Toronto, Canada 1920s in color [60fps, Remastered] w/sound design added

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  • čas přidán 11. 05. 2024
  • I colorized, restored and created a sound design for this video of Toronto, Canada in the 1920s. Views of city streets, traffic, walkers and cars in the streets. A panoramic view of Toronto. Views of Mary Pickford's birthplace, the Legislative Assembly and the National Gallery of Canada.
    Video Restoration Process:
    ✔ FPS boosted to 60 frames per second
    ✔ Image resolution boosted up to HD
    ✔ Improved video sharpness and brightness
    ✔ Colorized only for the ambiance (not historically accurate)
    ✔added sound only for the ambiance
    ✔restoration:(stabilisation,denoise,cleand,deblur)
    Please, be aware that colorization colors are not real and fake, colorization was made only for the ambiance and do not represent real historical data.
    B&W Video Source from: Library and Archives Canada. Gordon H.N. Parker fonds, 1982-0199, IDC 7737
    Join this channel to benefit from exclusive advantages and also to support us: / @nass_0

Komentáře • 561

  • @NASS_0
    @NASS_0  Před 26 dny +32

    Would You like to live back in the 1930s??

  • @bombasticbushkin4985
    @bombasticbushkin4985 Před 24 dny +46

    Amazing to look back at this to get the full perspective. My dad was born in 1920 in Dauphin. Came to Toronto in 1922 becoming his true hometown. He sold newspapers at 13 during the Depression on downtown streets and Maple Leaf Gardens to make a buck for the family. Was at the Toronto Maple Leaf overtime game where Ken Doraty scored the eventual winner. Back then, overtime ran a full 10 minutes with unlimited scoring. My dad, arguably the greatest newsy in Canada, sold a record 4,110 newspapers (incl. Telly fun cheques, for car draw) by the CNE ferris wheel on a single Labor Day in the 1960s. He was steeped in Toronto history and one of the Three Stooges was his friend, Curly Joe DeRita, who would send us a Christmas card every year. I got autographed pictures of the Stooges at the Royal York Hotel after a performance at the CNE's Exhibition Grandstand. Many fond memories. Thought you might find this interesting. I was very lucky to have such a great father.

  • @siroptimistic
    @siroptimistic Před 29 dny +55

    1:08 City Hall and Clock Tower
    1:24 Bay Street looking north towards City Hall Clock Tower
    1:32 Yonge Street looking north at King Street (Hennessy’s Drug Store, Yonge Street)
    1:50 King Street looking east at Yonge Street
    2:25 Canadian Pacific Railway building, 69 Yonge Street
    3:10 The Royal York Hotel
    3:48 Union Station train terminal
    4:09 Casa Loma
    4:16 Birth home of actress Mary Pickford (211 University Avenue, now demolished)
    4:30 Ontario Legislative Building at Queen’s Park
    4:51 University College building at University of Toronto campus
    5:11 Hart House building at University of Toronto campus
    5:21 Sunnyside Amusement Park
    5:58 Sunnyside Beach
    6:32 Princes’ Gates entry to Canadian National Exhibition (CNE)
    6:50 Arts, Crafts and Hobbies Building at CNE grounds (now Medieval Times Dinner Theatre)
    7:07 Horticulture Building at CNE grounds (now Toronto Event Centre)
    7:15 The Midway Strip of the CNE

    • @cyberspacekosmonaut
      @cyberspacekosmonaut Před 26 dny +1

      That's Old City Hall of course.

    • @hc8843
      @hc8843 Před 25 dny +1

      Thanks. very helpful. what about 7:07?

    • @siroptimistic
      @siroptimistic Před 24 dny +2

      @@hc8843Horticulture Building at CNE grounds (now an event space). Added to list. Thank you.

    • @siroptimistic
      @siroptimistic Před 22 dny +3

      The Royal York Hotel was completed June 11, 1929. The CNE takes place annually from the third Friday in August until the first Monday in September. Therefore this film was likely made in 1929 during August to September.

    • @hc8843
      @hc8843 Před 22 dny +2

      @@siroptimistic thank you.

  • @sheiladineen9483
    @sheiladineen9483 Před 21 dnem +30

    My father came to Toronto in 1926, when he was 18. He saw signs that read "No Catholics or Irish need apply." Nevertheless he made his way and really enjoyed Toronto, living in beautiful Parkdale, and joining what would become The Boulevard Club, playing Tennis. He told us of all the great music in the 30s and 40s, when he would go dancing,imlooked for him at Sunnyside.

    • @brian13105
      @brian13105 Před 16 dny +2

      Yes , my father used to tell me about those signs but by a few years later this was an "Orange " city and it was no Jews or Catholics .

