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View of Greektown and the Church of the Holy Name on Danforth Avenue. Prior to World War II, Toronto's nascent Greek population of about 3,000 was concentrated in the area bounded by Yonge Street, Carlton Street, Church Street and what is now Dundas Street East. It was this area that was the focus of the 1918 Toronto anti-Greek riot.
The Church of the Holy Name in Toronto, Ontario, Canada is a historic church built during 1913 to 1926. The church was designed by architect Arthur W. Holmes to resemble the Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore in Rome. It is asserted to be "unchallenged as the Danforth's most impressive architectural landmark." [1]
Danforth Avenue (informally also known as the Danforth) and Danforth Road are two historically-related arterial streets in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.Danforth Avenue is an east-west street that begins in Old Toronto at the Prince Edward Viaduct as a physical continuation of Bloor Street and continues for about 6 kilometres (3.7 mi) east through old Toronto, about 350 metres (1,150 ft) of old ...
Old Toronto 18 375–377 Church Street 1876 375–377 Church Street Garden District: Old Toronto 18 589–593 Church Street 1876 589–593 Church Street Church and Wellesley: Old Toronto 18 Richard Bigley Building 1876 98 Queen Street East Garden District: Old Toronto 6 Brougham Terrace 1876 549–563 Parliament Street Cabbagetown: Old Toronto 18
St. Brigid's East Danforth 1920 Gothic Revival: St. Casimir's Roncesvalles: 1949 Gothic Revival: Polish St. Catherine of Siena East Danforth 1965 Modernist St. Cecilia's The Junction: 1909 Gothic Revival: Also home to Vietnamese Martyrs Parish St. Charles Borromeo Lawrence Heights: 1948 St. Clare's Oakwood: 1913 Baroque Revival St. Clement's ...
1896-1928 Clinton Street Methodist Church. [note 10] Pre-1972 The church building on Clinton St. belonged to a Greek Old Calendarist jurisdiction. An Athonite Hieromonk, Fr. Paisios, was its priest there when the parish was transferred to the Greek Orthodox Metropolis of Toronto in 1972.
The Pape Village Business Improvement Area represents approximately 110 businesses along the thoroughfare, and undertakes efforts to promote and beautify the area. Since much of the existing building stock in Pape Village dates to the 1940s and 1950s, the City of Toronto adopted a new community improvement plan for the district in 2003, in order to assist local businesses to renovate and ...
Merged with Glen Rhodes United Church, building now home to Metropolitan Community Church of Toronto: St. Andrew's United Church: Downtown 1949 Merger of Old St. Andrew's United Church (from 1830) and Westminster (Yorkville Canada Presbyterian 1860)- Central (Yorkville Methodist 1841) in former Westminster (1892, gutted by fire 1922) building.