass migration, rapid postwar economic changes, the emergence of the Cold War, and the looming threat of atomic annihilation.
Sportswriters and broadcasters in this country agree that Bobbie Rosenfeld may be Canada's greatest female athlete of the twentieth century.
Tours featuring this location.
Our By The Book tour series allows you to navigate all the sites featured in one of our great Ontario books. What better way to bring a book into your world? Walk the streets, try to see a landmark in the context it's been written.