    • @mdtorres_76
      @mdtorres_76 Před 11 dny

      I heard this story from my client who's now 85 y/o.

    • @danieldonnelly3602
      @danieldonnelly3602 Před 4 dny

      Parkdale. That's where I buy my crack.

  • @stephanieparker1250
    @stephanieparker1250 Před měsícem +95

    Whoa I didn’t realize it was already such a big city in the 1920s!

    • @antonioanchiraico4542
      @antonioanchiraico4542 Před měsícem +8

      Las grandes ciudades existen desde 1879 y que decir de europa, Londres 1830

    • @cosmoray9750
      @cosmoray9750 Před 29 dny

      Lensky Blames the World ........
      czcams.com/video/dVllIwgy3dM/video.html

    • @nahshonimmanuel1704
      @nahshonimmanuel1704 Před 24 dny

      You’re not alone the people in charge of it in 2024 don’t realize it’s a big city
      Have minimal underground subway tunnels compared to cities of the same size around the world
      Toronto has to get rid of its country bumpkin mentality leaders

    • @yvonneplant9434
      @yvonneplant9434 Před 22 dny +2

      Can't just google to find out its stats?

    • @stephanieparker1250
      @stephanieparker1250 Před 22 dny +13

      @@yvonneplant9434 Ok I guess I need to explain my comment.. I never had a reason to google Toronto 1920s before this video. Therefore, I was surprised to find out it was a huge city even at that time.

  • @jeffkrebs
    @jeffkrebs Před 28 dny +24

    The shots of Bay Street towards Old City Hall, casaloma, and the University of Toronto feels like not much has changed. It's kind of eerie to look at all these people even the children and realize they are long gone

    • @jeffkrebs
      @jeffkrebs Před 28 dny +3

      And the shots of the CNE were incredible, life was so much simpler than it is now

    • @theDyingArts
      @theDyingArts Před 19 dny +2

      I thought the same, Queen and Yonge look almost identical too.

  • @miket7281
    @miket7281 Před měsícem +120

    Very nice but you went a little overboard with the car horns.

    • @sullivanworks9777
      @sullivanworks9777 Před 19 dny +9

      I don’t think the cars shown in the films had the same kinds of horns that are in the soundtrack. That might be worth a little bit of research.

    • @chairlesnicol672
      @chairlesnicol672 Před 17 dny

      @Sullivanworks They had 16 yr old drivers back then too, didn't they? KoL

    • @bethgibbs-bartel5480
      @bethgibbs-bartel5480 Před 17 dny +1

      100% agree

    • @cbeausoleil
      @cbeausoleil Před 14 dny +2

      Didn’t the car horns sound like “arooooogaaa” back then?

  • @intuitiveimprints
    @intuitiveimprints Před 23 dny +24

    This is absolutely wonderful to see. I’m from Toronto and this means a lot that you did a video on the city where I live. So fascinating to see this. Thank you and a wonderful job you did on this restoration with an accompanying soundscape. Cheers! 👍🏻😀

    • @AlanKelly-nm9lx
      @AlanKelly-nm9lx Před 22 dny

      Toronto now smells like garbage and has mentally ill people on every street corner the state has thrown to the streets and abandoned. No graffiti back then like now everything has crap tags or bad art on it. Drugs being used openly every where these days and openly sold by csis/rcmp employees. Imagine how clean the air was back then. and no FFFFFing camera watching everything u do!

    • @Ahmiseysoh75
      @Ahmiseysoh75 Před 20 dny +1

      Great archival footage. Fascinating to see history in motion. Thanks for sharing.

  • @Ira_Rosenberg
    @Ira_Rosenberg Před měsícem +37

    So wild seeing my home town like this. Thank you for everything that you do. ♥️

    • @justinberber9848
      @justinberber9848 Před měsícem

      will only get worse and worse as the white Euro stock that built the country gets replaced with the third world

  • @paulfromt.o.7384
    @paulfromt.o.7384 Před 22 dny +9

    Amazing to see this.
    As a Torontonian of 55+ years, I certainly recognize most of the locations. This footage reminds me of my folks and grandparents.

  • @user-og2wt3le4j
    @user-og2wt3le4j Před měsícem +33

    At 1:25. Many of those buildings in this shot of Bay Street still stand today. And on Yonge Street the same. There are office towers there from the 1890s. Part of the current Hudson's Bay department store has the original building from the 1800s.

  • @ryderstrong3899
    @ryderstrong3899 Před měsícem +40

    Would love to see a video like this around Christmas time and see how everything was decorated back then.

