Interesting Historical Information On The Former Town of Mimico (now part of the City of Toronto)
Sunday, February 28, 2021
Archibald Herod House - 180 Queens Avenue
Saturday, February 27, 2021
Anthony Joseph Building - 80 Mimico Avenue
St. Andrew's Hall - 178 & 178A Royal York Road
Union Bank Building - Mimico Branch - 86 Mimico Avenue/3 Station Road
Google streetview
The bank appears to have closed the branch in 1936 after which the building remained vacant until 1939 when it was sold to Charles Grossi for $2 and a mortgage of $3,750. Grossi sold the north end of the lot to the Silverwood Dairy just down the street but retained the building. However it appears as vacant in the Toronto City Directories until 1942 when John Lavelle who had a butter and egg business is listed as living there. Grossi died about 1953 and his estate sold the building to Florence Weber for $2 subject to the existing mortgage.
Sunday, February 14, 2021
Bank of Montreal Building - 2448 Lake Shore Blvd West
After more than 100 years in Mimico the Bank of Montreal closed its branch at 2448 Lake Shore Blvd West on March 22, 2019. The Bank of Montreal claimed that it was the first chartered bank to open in the Town of Mimico but the Union Bank of Canada beat it by 6 years when it opened its branch at present day 34 Cavell Avenue (then Southampton Street) in 1910. The Bank of Montreal didn't establish itself in Mimico until 1916 in a former butcher shop on the Lakeshore Road.
In 1923 the bank acquired the landmark site at the corner of Mimico Avenue and the Lakeshore Road when it merged with the Merchant Bank of Canada who purchased the vacant lot in 1920 but had not yet built on it. In 1923 the Bank of Montreal commenced construction of a purpose built branch on the property. The building was designed by Ralph K. Shepard (1874-1933), a prominent architect, whose list of works includes the University Club of Toronto the Temple Building, and many other bank buildings.
The building was reviewed as part of the “Mimico 20/20 Revitalization Cultural Heritage Resource Assessment” completed by URS for the City of Toronto's Heritage Preservation Services in 2012. The report provided the following description for the building:
"Early 20th century commercial building of good design, significant siting, makes a solid contribution to the character of the street and reflects the most significant phase of commercial development in Mimico for the past century. Two storey brick structure with stone or concrete string courses and sills, pressed metal cornice, classical portico around main entrance may be later addition." (note that a 1924 photo of the bank indicates that the classical portico was part of the original 1924 design)
Though this bank is now closed the building is a significant building in the Town of Mimico anchoring the corner of Mimico Avenue and Lake Shore Blvd West. The building was a landmark in Mimico upon its construction in 1924 and remains a landmark building to this day.
Having been identified in the Mimico 20/20 Revitalization Cultural Heritage Resource Assessment study as worthy of "further study and evaluation as a potential Built Heritage Resource" I submitted a request in November 2018 to designate the building under the Ontario Heritage Act to Heritage Preservation Services at the City of Toronto. The request remains in the queue but hopefully this significant landmark building will continue to grace this corner, and delight the eyes, for many years to come.
Update October 6, 2021
Today the Toronto Preservation Board recommended that the property be listed under the Ontario Heritage Act. Hopefully full designation under the Act will be forthcoming soon.
Saturday, February 13, 2021
Robert Herod House - 182 Queens Avenue - Under Threat
St Leo Roman Catholic School Redevelopment Proposal - 165 Stanley Avenue
The redevelopment proposal would retain and restore the original 1926 school building and link it to a new three storey building to be built to the south. The later additions to the original 1926 school building would be demolished.
The architect of the original school building was Dr. William J Woods, a Mimico Dentist. Dr Woods had a long involvement with the education sector in Mimico including being a member of the Public School Board, the High School Board and the Separate School Board. He based the design of the new St. Leo's Roman Catholic School on the existing Public School on Dixie Road just south of Dundas Street in Toronto Township (present day City of Mississauga).
According to “We Remember, We Believe: A History of Toronto’s Catholic Separate School Boards, 1841-1997” by Robert T Dixon, “The Mimico RCSS [Roman Catholic School Section] Board, formed in February 1926, had opened St. Leo that same year with the teaching and administrative assistance of the CSJ [Community of St. Joseph (Sisters)]. The Board served Mimico’s Catholic children and those residing in Etobicoke and New Toronto within three miles of St. Leo's. The trustees had promised that they would never raise taxes; that promise had kept the board from amalgamating with the TSSB and TSSSB."
"In 1967 a group of parents in Mimico asked Art Arbour, an MSSB teacher, to run for trustee so that he would bring about amalgamation with the MSSB. They were paying tuition to send their children to Michael Power/St. Joseph. Since in 1968 the MSSB had assumed responsibility for grades nine and ten in all of Metro Toronto’s Catholic high schools, amalgamation would render grades nine and ten free for Mimico’s Catholic students."
"The group kept showing up at board meetings until in 1968 Arbour got the Mimico RCSS Board to pass a motion to join the MSSB.” (pg 285) The amalgamation became effective January 1, 1969.
According to the heritage report by ERA Architects: "The interior of the 1926 school building is proposed to be restored to its original configuration and rehabilitated to suit future programmatic needs, including the introduction of a central Learning Commons, modernization of classroom facilities, and accessibility upgrades."
The application to the city is currently being reviewed by planning staff.