We will be back Thursday, September 4th with another year of great programs!
In the meantime, feel free to visit us at our archives in the Annette Library:
Public hours are 3:00 to 5:00 p.m. Mondays [except holidays], and 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. Thursdays.
Past Event: Thursday, May 1, 2014 – Annual General Meeting 7:30 pm. Speaker, 8:15 pm.
Return Engagement:
Sandra Joyce: British Home Children
Since the launch of her debut book at Upper Canada Village on September 28, 2011, native Torontonian Sandra Joyce, has given over 90 presentations on British Home Children.
A graduate of Ryerson’s Journalism program, she became interested in the British Home Children after finding out from a passenger list at Halifax’s Pier 21, that her father had been one. He had passed away a few years prior to this revelation and Sandra, surprised that this huge part of Canadian history was unknown to her, decided this was a story that needed to be told. Her book, “The Street Arab – The Story of a British Home Child” is in its third printing.
Visit www.sandrajoyce.com
Past Event: Thursday, April 3, 2014 – Business Meeting at 7:30 pm, Speaker at 8:15 pm, Annette Library
Jim Munroe : Wonderland: A Solvitur Ambulando Mystery
An interactive audio story for the iPhone, set in Toronto’s Junction neighbourhood in 1915: The projectionist of the Wonderland, one of the city’s first movie theatres, makes a grim discovery in the aisle one morning.
Heintzman Place resident Jim Munroe will be demonstrating how his audio story works, discussing the importance of the WTJHS in researching the story, and talking about future plans for it. Jim is an indie creator in a variety of forms — post-Rapture graphic novels, political videogames, and lo-fi sci-fi feature films. He is currently the artist-in-residence at the Art Gallery of Ontario.
Past Event: Thursday, March 6, 2014 – Business Meeting at 7:30 pm, Speaker at 8:15 pm, Annette Library
Larry Sherk: One Hundred Years of Sheridan Nurseries
In May 1911 British landscape architects Howard Dunnington-Grubb and his wife Lorrie settled in Toronto to set up one of Canada’s first landscape architecture firms. In 1913 they purchased 100 acres of land in Ontario near the village of Sheridan. An ad in a British journal soon brought a young Swedish born nurseryman, Herman Stensson and his wife and four young sons to Canada to establish this new nursery in the spring of 1914. The first catalogue was released in the fall of 1914 for the 1914-1915 gardening season. Growth was rapid and by 1926 the nursery had grown to 250 acres with an extensive selection of trees, shrubs, evergreens, roses and perennials. A hundred years later and still flourishing!
Larry Sherk is Sheridan’s retired Chief Horticulturalist and for the last twelve years it’s unofficial archivist and historian. He is senior author of the book “Ornamental Shrubs in Canada” and author of “Growing Canada’s Floral Emblems.”