    • @truetech4158
      @truetech4158 Před 24 dny +1

      Magical childish thinking was probably more popular then than today, going back throughout the gregorian calendar accordingly.

    • @ryderstrong3899
      @ryderstrong3899 Před 24 dny +2

      ​@@truetech4158I think so too. I hope there is some old footage that can be restored of the holidays. I love these videos

    • @jonathanbaltrusaitis6558
      @jonathanbaltrusaitis6558 Před 23 dny +1

      "I would love to see this town in the Autumn." czcams.com/video/w23Mn0bZY5w/video.htmlsi=xwcMlMVo0tCmo5yU

    • @ryderstrong3899
      @ryderstrong3899 Před 23 dny +2

      @@jonathanbaltrusaitis6558 agreed, that would be nice to see

  • @k_DAN
    @k_DAN Před 28 dny +9

    I was at the CNE celebrating its 100th birthday and now it's coming up to its 150th.

  • @funghouls5498
    @funghouls5498 Před 24 dny +14

    This is wonderful footage of Toronto and dutifully remastered. Thank you.

  • @fredsands9220
    @fredsands9220 Před měsícem +15

    That little boy really knew how to charm those two young ladies sitting on the steps didn't he? ;-) Outstanding restoration, thank you!

    • @UnknownUnrecognized
      @UnknownUnrecognized Před měsícem +2

      2024 - did you assume genders? hahah

    • @fredsands9220
      @fredsands9220 Před měsícem +2

      @@UnknownUnrecognized Yes, based on attire. We'd hope a channel like this would be a refuge from US politics, but that's rarely the case.

    • @UnknownUnrecognized
      @UnknownUnrecognized Před měsícem

      @@fredsands9220 that's not even us politics, it is world wide propaganda and brainwashing:)

  • @NASS_0
    @NASS_0  Před měsícem +27

    Like And Share Please!

    • @vityamba1274
      @vityamba1274 Před měsícem +2

      Дякую, Бро 🖐️👁️як завжди,дуже круто👍це,якась ...магія кіноплівки,що може переносити нас у ті часи....як машина часу☝️Ще раз,дякую‼️Привіт із України ✌️🇺🇦🦾🦾🦾

    • @Anthony_Spilotro
      @Anthony_Spilotro Před měsícem +4

      Absolutely! This is amazing footage.

    • @francobina
      @francobina Před 27 dny

      Hi I really enjoyed watching this, but the car horns sound modern to me and so I preferred to watch it mute. Otherwise awesome!

  • @fjcrod
    @fjcrod Před měsícem +13

    So nice to see my city as it was in the 1920s. So many of the buildings are still around today. The city has changed in so many ways while remaining somewhat familiar. Toronto has truly evolved over the last 100 years. Today's metropolitan population is roughly 8 times what it was in the late 20s. Crazy to see the CNE as packed back then, as it is today. Thanks for this wonderful time capsule. Hope there are more videos like this one out there.

    • @sovereignty14
      @sovereignty14 Před 26 dny +1

      “Evolved” is probably not the right word. 😟

    • @maydom04
      @maydom04 Před 25 dny +2

      @@sovereignty14 devolved??

  • @2painful2watch
    @2painful2watch Před měsícem +32

    It's amazing how the Canadian and American cities looked so dang similar. Great post, thanks. My only bone to pick is that the horn honks from the cars sound too modern. Didn't they have more of a bull horn sound. Just watch the old Laurel and Hardy or Three Stooges episodes and you will see.

    • @bobbykiriakidis9753
      @bobbykiriakidis9753 Před měsícem +4

      I believe they were added for effect.

    • @2Sugarbears
      @2Sugarbears Před 27 dny +2

      They are all Tartarian.

    • @JohnChalmers617
      @JohnChalmers617 Před 27 dny +2

      It would have been a silent camera . Sound film didn't begin in earnest until the late 1920s. The sound effects have been added well afterwards.

    • @2painful2watch
      @2painful2watch Před 27 dny +2

      @@2Sugarbears Mmmm......I love Tartar sauce.

    • @sovereignty14
      @sovereignty14 Před 26 dny +3

      Canadian & American cities “looked” similar because they were all built by European people… of course. Canada & America is the “New World”, after all.

  • @truetech4158
    @truetech4158 Před 24 dny +8

    There's something creepy errie to seeing old videos of people motioning about way back when they were alive, and knowing they are dead now as if ghosts frozen in time.

    • @Mikey-kh4yc
      @Mikey-kh4yc Před 17 dny +2

      And we, too, are all the ghosts of tomorrow ... people in 2124 will see us in full 4K clarity while most of us will, by then, be lost to the mists of the past ...

