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English: Map of the City Wards of Toronto, Canada, as they have existed from 2000 to present. Español: Mapa de las zonas municpales de Toronto, Canad ...
North St. James Town Old City of Toronto St. James Town: N 173 North Toronto Old City of Toronto North Toronto: N 54 O'Connor–Parkview: East York Parkview Hills, Topham Park N 154 Oakdale–Beverly Heights North York Downsview: Y 121 Oakridge: Scarborough Oakridge Y 107 Oakwood Village: York Oakwood Village N 58 Old East York: East York Old ...
The site where the Ward existed is the territory of the Huron-Wendat and Petun First Nations, the Seneca, and most recently, the Mississaugas of the Credit River (Ontario First Nations Maps, 2016). [4] The area was also home to the Taddle Creek. Now a buried lake, it would have been a significant gathering spot for Indigenous people. [5]
Jamaal Myers (Ward 23 Scarborough North) Agincourt ( / ˈ eɪ . dʒ ɪ n . k ɔː r t / ) is a neighbourhood and former village in Toronto , Ontario , Canada. Agincourt is located in northeast Toronto, along Sheppard Avenue between Kennedy and Markham Roads (north-south includes lands between Highway 401 and Finch Avenue ).
Ward 4 Parkdale—High Park; Ward 5 York South—Weston; Ward 6 York Centre; Ward 7 Humber River—Black Creek; Ward 8 Eglinton—Lawrence; Ward 9 Davenport; Ward 10 Spadina—Fort York; Ward 11 University—Rosedale; Ward 12 Toronto—St. Paul's; Ward 13 Toronto Centre; Ward 14 Toronto—Danforth; Ward 15 Don Valley West; Ward 18 Willowdale ...
Extending from present-day Jarvis street to Peter Street (and Blue Jay Way), south of Queen Street West and north of Front Street, this became known as New Town. Sparsely populated in 1815, New Town grew rapidly during the 1820s and 1830s, and a rivalry formed between the two neighbourhoods, especially for the location of the Parliament Buildings.
It consists of the part of the City of Toronto bounded on the north by the northern city limit, and on the east, south and west by a line drawn from the city limit south along Keele Street, west along Grandravine Drive, southeast along Black Creek, west along Sheppard Avenue West, south along Jane Street, west along Highway 401, and northwest ...
Most of King's Highway 427 travels within Toronto from Browns Line to Steeles Avenue, but it has been extended beyond current city limits to Major Mackenzie Drive.It was initially constructed to Highway 401 from 1953 to 1956 as the Toronto Bypass, then extended to Pearson Airport as the Airport Expressway from 1964 to 1971, and finally designated as Highway 427 in 1972.