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The club played host to a tournament in 1881 (for gentlemen's singles) that over time became the Canadian Open tennis championship, now known as the National Bank Open. [3] The location of the club moved to Rosedale in 1913. [4] The surface for the courts was red clay. The Toronto Lawn Tennis Club also played host to the first Davis Cup tie ...
The CLTA began organizing the Canadian Championships at the Toronto Lawn Tennis Club, starting with the 1890 tournament. [3] They adopted the rules of the All England Lawn Tennis Club, the club which hosts Wimbledon. [4] [5] Beginning in 1894, the CLTA began organizing a junior championship for boys 18 years old and under. [6] [7]
PF&R employs over 4,000 permanent and temporary full-time and part-time, unionized and non-unionized staff, and is one of the city's largest services. [2] [3] [4] The division is led by a general manager, presently Janie Romoff, and is organizationally part of the city's Community and Social Services cluster.
The hockey club won its first championship in 1918 as the Toronto Hockey Club (informally the Toronto Arenas), whereas its second championships (in 1922) was won when the club was named the Toronto St. Patricks. All subsequent championships won by the club were awarded when the club was named the Toronto Maple Leafs. 13 Stanley Cups
The event was played on clay until it was switched permanently to hard courts in 1979. Up to the end of the 1980 Canadian Open, both the men's and women's tournaments were played as a single combined tournament at the National Tennis Centre in Toronto. In 1981, the men's tournament was played at the Jarry Park Stadium in Montreal for the first ...
The following is a list of community and recreation centres in the city of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. [1] The city operates 152 recreation centres across the city. [2] As part of the Toronto 2015 Pan American and Parapan American Games, the Etobicoke Olympium [3] and the Toronto Track and Field Centre [4] will be closed, renovated, and will reopen on September 2, 2014.
The 1969 Canadian Open was a tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts at the Toronto Lawn Tennis Club [3] in Toronto in Canada.The men's tournament was held from August 9 through August 15, 1969, while the women's tournament was played from August 16 through August 23, 1969.
In 1880, the club moved to 471 Church Street, where it added lawn bowling and tennis. By 1885, the membership had reached 447 members. By 1885, the membership had reached 447 members. Later in the 1880s, the club's members formed and sponsored an ice hockey team, considered the first or one of the first organized ice hockey teams in Toronto.