    • @truetech4158
      @truetech4158 Před 17 dny

      @@Mikey-kh4yc Well speak for yourself, but, i, am, jim morrison, and seeing my old music videos seems creepy errie to me, and because i can now only exist in this digital database.
      Oh well, party on Garth.

  • @oconnorkevin
    @oconnorkevin Před 17 dny +2

    I love this and was about to share it with my wife until the last few frames. She's Ojibwe you see, and the fair shots where clearly, briefly, indigenous people are 'on display' made me pause. Then the realization that basically everyone else in this video is white made me hesitate. She loves Toronto, but that would be painful for her to see. I'm white and I'm not trying to make a great statement here but it does illustrate how beautiful, yet how brutal, these times were.

  • @alistairbest3622
    @alistairbest3622 Před 22 dny +4

    Lovely Toronto; for an isolated city in North America of 1920's, Toronto certainly had a fair size population.

  • @Sonnycorleone162
    @Sonnycorleone162 Před měsícem +5

    Nass, thanks for another fabulous upload. I truly enjoy your work. At 1:30 Love scenes like this with people, streetcars, horses and cars all sharing the street. I thought at first it may be early 1920's but may be later with statue sign at 6:41. At 7:45 Canadiens had their own amusement park., They did not have to go Next door to enjoy Coney Island, New York! Haha!

    • @NASS_0
      @NASS_0  Před měsícem +2

      Hi!! thank you very much!!

  • @JamesWoodring-mu2iz
    @JamesWoodring-mu2iz Před měsícem +2

    thanks nass late to the show today i never miss one of ur productions! great as always

  • @prostratic
    @prostratic Před měsícem +9

    I just saw how my great grandparents lived and experienced life in Toronto. Cheers Nass, you Rock ! 🍻

  • @johnerwin9024
    @johnerwin9024 Před měsícem +4

    Pretty cool filmography/I was think ing around 1930- thnx 4 posting👏

  • @EricLehner
    @EricLehner Před měsícem +16

    Thank you from Toronto!

  • @nivagnoswal
    @nivagnoswal Před měsícem +18

    great work....my mom was born in 1914 in Toronto...I wonder where she was then these shots were taken...for that matter I wonder where she is now...thanks again....

    • @NASS_0
      @NASS_0  Před měsícem +1

      Thx!!👍

    • @sonjagatto9981
      @sonjagatto9981 Před měsícem +2

      💖For sure...in Deinem Herzen.💖👍

    • @bardo0007
      @bardo0007 Před 28 dny

      This is 1927 so she would have been 13, probably at school.

    • @noahgabriel210
      @noahgabriel210 Před 28 dny

      She's right there in the baby carriage at City Hall. Didn't you see her? Her parents were there getting her birth certificate.

    • @stangsswang8355
      @stangsswang8355 Před 24 dny

      probably workin a corner somewhere

  • @siroptimistic
    @siroptimistic Před 22 dny +3

    The Royal York Hotel 3:10 was opened on June 11, 1929. The Canadian National Exhibition (CNE) 6:32 takes place annually from the third Friday in August until the first Monday in September. Therefore, this film was likely shot in 1929 during the months August to September.

  • @Unit-ep2eg
    @Unit-ep2eg Před 12 dny

    Beautiful. Thanks for unearthing and sharing.

  • @maydom04
    @maydom04 Před 25 dny +2

    This is Gold! I don’t care if the color is fake!…some of those tracking shots going up the buildings are exceptionally smooth, even by today’s standards. Toronto lookde so clean and uncluttered….PS, where are the dandelions?

  • @andrewaway
    @andrewaway Před 7 dny

    This is amazing. Thank you for sharing. If you don’t like the sound, turn down your volume.

  • @melissamcgreish9296
    @melissamcgreish9296 Před 22 dny +1

    Wow, some of those buildings are still recognizable today. Some of those buildings that are still here have extended buildings built on top. Really amazing love your video thank you.

  • @randomrazr
    @randomrazr Před měsícem +27

    the one city that was smart enough to not destroy its entire street car system

    • @fernandorubio972
      @fernandorubio972 Před měsícem +3

      Infraestructura imposible para esa época, la historia oficial es una farsa, en todo el mundo igual...

    • @sorrywrongplanet8873
      @sorrywrongplanet8873 Před 27 dny +1

      It wasn’t so much smarts and planning as delays and apathy until streetcars started to look like a good idea again.

    • @randomrazr
      @randomrazr Před 27 dny

      @@sorrywrongplanet8873 can u elaborate?

    • @sorrywrongplanet8873
      @sorrywrongplanet8873 Před 26 dny +1

      @@randomrazr they meant to switch to buses but kept procrastinating, like they always do with TTC improvements, until the whole environmental movement became prominent. Then they were like oh, electric streetcars are better!

