City of Toronto Archives

City of Toronto Archives

The City of Toronto Archives is the municipal archives for the City of Toronto. It holds records created by the City of Toronto government and its predecessor municipalities from 1792 to the present day,[1] as well as non-government records created by private groups and individuals.[2] There are also over one million photographs of Toronto within its collection, with over 50,000 available to view on its website.[3]

Contents

The Collection

The oldest record in the Archives is a map of Toronto harbour dated 1792[4], and the newest one is a DVD of the previous month’s Toronto City Council meeting. Of the 1.2 million photographs within the Toronto Archives collection, the oldest are a set of twenty-five prints of the city taken in 1856-57 by the firm of photographers, Armstrong, Beere and Hime. These are the earliest known photographs of Toronto[5]. Other important photographic collections are the William James collection, the Alexander Galbraith collection and the F.W. Micklethwaite collection, the Globe and Mail collection (1922-56), as well as over 100,000 photographs taken by city photographers.

The Building

The present Archives building was opened in 1992. It was designed by the architectural firm of Zeidler Roberts, who also designed the Toronto Eaton Centre, as a state-of-the-art purpose-built archives building incorporating a climate controlled records, a central atrium and exhibition area; a 60-seat theatre and a Research Hall.[6]

The original purpose of the building was to hold the records of the government Metro Toronto. Since amalgamation in 1998, documents from the other six constituent municipalities have been housed there[7]. Prior to amalgamation, the archives were held in the respective city halls.

References

External links

City of Toronto Archives website


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Toronto City Hall — General information Architectural style Modernist Location …   Wikipedia

  • Toronto — Spitzname: T.O., The Big Smoke Nächtlicher Blick auf die Harbourfront und Downtown Toronto …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Toronto — This article is about the city in Canada. For other uses, see Toronto (disambiguation). City of Toronto redirects here. For the municipal government, see municipal government of Toronto. For the historical part of the city, see Old Toronto.… …   Wikipedia

  • Toronto Pearson International Airport — This article is about the Canadian airport. For the airfield in the United States, see Pearson Field. For other airports in Toronto, see List of airports in the Greater Toronto Area. YYZ redirects here. For the instrumental by Rush, see YYZ… …   Wikipedia

  • Toronto subway and RT — A T series train at Sheppard–Yonge station on the Sheppard line …   Wikipedia

  • Toronto — • Located in the Province of Ontario, Canada Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Toronto     Archdiocese of Toronto     † …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • Toronto Eaton Centre — infobox shopping mall shopping mall name = Toronto Eaton Centre caption = The Toronto Eaton Centre logo. location = Toronto, Ontario, Canada address = 220 Yonge Street Suite 110; Toronto, ON; M5B 2H1 coordinates =… …   Wikipedia

  • Toronto Transit Commission fares — Obverse and reverse of the TTC single ride token introduced in 2006. On the Toronto Transit Commission, fares may be paid with a variety of media, the price of which may be determined by the age of the rider. Contents …   Wikipedia

  • Toronto goth scene — The Toronto goth scene, the cultural locus of the goth subculture in Toronto, Ontario, Canada and the associated music and fashion scene, has distinct origins from goth scenes of other goth subcultural centres, such as the UK or Germany.… …   Wikipedia

  • Toronto FC — Infobox Football club clubname = Toronto FC current = Toronto FC 2008 fullname = Toronto FC nickname = TFC, Reds shortname = founded = 2006 dissolved = ground = BMO Field capacity = 20,522 chrtitle = Owner chairman = flagicon|Canada MLSE ceo =… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”