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Toronto Hunt Club; Toronto Lawn Tennis Club; U. University Club of Toronto; W. Weston Golf and Country Club; Y. York Club This page was last edited on 24 January 2016 ...
The Toronto House of Lancaster strip club is located at 1215 Bloor Street [10] in Bloordale, Toronto [1] and club opened in 1983. [1] It closed during start of COVID-19 pandemic, but opened in August 2020 to customers who make phone reservations and wore face masks.
The following list is of gentlemen's clubs that operated in Canada. A gentlemen's club is a private social club that serves as a place for men to dine, drink, read, and socialize. They originated in the 18th century as a type of British social institution and flourished particularly in the 19th century.
The Toronto Entertainment District is an area in downtown Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is concentrated around King Street West between University Avenue and Spadina Avenue . It is home to theatres and performing arts centres, the Toronto Blue Jays , and an array of cultural and family attractions.
The Granite Club was founded in 1875 on St. Mary's Street in downtown Toronto. It was initially a curling club. It provided a curling rink and a skating rink as facilities. After only five years on St. Mary's Street, expansion was needed in order to improve existing facilities and to accommodate the growing membership.
The club was founded in 1908 by journalist Augustus Bridle, who arranged a first meeting on 23 March 1908. [2] At a meeting on 14 May the motion to give the club its name was moved by E. Wyly Grier; The Globe reported "it is the intention of the members of the club to seek among themselves a genial companionship, and to increase sympathy between the various branches of the arts."
The Toronto Dingos is an amateur Australian rules football club based in Toronto, Ontario, Canada competing in the AFL Ontario.. The club was formed in February 1996 and train at David A. Balfour Dog Park located at Yonge & St. Clair, playing their home games at Humber College (Lakeshore Campus) in Etobicoke, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
The National Club was founded by Ontario Letters Patent on July 6, 1874. There were 24 members in the original roster. [1] The National Club was created to provide a home and Toronto focus for Canada First, a nationalist movement founded in 1868 by George Denison, Henry Morgan, Charles Mair, William Foster and Robert Grant Haliburton.