    • @randomrazr
      @randomrazr Před 26 dny

      @@sorrywrongplanet8873 so torontto street cars exists because they were to lazy to switch em up asap like almost all other cities and by the time they wanted to....environmentalists pushed that they were good?

  • @asan1050
    @asan1050 Před měsícem +3

    NASS! Thanks for posting this video

  • @MikeRoberts1964
    @MikeRoberts1964 Před 20 dny +1

    Lived in Toronto from 1964 to 1971, then from 1977 to 2002....Strange to see how much of the city was so different in the 20s......I bet my Grandfather would see this and think of his childhood here, as this wa his era...

  • @tjmcguire9417
    @tjmcguire9417 Před 23 dny +1

    How did you accomplish this? It is incredible. I and mine have lived in Toronto since the late 1890's. Ran an investment firm. I know all these places even now. The Royal York. Casa Loma. Old City Hall. Yonge Street stretching north out of sight. Union Station. Except for the horses; the whole psychology is the same. My dad was born in '26 and lived 86 years serving Toronto. And then there is UC. Holy cow. So good. CNE. Princess Gates... so much more. THANK YOU. I know all of these places well. (U of T and The Spadina trams... 'streetcars'.) Talk about living history.

  • @LijaMoore
    @LijaMoore Před měsícem +9

    I love these beautiful old buildings and also watching the interactions between humans and especially the children and how different things were how much more gentle people were

  • @johnmorrison9758
    @johnmorrison9758 Před měsícem +5

    I couldn't believe I actually saw a few men without hats !!! Incredible how that was such a thing back then. Probably went out of fashion in the 1950s. The Canadian National Exhibition is still packed, but nothing like what we see in this old movie. The city back then was fairly dirty and gritty. Just look at the scene at the CNE and you can see the pollution coming from smokestacks downtown.

    • @stephenedgecock
      @stephenedgecock Před měsícem

      now it's a 3rd world shithole

    • @junkbox_
      @junkbox_ Před měsícem

      The amusements would have been at Sunnyside in the 1920s. These grounds would have been used more for industrial exhibits at this time. This video is only a rendering.

  • @thesoundtree
    @thesoundtree Před měsícem +8

    Wow, over 100 years ago I can’t believe people use to actually swim in the lake

    • @jamesholler1811
      @jamesholler1811 Před měsícem

      People always have and still do. You never heard of Toronto Island?

    • @missj2045
      @missj2045 Před měsícem +4

      ​@@jamesholler1811 Nobody from Toronto swims in that water anymore. Too polluted.

    • @MrCanadatom
      @MrCanadatom Před měsícem +2

      In the 80s my brother got a serious ear infection from swimming in the lake. The problem was bird guano. Some years ago they started spraying turpentine on seagull nests,, and tbe situation improved. Last time I I was in Toronto I was swimming in the lake (for the first time in my life and I come from there) at a man-made and very nice beach at Bluffer's Park, at the bottom of The Scarborough Bluffs

    • @alukuhito
      @alukuhito Před 10 dny

      @@jamesholler1811 Not to the same scale at all though.

  • @Rob78169
    @Rob78169 Před měsícem +3

    Amazing 😍 Thank you🙏

  • @draff1662
    @draff1662 Před měsícem +2

    Outstanding. Thanks, NASS.

    • @NASS_0
      @NASS_0  Před měsícem

      thank you very much

  • @zeeshandogar9406
    @zeeshandogar9406 Před 3 dny

    Can we just appreciate the technology that allowed us to travel 100 years in time and hang out in downtown Toronto.

  • @2Sugarbears
    @2Sugarbears Před 27 dny +2

    Lovely old Tartarian building.

  • @retired815
    @retired815 Před měsícem +18

    Love the video, but the cars had aoogah horns.

    • @2Sugarbears
      @2Sugarbears Před 27 dny

      I have lived downtown for fifty years. I never (NEVER) ever heard a horn. Not til 2021.

    • @JohnChalmers617
      @JohnChalmers617 Před 27 dny

      The sound effects were obviously added not long ago since sound films did not begin in earnest until the late 1920s. With the first talkie feature film being 'The Jazz Singer's made in 1927 and only a partial talkie at that.

  • @StepwiseWonders
    @StepwiseWonders Před měsícem

    Very nice ❤ Thanks for sharing 😊

  • @mimicotom
    @mimicotom Před 26 dny

    I think the year maybe 1929. Great video. Thanks for sharing it with us. I lived in Toronto my entire life. 66 now.

