Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Manitoba. The Port Perry mill and grain elevator, circa 1930. Originally built in 1873, the building remains a major landmark to this day. The original line of the PW&PP Railway can be seen in the foreground. Inglis – Inglis elevator row, last surviving elevator row in Manitoba with a total of four elevators.
They are the topic of numerous prairie landscapes and photographs. The Wheat Pool calendar map or Country Elevator System calendar maps were a mainstay of many pioneer households. These calendar maps depicted the networking of the early CNR and CPR rail lines, the many early incorporated areas, and the locations of the grain elevators. The ...
Pioneer Village is a subway station on the Line 1 Yonge–University of the Toronto subway. It is located under the intersection of Northwest Gate and Steeles Avenue , at the city boundaries of Toronto and Vaughan , Ontario , Canada.
The Village at Black Creek, previously Black Creek Pioneer Village, and before that Dalziel Pioneer Park, [1] is an open-air heritage museum in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.The village is located in the North York district of Toronto, just west of York University and southeast of the Jane and Steeles intersection. [2]
The elevator was then taken over by Province Elevator Co. later becoming Reliance Elevators in the 1930s. By 1941 a new "twin" elevator was added for more space. Manitoba Pool bought the elevators in 1952 and lastly sold to United Grain Growers in 1971. The elevators have since been fully restored back to their original signage as Reliance ...
Ontario More images: 49 Front Street East (Dixon Building) 49 Front Street East Toronto ON Ontario , Toronto municipality More images: Annesley Hall at the University of Toronto: 95 Queen's Park Crescent Toronto ON
Highways 102 and 11 in Ontario and Highway 12 south of Ste. Anne in Manitoba are part of this network. A cairn and plaque commemorating the Dawson Road was erected by the Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada in 1933. The landmark is located next to the local municipal office in Ste. Anne, Manitoba. [25]
In Toronto’s zoning maps, which designate the permitted land uses in a given area, the arterial roads making up the borders of the neighbourhood (Jane, Runnymede, and Bloor) are zoned as mixed use. The local roads within are predominantly residential, with the exception of Annette (a minor arterial road). [ 11 ]