Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Town Hall 1873 Centre for the Performing Arts, commonly known as the Town Hall 1873, is a performing arts theatre in Port Perry, Ontario, Canada. The theatre is located at 302 Queen Street and has approximately 234 seats.
Port Perry is a community located in Scugog, Ontario, Canada. The town is located 84 kilometres (52 mi) northeast of central Toronto, north of Oshawa, and east of Whitby. Port Perry has a population of 9,553 as of 2021. [2] Port Perry serves as the administrative and commercial centre for the township of Scugog.
Canada Permanent Building (Century House) 432 Richards Street 1911 John Smith Davidson Taylor, architect Vancouver Block: 736 Granville Street Built in 1912 for Dominic Burns, brother of Sen. Patrick Burns, who also managed P. Burns & Co. Meat Packing. The building permits were filed on January 23, 1911, for a cost of $75.70.
website, local history, operated by the Port Hardy Heritage Society Port McNeill Heritage Museum: Port McNeill: Mount Waddington: History: Local history [16] PoMo Museum: Port Moody: Greater Vancouver: History: Local history, located in a historic railway station building Pouce Coupe Museum: Pouce Coupe: Peace River: History
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. The Port Whitby and Port Perry Railway (PW&PP) was a railway running from Whitby to Port Perry, running north–south about 50 km east of Toronto.
Vancouver, was also the home port of the 246 ft. Malahat, a five-masted schooner known as the "Queen of Rum Row," maintained an active liquor trade throughout the Prohibition Era of the neighbouring United States, despite efforts to bring Prohibition to Canada.
Centerm is short for Centennial Terminals, a major container port in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. It is located on the south shore of the Burrard Inlet in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside neighbourhood. It is one of four container terminals at the Port of Vancouver, the others being Vanterm, Deltaport, and Fraser Surrey Docks
Panorama view of Canada Place's sails with the North Shore in the background Canada Place with Downtown Vancouver. Canada Place was built on the land which was originally the Canadian Pacific Railway's Pier B–C. Built in 1927, its primary purpose was to serve CPR and other shipping lines trading across the Pacific Ocean. [2]