  • @augurseer
    @augurseer Před 18 dny

    Thank you.
    As a Torontonian. It nice to see my beautiful city presented.

  • @jayhuskey2280
    @jayhuskey2280 Před měsícem +7

    Very cool! Would love to see something like this from Houston Texas if it exists. 😊

    • @NASS_0
      @NASS_0  Před měsícem +5

      ok ;))

    • @jayhuskey2280
      @jayhuskey2280 Před měsícem +2

      @@NASS_0 watched the San Antonio video. That was awesome 👌

  •  Před měsícem +5

    Muito lindo, belo vídeo!! 👍👍👍👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

  • @boyfrmnewyork
    @boyfrmnewyork Před měsícem

    So great to see my adopted home town from back then. I graduated from U of T and passed though those heavy doors daily. Being on campus was always like a time capsule:)

  • @sullivanworks9777
    @sullivanworks9777 Před 19 dny +1

    Nice to see old pictures of my hometown much as my parents might’ve seen it as children although they were born in the 20s actually.

  • @secondhorizon
    @secondhorizon Před měsícem +2

    *masterfully done*

  • @empizzle8
    @empizzle8 Před měsícem +6

    Truly amazing

  • @PLS.54
    @PLS.54 Před měsícem

    This one rang a bell 🔔 with me. I lived in Toronto for 8 years!

  • @renatoamaral2029
    @renatoamaral2029 Před měsícem

    Well done, Nass! A+ to you! 👍👍👍

    • @NASS_0
      @NASS_0  Před měsícem +1

      thank you!!!!👍

  • @user-uv3bg6tf6i
    @user-uv3bg6tf6i Před 21 dnem +1

    One thing l noticed is that everyone is slim. People walked everywhere back in the day as cars were expensive.

  • @selene7134
    @selene7134 Před měsícem +78

    Before diversity was our strength

    • @kristophert932
      @kristophert932 Před měsícem +21

      Strength?!? 😂😂 it’s the city’s downfall. It’s a third world country now

    • @selene7134
      @selene7134 Před měsícem +27

      ​@@kristophert932I was being sarcastic, of course. The entire West has been ruined. I can't believe we've let this happen

    • @justinberber9848
      @justinberber9848 Před měsícem

      @@selene7134 poopskins are taking over the west

    • @Brunettte-Barbie
      @Brunettte-Barbie Před měsícem +14

      @@selene7134 5th gen Torontonian- my Scottish great-great- grandfather was an engineer who came from Edinburgh to help construct the Prince Edward viaduct in 1915. Imagine how I feel. A minority in my own city. Torontoistan.

    • @Lizwindsor
      @Lizwindsor Před 29 dny +10

      @@Brunettte-Barbieand immigrant, don’t forget, we are all immigrants

  • @donnadixon289
    @donnadixon289 Před 21 dnem +1

    Shocked to see how many people attended the CNE back then.

  • @soccerman127
    @soccerman127 Před 20 dny +2

    At this time, The Royal York Hotel (3:10) was the tallest building in Canada

    • @alukuhito
      @alukuhito Před 10 dny

      It's interesting how the copper roof hadn't turned green yet. I wonder how long the process took.

  • @bonnie_gail
    @bonnie_gail Před měsícem +2

    This is the first time I've seen old videos of Toronto ! I was half-hoping to see a relative in the crowd lol

    • @bardo0007
      @bardo0007 Před 28 dny

      They were probably at the the exhibition , it looked crowded

  • @robertkennith7866
    @robertkennith7866 Před 16 dny

    its amazing how much and so little has changed, ton of people, ton of cars and a ton of bicycles, a reminder they have always been a thing

  • @user-sj3uf2ld5e
    @user-sj3uf2ld5e Před 18 dny

    Every person seems more relaxed, less paranoid, more peaceful.

  • @jasone3166
    @jasone3166 Před 23 dny +1

    The engine sounds are accurate but all the horns! Too many, to begin with and more importantly they should be Klaxon horns with the characteristic "aoohga" sound. I would live back then in a heartbeat. There was way too much injustice but life was soo much more my speed.

  • @beautifulsoul3281
    @beautifulsoul3281 Před měsícem +4

    Honestly, we look like an experiment. All those people have already left, where to? where will we go? Maybe there's nothing after this. Why are we here? What is the reason ? That is the question. Much love to all.

    • @user-hb1ve6mc6f
      @user-hb1ve6mc6f Před měsícem

      Anunnaki

    • @Consume_Crash
      @Consume_Crash Před měsícem +1

      Jesus Christ is the reason.

