Past Event: October 4, 2012: Imagining Toronto

Thursday, October 4th, Annette Library, Lower Level, Committee Room 1:

7:30 PM – Business Meeting

8:30 PMImagining Toronto

Imagining Toronto is a study of how the city has been described and revealed in and through literature.  Author Amy Lavender Harris, who teaches in the Department of Geography at York University, discusses the study.  Imagining Toronto (Mansfield Presss, 2010) was shortlisted for the Gabrielle Roy Prize in Canadian Literary Criticism and won the Award of Merit, the highest honour given to a book at the 2011 Heritage Toronto Awards.  More about Imagining Toronto here.

 

Past Event: September 6 Meeting: Buster Keaton Double Bill

Thursday, September 6, Annette Library, Lower Level, Committee Room 1:

7:30 PM – Business Meeting

8:00 PM – Buster Keaton Double Bill:  Bring your own popcorn! (note early start)

The Railrodder is a 1965 short comedy film released by the National Film Board of Canada,  starring Buster Keaton in one of his final film roles.  A 25 minute comedic travelogue of Canada, it was also his last silent film as it contains no dialogue and all sound effects are overdubbed.  Concurrent with the production of this film, the National Film Board produced a documentary entitled Buster Keaton Rides Again which combines behind-the-scenes footage of the making of The Railrodder, including sequences showing Keaton and the director discussing (and occasionally arguing over) gags in the film, with retrospective footage of Keaton’s Hollywood career.  Running time of 55 minutes.

WTJHS leads successful Heritage Toronto walking tour

On a hot and sunny Sunday, June 10,  the inaugural James Ellis Heritage Toronto Walk took place in the Junction.  Three guides, including the Society’s Neil Ross and David Wencer,  along with architectural enthusiast Christopher Sears, led sections of the large crowd.  Highlights included our Annette Library, and  the Junction Shul, Congregation Knesseth Israel, both designed by Junction architect James Ellis.  Starting at Keele and Dundas, the guides spent a couple of hours illuminating Junction public and domestic architecture of the 1800s and 1900s on Annette, High Park and Dundas, ending with an inside tour of the Junction Shul.  See more pictures and tour information on the Ellis Tour Webpage.

Past Event: James Ellis: Architect of the Junction – Walking Tour

James Ellis was the premier architect of the Junction. His work defined the railway town: its schools, houses of worship, homes and civic buildings.  Discover the work of this remarkable architect, reflecting the social fabric of the Junction as we visit buildings he designed, knew, and frequented.

Date: Sunday, June 10, 2012

Time: 1:30 PM

Location: Starts at Bank of Montreal parking lot, SW corner of Keele St. and Dundas St.

Finishes at: Junction Shul, Congregation Knesseth Israel, 56 Maria Street.

Duration: Approximately 2 hours

MORE DETAILS at the walk website

A Heritage Toronto Walk, made possible in part by Congregation Knesseth Israel, and funded by the Ontario Trillium Foundation

The Route