Showing posts with label historic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label historic. Show all posts

Thursday, February 29, 2024

Throwback Thursday - Craigdorroch Castle

September 2017 - Victoria BC

While in Victoria we decided to walk to Craigdorroch Castle, don't let anyone tell you that it is a lovely walk from downtown, it is uphill and a long walk.

Craigdarroch Castle is a definitively Victorian experience. It is a shining example of a “bonanza castle” — massive houses built for entrepreneurs who became wealthy during the industrial age. In this case, the industrialist was Robert Dunsmuir, a Scottish immigrant who made his fortune from Vancouver Island coal.


This legendary Victorian mansion, built between 1887 and 1890 on a hill overlooking the City of Victoria, announced to the world that Robert Dunsmuir was the richest and most important man in Western Canada.


Robert and Joan had two sons and eight daughters plus one child who died in infancy. As the Dunsmuir fortune grew, the family eventually moved from Nanaimo to Victoria and took up residence in 1885 in a house named Fairview situated near the Legislative Buildings. Robert at this point had been elected and was serving as a Member of the Legislative Assembly for Nanaimo.



Thirty two of the forty-seven original art glass windows are still in place. The studio responsible for them remains a mystery. An 1890 newspaper account states that the order for interior woodwork from A.H. Andrews & Co. of Chicago included “windows.”


Sometime after Joan Dunsmuir’s death, several art windows disappeared from the Castle. The largest of these windows were removed from the dining room, the sitting room, as well as a bathroom. The Castle Society plans to install reproductions of all the missing stained and art glass windows at Craigdarroch, which will involve careful study of historic photographs.





James, the elder son, took charge of the mining operations in Nanaimo, and Alexander, the younger son, lived in San Francisco and managed the sales and shipping office. Dunsmuir coal now moved to market on Dunsmuir rail and in Dunsmuir ships and the business empire also included: collieries; an iron works; a saw mill; a quarry (the source of the sandstone for the exterior of Craigdarroch); a dyking company; a theatre; and extensive real estate.


In 1887, two years after the last spike had been driven on the E&N railway, and five years after he started accumulating 28 acres of property, Robert Dunsmuir gave the orders to start building Craigdarroch. There were still three Dunsmuir daughters who were not married and the mansion would be the perfect venue to launch them into married life.


Unfortunately, he died in April 1889 before the house was completed. After Robert’s death, Joan spent some time travelling in Europe. Her sons oversaw the completion of the construction while she was in Europe and Joan, with her three unmarried daughters and two orphaned grandchildren, took up residence in 1890.


Robert’s death brought strife to the family. Contrary to oral promises made to his sons, he left his entire Estate and business holdings to his wife, Joan. This was a blow to both James and Alex (then in their thirties) who had worked in the family business all their lives. It took seven years of negotiations with Joan before she would give her sons title to the San Francisco company. It took another three years before she agreed to their terms to purchase the Wellington Colliery. With this settlement, Alex Dunsmuir felt secure enough in his financial future to marry Josephine, a divorced woman that he had been living with as man and wife for close to twenty years. Their married life only lasted six weeks; Alex passed away on January 31, 1900 while they were in New York on their honeymoon.



After the death of Alex, a costly quarrel over his Will again divided the family, setting Joan and her daughters against James. This quarrel triggered a lawsuit that went all the way to the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in London (in those days equivalent to the Supreme Court of Canada). James, who was Premier of British Columbia at the time the action was announced, was very much in the public eye. A story in the New York Times announced: “Premier sued by his Mother”. As a result of the legal action, Joan and James did not speak for years. When she died in 1908 having lived in Craigdarroch for 18 years, the local newspaper reported that James (then serving as Lieutenant-Governor of British Columbia) was not expected to attend her funeral. At the last minute he changed his mind and did attend. During the service, he broke down and wept.






























Tuesday, December 6, 2022

Tuesday Treasures

  Tom the backroads traveller hosts this weekly meme.


Toronto ON


DESCRIPTION

The iconic image of the comic book hero Superman was created by Toronto-born artist Joe Shuster. He and writer Jerry Siegel (1914–1996) developed the character in high school in Cleveland, Ohio, and the story was first printed in Action Comics #1 in 1938.

Shuster grew up in a low-income Jewish family in the Kensington Market area. His mother, Ida, had fled Russian pogroms and his father, Julius, was a garment worker. As a child, Shuster went to Lansdowne Public School and made his first drawings on scrap butcher’s paper. He helped support the family selling copies of the Toronto Daily Star.

The family moved to Ohio in 1924, but Toronto still inspired Shuster. The Daily Planet, where Superman works under his secret identity of Clark Kent, was based on the Star, which was located here until 1971. The architecture of Metropolis was based on Toronto and Cleveland.

Shuster and Siegel sold the rights to Superman to DC Comics in 1938 and became one of the most successful creative teams in the industry, writing and drawing the comic for nearly a decade. Today, Shuster and Siegel are recognized as the creators of Superman, a cultural icon enjoyed worldwide.




Monday, February 3, 2020

Monday Mural

I'm linking up at Monday Mural 

September 2019 - Toronto ON

The wall alongside the Long & McQuade parking lot got an artistic refresh.
Working with the theme of "Celebrating Creativity", it was interpreted as music by Jarus and Jason Pinney of One Day Creates.

A mix of cubanism and realism created this beautiful piece - and features a precious Les Paul guitar.




This is a mural update - as seen in 2018. This link contains a history of the Long and McQuade business.

Back in 2008, Jason adorned the same wall with a scene celebrating the community with music.





As an aside, the building contains a historical plaque also about music.