    • @beautifulsoul3281
      @beautifulsoul3281 Před měsícem

      @@Consume_Crash I respect Religion, but nowadays it seems more like a method of mass control than something "real" to rely on. Outside of the Church, there is nothing else.

    • @bardo0007
      @bardo0007 Před 28 dny

      We will return to bones like billions before us. Humans do not live long enough. But there are trees on this planet still standing after 300 years, they have seen it all.

    • @stangsswang8355
      @stangsswang8355 Před 24 dny

      A.I. takes over,,,we become man/machines,,,,then just machines

  • @Test-vl1ib
    @Test-vl1ib Před měsícem +2

    Great one, thanks. As a 6th generation Torontonian, I heard many stories of the city from this era. Toronto lost a lot of its beautiful architecture in parts of the downtown, but the vast majority seen in most of this video is still there. Although, right now the wokesters have the John A Macdonald statue at the foot of Queen’s Park in a box: it’s at the 4:33 mark. Speaking of that, I have to head there now!

    • @NASS_0
      @NASS_0  Před měsícem

      thank you

    • @MrCanadatom
      @MrCanadatom Před měsícem

      What's he doing on a box? Is this a joke, like Robin Hood in a bag

    • @mikeman4695
      @mikeman4695 Před měsícem +1

      @@MrCanadatomnope British and French contributions to Canada are non grata nowadays it seems.

    • @anonanon7235
      @anonanon7235 Před 21 dnem

      @@mikeman4695 Nonsense. They have a box around the statue to protect it. It's happened before.

    • @anonanon7235
      @anonanon7235 Před 21 dnem

      "Toronto lost a lot of its beautiful architecture in parts of the downtown", you can't keep everything, the structures that are tagged as Heritage, are kept and that's why most of us can still recognize Toronto from this video.

  • @noahgabriel210
    @noahgabriel210 Před 28 dny +3

    Old City Hall looks like a fancy ginger bread house.

  • @rickyufo
    @rickyufo Před měsícem +3

    Maravilloso 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

  • @juliannorwich319
    @juliannorwich319 Před 15 dny

    Toronto still had horse-drawn trams in the 1920s? Wow!

  • @rabbitfishtv
    @rabbitfishtv Před měsícem +1

    This is the time when my dad was born in Toronto. And, at least for a little while, he’s still with us! I’ll show him this video when I see him Wednesday, although the earliest times he remembers are the 1930s.

  • @Sonnycorleone162
    @Sonnycorleone162 Před měsícem +2

    At 2:06 now this is a scene you do not see much anymore. A man in straw hat tips his hat to the ladies and one lady in white hat straightens her hat & nods his way!

  • @johnmcgahern3946
    @johnmcgahern3946 Před 16 dny

    Holy crap, The Flyer! And to think I went on that in the early eighties!!!!

  • @siouxfan1716
    @siouxfan1716 Před měsícem +19

    In the 1920's is it the last time the Maple Leafs won Lord Stanley?

  • @sliwakathy431
    @sliwakathy431 Před 13 dny

    OMG..LOVE IT...I am born and bred here in T.O.....great to see this...thx

  • @user-og2wt3le4j
    @user-og2wt3le4j Před měsícem +2

    At 4:50. That looks like the U of Toronto campus. This building still stands.

  • @78zappaf
    @78zappaf Před 27 dny +1

    Wow, Queen's Park actually looks clean! Some of the places looks almost the same!

  • @BuonoBruttoCattivo77
    @BuonoBruttoCattivo77 Před 21 dnem

    Very cool little time machine

  • @braydentan985
    @braydentan985 Před měsícem +5

    Back when construction, roads, and traffic were actually organized properly 😂😂

    • @soulscanner66
      @soulscanner66 Před měsícem

      True. Pedestrians had the right of way everywhere.

  • @crazycat1345
    @crazycat1345 Před 29 dny +1

    I wonder if any of those old Tartarian buildings are still in Toronto. Tartaria was the civilisation before ours, in case you were wondering.

  • @stephanieparker1250
    @stephanieparker1250 Před měsícem +9

    Look how nice people dressed. I love seeing people going on with their daily lives. Sure wish cities still looked like this.. not trash heaps like they are now.

  • @bashira1234
    @bashira1234 Před měsícem +3

    Now Toronto is a construction and traffic nightmare

  • @firehawk128
    @firehawk128 Před měsícem

    Nice find!

  • @TopHotDog
    @TopHotDog Před měsícem +6

    Those experimental wobble buildings never caught on. The jello effect was only appreciated in Toronto.

