Yorkville Town Hall
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Yorkville Town Hall was the municipal building for the Village of Yorkville before its annexation by the City of Toronto. Built in 1859-1860 by architect William Hay[1] and his apprentice Henry Langley, the three-storey building also served as an omnibus stop. The hall was located north of Bloor Street on Yonge Street, along the west side.
The building served as the town hall until 1883, when Yorkville was annexed into Toronto. The building then became known as St. Paul's Hall and had a public library, along with various clubs and community uses. The hall survived until 1941, when it was destroyed by fire and was demolished. The site is now home to a condominium building and is across the street from the Toronto Reference Library.
The town hall's coat of arms plaque survives today on the front face of the Toronto Fire Services Station 312 (old TFD Station 10). The fire hall is located at 34 Yorkville Avenue and has been historically protected by the City of Toronto, after being designated as a heritage property in the City of Toronto Heritage Property Inventory on June 20, 1973.[2]
References
[edit]- Shapiro, Linda (1978). Yesterday's Toronto: 1870–1910. Toronto: Coles Publishing. ISBN 0-7740-2678-2.
- ^ "Village of Yorkville/Yorkville Town Hall". Read The Plaque. Retrieved 19 May 2024.
- ^ Heritage Property Detail for 34 Yorkville Avenue
See also
[edit]- East York Civic Centre
- Etobicoke Civic Centre
- Metro Hall
- North York Civic Centre
- Old City Hall (Toronto)
- Scarborough Civic Centre
- St. Lawrence Market
- Toronto City Hall
- York Civic Centre
External links
[edit]43°40′19″N 79°23′19″W / 43.6720°N 79.3887°W
- Municipal buildings in Toronto
- City and town halls in Ontario
- Demolished buildings and structures in Toronto
- Former seats of local government
- City of Toronto Heritage Properties
- Government buildings completed in 1860
- Buildings and structures destroyed in 1941
- Ontario building and structure stubs
- Toronto stubs