The Concord Tavern opened in this building on June 14, 1948. It originally operated as a restaurant with live music, hosting big band concerts. There was no cover charge; the alcohol-free section was marked on the floor with tape. During the early 1960s, as the focus shifted to rock, country, and blues music, major acts such as Conway Twitty, Bo Diddley, and Duane Eddy came here to play. Around the same time, musician Ronnie Hawkins recruited a house band, The Hawks, who played high-energy rockabilly during the club's twist dance parties. The Hawks performed seven nights a week, sometimes sleeping upstairs. They later became The Band, one of North America's most influential groups, and created a new electric sound as Bob Dylan's back-up band. As business waned in the late 1970s and early 1980s, management increasingly booked adult performers. The Concord Tavern closed in 1983.











Friday, August 16, 2019

One Pot Wonder

Chinatown Dundas West Toronto - 2019

Saturday was a stay at home day. We each relaxed and did what we wanted.

Dinner was maple syrup salmon, roasted potatoes and carrots.

Sunday we debated going out but opted to read and catch up on our favourite shows, along with golf for John.
I finished Masterchef Australia 2019 and then discovered Masterchef Singapore!!

Roasted chicken with lemon butter, roast potato (John insisted) mashed sweet and white potatoes with mushy peas. And I made crispy fish skin for the first time.

Monday John golfed and I did some groceries.
Dinner was fully loaded baked potato with broccoli and bacon at John's request.


Tuesday, after lunch, we went to the AGO, John wanted to see the Brian Jurgen exhibit that I had seen last week.










The AGO has one of the nicest museum gift shops.







I had a new ice cream place picked out, close by. 
Baldwin Village is a small enclave just east of Chinatown and north of the AGO lined with about three dozen restaurants, cafes and stores.

McCaul St.


John was "yum, Peking duck" on Baldwin.



Destination - Thai stir-fried ice cream rolls!!


Making the ice cream.











A new-to-us mural by Smoky.


Down Beverley.



Beverley Street features several yellow-brick mansions of some of Toronto’s most pre-eminent families, the “Family Compact” – the true power brokers of the early 19th century. Families such as the Cawthras and others owned huge tracts of land in what is today’s downtown Toronto.



George Lissant Beardmore, a prosperous tanner, built this house, named for his birthplace, in 1871-72, with additions and alterations by Eden Smith, Architect, in 1890. His son, George Wathen Beardmore, occupied the house until his death. In 1937 it was purchased for use as the Italian Consulate. The property was taken over by the Government of Canada in 1939, and for almost twenty years, the building served as a barracks for the R.C.M.P. In 1962 the Canadian Government gave the house to the Italian community as a training centre for immigrants and in 1977 "Chudleigh" again became Toronto's Italian Consulate.



I had spotted this new installation in Chinatown last week so John and I went to check it out.


The Chinatown Toronto BIA, in collaboration with the City of Toronto, has just begun the construction of a beautiful-sounding new public square on Huron Street.

Appropriately named "Huron Street Square," the outdoor space just north of Dundas Street West will including unique seating, lighting, a bronze Qilin and decorative pavers, among other features.



Well, it's not quite a square as yet, the road is still there.


Chinese zodiac calendar.





Now in the heart of Chinatown.







Wednesday was John's golfing day.

Dinner was Pho with pork meatballs.


Thursday the plan was to go to the Distillery District for lunch and find some of the Brains.

The day was doomed from the time we waited, forever, for the 121 bus. John is on his mussels quest after his non-lunch a couple of weeks ago, when the Museum Tavern didn't have any. He was skeptical at Pure Spirits when he read "organic" mussels and not PEI. And well he should have been. These were little itsy-bitsy mussels in a dishwater "traditional Provencal" sauce.

.


I also had a dismal meal, ordering Jonah crab claws. These are so hard to crack open and yield so little meat for the effort.


The manager happened by to ask how our meal (the server hadn't bothered) was and we mentioned the mussels were mediocre. She immediately comped the $25 for the dish.

And then it rained when we stepped out and got really cold, so we took the suggestion that perhaps we should go home and call it a day!

But look how pretty the love locks look.



Dinner was burgers and chips.


Friday John headed to play golf.

I first went to TTC headquarters and got a subway pass to be used by visitors.

Then to Bloor and Bathurst to pick up a gluten-free bread order.
Along the way, I was in Koreatown.



Insomnia Club...









Mural in progress and another up on the far wall. PAT is a large Korean grocery store on my list to visit.






Yup, that says POOP Cafe. Also on my list to visit.


Christie Pits
The Korea Town Business Improvement Area lights him up every winter to symbolize, according to Korean mythology, well-being and prosperity.





On August 16 (TODAY), 1933, a group of men calling themselves the Pit Gang unfurled a banner of a swastika at a baseball game at Christie Pits Park in Toronto. They were targeting the Harbord Playground team, a group of mostly Jewish men, who were playing a game that evening.
According to the Toronto Daily Star, 10,000 people were involved in the riot, "excited by cries of 'Heil Hitler.'"
The Italian team who were playing opposite the Harbord Playground helped to defend their Jewish counterparts.
Although people were using baseball bats and knives to attack each other, no one died during the riot.


My destination, and it turns out it is a place we had been before. Three loaves of gluten-free sourdough bread are not light to carry!


We tasted the bread when we got home and it was delicious.







BOOKS

AGO Gift Shop Toronto ON


Finished Widows, meh, I think the movie would be better (SHOCK!).

Started Peter Robinson's 25th Inspector Banks Careless Love.


SUMMER OF ICE CREAM

Taiyaki NYC Japanese Dundas W
Dainties Macaron ice cream macaron sandwich Spadina
Arctic Bites Thai stir fried ice cream rolls Baldwin St.


LINKING UP WITH
Beth hosts Weekend Cooking where you can post anything food related.
Saturday Snapshots is hosted by A Web of Stories.
Sunday Salon