Credit: Exclusive permission to reproduce these images was very kindly provided to the Toronto Project by the Map and Data Library, University of Toronto. These image may not be reproduced. Original links found here. Click here for the full-size first image. Click here for the full-size second image. Apparently published in 1956, these "Business Section" maps are updated versions of maps originally published in 1945 by Nirenstein's National Realty Map Co., giving us an incredibly detailed view of Toronto's downtown business community in the 1950s. Credit: Exclusive permission to reproduce these images was very kindly provided to the Toronto Project by the Map and Data Library, University of Toronto. These images may not be reproduced. Original links found here. Click here for the full-size front image. Click here for the full-size back image. These images are the front and back of "Algate's Toronto & Suburbs" map, published in 1935 by A.J. Algate, the Map Specialty Co. Credit: Exclusive permission to reproduce this image was very kindly provided to the Toronto Project by the Map and Data Library, University of Toronto. This image may not be reproduced. Original link found here. Click here for the full-size front image. Please note that this image is very large (~80 MB), so that it may not be viewable on all computers, and it is recommended that you save this file to your computer before viewing. This stunning, incredibly detailed "BIRD'S-EYE VIEW OF TORONTO" was published in 1876 by Peter A. Gross. The following year, in 1877, he would publish J. Timperlake's "Illustrated Toronto: Past and Present," which included "A Key to the Publisher's Bird's-Eye View of the City"; meant to accompany the map he had published the year before. Credit: Exclusive permission to reproduce this image was very kindly provided to the Toronto Project by the Map and Data Library, University of Toronto. This image may not be reproduced. Original link found at here. Click here for the full-size image. In 1788, Alexander Aitken (sometimes spelled Aitkin), a deputy surveyor, had prepared an initial survey of York Harbour on the instructions of the Governor-in-Chief, Lord Dorchester (Sir Guy Carleton, First Baron Dorchester). In 1793, he was asked by the Lieutenant-Governor of Upper Canada, John Graves Simcoe, to prepare a new survey, which included the proposed location of a blockhouse to command the entrance of the harbour, as well as a battery and barracks for the Queen's Rangers. The soundings for this survey were taken by Joseph Bouchette. Credit: Exclusive permission to reproduce this image was very kindly provided to the Toronto Project by the Map and Data Library, University of Toronto. This image may not be reproduced. Original link found here. Click here for the full-size image. In 1788, Captain Gother Mann of the Royal Engineers, instructed by Lord Dorchester (Sir Guy Carleton, First Baron Dorchester) to conduct military surveys of the Great Lakes, prepared a survey and plan for "Torento Harbour." The plan, dated at Quebec the 6th of December, 1788, covered a large area extending roughly from High Park to the Don Valley, and north of Eglinton Avenue. Mann's layout for the area included a common area in the centre, residential lots around this area, and reserved government land along much of the shoreline. The ruins of Fort Rouillé can be seen on the survey. Accompanying the plan was the report of Deputy Surveyor General John Collins, in which he advised that the shoreline was too shallow for wharves or quays to be practical, and that a prevalent west wind would make it difficult for ships to leave the harbour. Credit: This image very kindly made available for reproduction by Geographicus Rare Antique Maps (geographicus.com) as part of a cooperation project with the Wikimedia Foundation. Click here for the full-size image. This Jacques-Nicolas Bellin map of the Great Lakes appeared in the 1755 issue of the Homann Heirs Atlas Major. Bellin made use of the most advanced French cartographic intelligence available at the time, which he had access to as chief engineer of the cartographic section of the Ministère de la Marine, the depository for journals and maps from New France. Credit: This image very kindly made available for reproduction by Geographicus Rare Antique Maps (geographicus.com) as part of a cooperation project with the Wikimedia Foundation. Click here for the full-size image. Vincenzo Coronelli's 1694 map of the Great Lakes drew from the reports of Jesuit Missionaries, marked with forts, Indian villages, and missionary stations. Lake Ontario is referred to as Lake "Frontenac," and Lake Simcoe is marked as "L Toronto." The villages of Toioiagon (Teiaiagon) and Canathe-Kiagon (Ganatsekwyagon) are also marked. Credit: Exclusive permission to reproduce this image was very kindly provided to the Toronto Project by the Map and Data Library, University of Toronto. This image may not be reproduced. Original link found here. Click here for the full-size image. In 1688, Jesuit Father Pierre Raffeix published a map titled, "LE LAC ONTARIO avec les lieux circonvoisins particulierement les cinq nations Iroquoises." The map consisted of Lake Ontario, also known as the Lake of Saint Louis, with the surrounding area marked as including territory belonging to the five Iroquois nations. Current-day Lake Simcoe was marked as "Lac Taronthe." The villages, Theyagon (Teiaiagon) and Ganestikiagon (Ganatsekwyagon), were also marked. Credit: Exclusive permission to reproduce this image was very kindly provided to the Toronto Project by the Map and Data Library, University of Toronto. This image may not be reproduced. Original link found here. Click here for the full-size image. In a 1680 map by Abbé Claude Bernou, LAC DE TARONTO was the name given to current-day Lake Simcoe. The villages of Teyoyagon, also known as Teiaiagon, and Ganatchakiagon, also known as Ganatsekwyagon, were marked on the map. |