The slogan on Ontario's licence plates, 'Yours to Discover,' was designed to promote travel opportunities within the province. Every year, thousands of tourists drive along country roads, past farmyards and through hamlets, en route to popular vacation spots. In Looking for Old Ontario, Thomas McIlwraith shows that many destinations are closer at hand than one might imagine, and invites travellers to rediscover familiar countryside landmarks by 'reading' them as chapters in a rich historical narrative. Surveyors long ago scored Ontario's land, and generations have since inscribed it with residences, businesses, and institutions. This book, the result of thirty years of field work and archival research, is a reflection on and an interpretation of the ways in which the land and its inhabitants interrelate. Looking for Old Ontario guides readers through the vernacular landscape of the province, examining barns, fences, jails, post offices, inns, mills, canals, railways, roadsides, cemeteries, and much more. McIlwraith emphasizes ordinary features of the cultural landscape which communicate social meaning to the observant eye. The landscape tells us that Ontario has been inhabited by thrifty people; this we can conclude by looking at the economical use and reuse of construction materials. Yet the landscape also tells us that Ontario's residents have been inclined to show off: consider the province's unusually large number of elegant brick dwellings. To read a landscape is to think about such connections, and McIlwraith's contemplative style differentiates his work from manuals or handbooks. Since landscape interpretation is a highly visual subject, Looking for Old Ontario is extensively illustrated with photographs, drawings, and maps. It will be useful to general readers interested in recognizing the broader meanings of their communities' heritage, as well as to students of geography, history, and planning.
Chosen as one of Style at Home's Top Ten Coffee Table Books.
Just in time for those of us who look forward to summer drives around our beautiful province are a couple of books, both from University of Toronto Press. The first, Looking for Old Ontario ($19.95) by Erindale College associate ...
VII-979 Cogley, J. Graham, M.A. Ecclestone, and William P. Adams. ... VII-989 England, John H. “Late Quaternary Glaciation of the Eastern Queen Elizabeth Islands, Northwest Territories, Canada: Alternative Methods.
Hugh Armstrong, “StreetnamechangesinToronto,” Hugh Armstrong's Genealogy Site, www.changeology.com/armstrong/name_change. 72. Joanne Doucette, Pigs, Flowersand Bricks:AHistory of Leslieville to1920 (Toronto:J. Doucette, 2012; ...
See Wood, Making Ontario, 141–56; and Thomas F. McIlwraith, Looking for Old Ontario: Two Centuries of Landscape Change (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1997), 262–70. In the first phase of settlement, there was little concern with ...
... FL Ocala, FL Orlando, FL Palm Bay, FL Pasadena, TX Pearland, TX Pembroke Pines, FL Pensacola, FL Port St. Lucie, ... 354,000 2,510,000 589,000 225,000 119,000 98,000a 183,000 183,000 135,000 240,000b 116,000c 326,000 90,000 180,000a ...
Crowley's Ridge is the largest pre- Pleistocene “island” in the alluvial valley, and its surface is hilly. Although the Mississippi once flowed along its western edge and the Ohio on its eastern, Crowley's Ridge remained above the level ...
An appreciative biography of Careless, an analysis of the relativism underpinning his approach to national and Ontario history, and a listing of Careless’s publications, complete this stimulating collection.
Looking for old Ontario: Two centuries of landscape change. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. Mak, G. 2000 [1996]. ... OMPIR (Ontario Ministry of Public Infrastructure Renewal). 2004. About PIR. Toronto: Queen's Printer for Ontario.
The trail begins on the shores of Obabika Lake and is a 2.6 km return trip, gaining 90 m (295 ft) of elevation along the way. The trail is overgrown in sections and will require some bushwhacking. Obabika Old Growth Pine Trails (Map ...