  • @sfeddie1
    @sfeddie1 Před měsícem +3

    At 7:17. I can’t believe the amount of people in that crowd that’s just barely able to shuffle along. How can that possibly be an enjoyable day out? I’m not sure if this is the Canadian Exhibition or a separate amusement park, but either way how can you fight that crowd to enjoy any ride or exhibit? And I can’t help but think, what if you are in the middle of all that and suddenly have an intestinal “emergency”? You couldn’t get to where you needed to “go.”

    • @fjcrod
      @fjcrod Před měsícem +2

      That is most definitely the Canadian National Exhibition.

    • @bardo0007
      @bardo0007 Před 28 dny

      @@fjcrod In 1927

    • @gabithemagyar
      @gabithemagyar Před 22 dny

      The Midway (where the rides and games were) were always crowded when I was a kid too in the 1960's. The Food building was a zoo as well since there were always free giveaways as well as many small businesses and farmers that sold specialty foods. My favourite building was the Arts and Crafts Building where you could get all sorts of models, crafts. stamps for collectors, model railroads, kites, chemistry sets and other things like that - activities which have declined into almost oblivion when PC-s and Cell phones etc. became accessible.

  • @valiktoma2542
    @valiktoma2542 Před 16 dny

    wow this is ho Toronto looked like before nonstop construction. Such open streets, practically no traffic.

  • @v.cotoiu3568
    @v.cotoiu3568 Před 21 dnem

    best and with most character buildings were already standing. 100+ years ago. Almost unbelievable.

  • @therookiesplaybook
    @therookiesplaybook Před 16 dny

    Toronto still clinging to the streetcars from the 20s

  • @TheFloridaTraveler
    @TheFloridaTraveler Před měsícem

    It's a wonder that the video capture had enough data to be able to be remastered. Im also wondering if "sound" was added and isn't original.

  • @wmbmorgan
    @wmbmorgan Před 16 dny

    My Dad was born in Toronto, April 9, 1900.

  • @Guitarisforgrins
    @Guitarisforgrins Před 23 dny

    Incredible. Imagine being a rural farmer and driving into this back in the day? Would have been jaw dropping.

  • @doeeyes2
    @doeeyes2 Před 21 dnem

    Its so insane watching people get into the lake at Sunnyside. My dad used to do this as a kid.

  • @ChaadHeartsCats
    @ChaadHeartsCats Před 29 dny +2

    this is definitely after 1924 as this was the first year Canadians drove on the right hand side of the road (and the monument at 6:45 shows 1927 so must be late 20s)

    • @bardo0007
      @bardo0007 Před 28 dny +2

      It's the exhibition of 1927...

    • @jdm1505
      @jdm1505 Před 16 dny

      @@bardo0007 The Royal York Hotel opened in 1929.

    • @alukuhito
      @alukuhito Před 10 dny

      This is made of several clips though, so some could've been taken before 1927.

  • @wmbmorgan
    @wmbmorgan Před 16 dny

    My dad was born in Toronto on April 9, 1900.

  • @withgoddess8029
    @withgoddess8029 Před 7 dny

    My grandgmother grandfather and baby sailed from England where they owned a small green grocers to Toronto. I was born there in 52 and moved to Durham Region in my 40s. Toronto is a travesty. I had seen so many pics of the oldest Toronto. It was a wonderful dignified place...now it has been destroyed and is a chaotic ugly dissonant mess. I don't even visit. It's like landing on another planet.

  • @andrewcharles459
    @andrewcharles459 Před 29 dny +1

    Fashion is such a strange concept. Imagine dressing up to go to the beach.

  • @pinlight97
    @pinlight97 Před 14 dny

    Brand new Union Station; very cool!

  • @DH-jj8vv
    @DH-jj8vv Před 12 dny

    This footage is absolutely amazing.
    The camera angles are perfect in showing how life moved back then. The sheer size of those buildings are a marvel in themselves. Every man seems to be wearing a hat and intersections with no signals. The kids in the water are priceless. And holy crap, The Flyer!!!

  • @_SnowJustice_
    @_SnowJustice_ Před 21 dnem

    Wow, amazing...if time travel was a thing, this would be it.

  • @musAKulture
    @musAKulture Před měsícem

    do you have a channel on bilibili? i really want to share this video in china.

  • @scottdawe1753
    @scottdawe1753 Před 8 dny

    Did they have drones back then lol. How they take videos from above?

  • @renatoamaral2029
    @renatoamaral2029 Před měsícem +2

    It was in Toronto around 1922 that insulin were discovered by Banting and Best.

    • @renatoamaral2029
      @renatoamaral2029 Před měsícem +1

      One of my dreams would be to study Bioinformatics in the U of Toronto! ❤😊

    • @fantinilukasz
      @fantinilukasz Před měsícem +1

      @@renatoamaral2029 hahahhaha