adma
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Keep in mind that CF Jefferies and the Jolly Miller aren't the only survivors: the Auberge Du Pommier repurposed an existing house, too...
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Keep in mind that CF Jefferies and the Jolly Miller aren't the only survivors: the Auberge Du Pommier repurposed an existing house, too...
I had great aunts and uncles who grew up on Roselawn who used to walk to the Miller on Saturday nights for their "imbibing" but I also had friends who used to live in the house(s)? that became the Auberge. The first time I saw it converted I was "really?". Maybe its just because I grew up there and the school house is long gone but the area has something special about it still - it's just so displaced from the rest of the city in character. It has this "Mayberry" quality about it - and I moved around a little bit growing up...
Keep in mind that CF Jefferies and the Jolly Miller aren't the only survivors: the Auberge Du Pommier repurposed an existing house, too...
I had great aunts and uncles who grew up on Roselawn who used to walk to the Miller on Saturday nights for their "imbibing" but I also had friends who used to live in the house(s)? that became the Auberge. The first time I saw it converted I was "really?". Maybe its just because I grew up there and the school house is long gone but the area has something special about it still - it's just so displaced from the rest of the city in character. It has this "Mayberry" quality about it - and I moved around a little bit growing up...
I had great aunts and uncles who grew up on Roselawn who used to walk to the Miller on Saturday nights for their "imbibing" but I also had friends who used to live in the house(s)? that became the Auberge. The first time I saw it converted I was "really?". Maybe its just because I grew up there and the school house is long gone but the area has something special about it still - it's just so displaced from the rest of the city in character. It has this "Mayberry" quality about it - and I moved around a little bit growing up...
The {Jolly} Miller through the ages
That's a really astonishing range of photos and little changes every time. The disappearance of trees, the widening of Yonge, the phone booth that came and went, the side door that was bricked up, the adjacent building that vanished, the style of the cladding... people probably hardly noticed it while it was all going on but seeing it laid out here all in one shot really makes an impression. Bravo, Anna.
The {Jolly} Miller through the ages