News   GLOBAL  |  Apr 02, 2020
 9.7K     0 
News   GLOBAL  |  Apr 01, 2020
 41K     0 
News   GLOBAL  |  Apr 01, 2020
 5.5K     0 

Then and Now for June 12.


Then. 249 Russell Hill Road. c1910. Residence of W.B. Brumell.

612249RussellHillRdc1910.jpg



Now. September 2011.

613.jpg
 
Regarding old Union Stations, see attached map images. The 1860 Tremaine indicates a “Union Depot,†and the 1862 Browne shows a “Union Railway Station.â€
 

Attachments

  • union 1860 tremaine.jpg
    union 1860 tremaine.jpg
    77.6 KB · Views: 394
  • union 1862 browne.jpg
    union 1862 browne.jpg
    96.7 KB · Views: 391
Thanks for correcting the record regarding UNION stations, wwwebster.
I wonder if anyone knows the origin of the term.
I always assumed it referred to a station where two or more rail lines merged.
 
^ I believe it actually has something to do with different railways sharing the same station (ie Grand Trunk and Canadian Pacific)
 
Another early Toronto railway station (attached).
 

Attachments

  • Northern Railway Station.jpg
    Northern Railway Station.jpg
    75.9 KB · Views: 429
Then and Now for June 13.


Then. 45 Russell Hill Road. c1910. S. Baker, Architect.

61445RussellHillRdc1910.jpg



Now. September 2011.

615.jpg
 
The privacy must be nice and I do like me a good birch tree but I think it would look better without the Amazon in front of it in the "now" picture.
 
p.s. here's the same building in 1924
f1548_s0393_it18763.jpg

Well there you go - right beside tracks!
I do agree with you that it appears to be an office rather than a "station."
The tracks would have been immediately on the other side of Front St.
OR: another erroneous caption?
 
Is someone in the neighbourhood of Yonge & Sheppard who can give us a "Now" view of this 1922 scene?
Looking east along Sheppard (across Yonge St.) - once known as the Lansing area.
That would be the old Dempsey's Hardware store on the left (N/W corner).

SheppardatYonge1922.jpg
 
Last edited:
Well there you go - right beside tracks!
I was afraid you would notice those...

According to the TPL site, the Northern Railway used:
First Union Station [1859]
William Armstrong. 1859.
Watercolour, pen & brown ink over pencil. 38.2 x 55.5 cm.
TPL (TRL) Acc. JRR 291

The Grand Trunk Railway built this frame station at the foot of York Street in 1858 overlooking the harbour. The Great Western and Northern railways were tenants. By 1871, the volume of traffic had become too much for this station. It was torn down and the second Union Station was constructed just west of it.

jrr291.jpg


So the current one is the third Union Station?
 
Is someone in the neighbourhood of Yonge & Sheppard who can give us a "Now" view of this 1922 scene?
Looking east along Sheppard (across Yonge St.) - once known as the Lansing area.
That would be the old Dempsey's Hardware store on the left (N/W corner).

SheppardatYonge1922.jpg

How about another 'then'?

s0071_it10529.jpg
 

Back
Top