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In search of the elusive Lawren Harris Toronto House

In search of the elusive Lawren Harris Toronto House
spacing.ca - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from spacing.ca Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Library and Archives Canada: eight projects for preservation of documentary heritage funded in Ontario

Share this article Share this article GATINEAU, QC, May 13, 2021 /CNW/ - Library and Archives Canada (LAC) will provide $1.5 million to support 41 projects (including 26  new projects) by archives, libraries and documentary heritage institutions throughout Canada. Eight projects submitted by organizations located in Ontario will be funded under the Documenary Heritage Communities Program (DHCP). The following projects will be funded by the DHCP in Ontario in 2021–2022: CSHS Descriptive Database Project (Canadian Slovenian Historical Society), Etobicoke, $5,053; Gananoque, $43,023; Digitizing and Preserving Historic Images of Canada: CHPF s 20th Anniversary Photographic Retrospective of Founding Members (Canadian Heritage Photography Foundation), Mississauga, $22,158; Ottawa, $ 50,000; Sault Ste. Marie, $45,000; Digitizing Inuit Artistic Heritage (Inuit Art Foundation),

The history of the Fashion District in Toronto

The history of the Fashion District in Toronto Stay in the loop Sign up for our free email newsletter. Unsubscribe anytime or contact us for details. The Fashion District, formerly known as the Garment District, was once a hub of Toronto s textile and fabric factories.  As years went by the neighbourhood evolved but you can still find a number of specialty stores for fashion-designing needs. Work being done on Spadina Avenue from King Street to Adelaide Street in 1928. The Fashion District is bounded by Queen and King streets, as well as Bathurst Street and Spadina Avenue. However, Google Maps extends these boundaries to Peter Street and Front Street West. 

2020, the year you want to forget? Archivists say not so fast

Article content The COVID-19 pandemic has left a disruptive mark on this holiday season, as family gatherings turned into Zoom calls and everyone felt less together. Accommodations like these are disappointing and maybe worth forgetting, but for Ontario’s archives it’s necessary to remember these extraordinary times. On the website for the Ontario Jewish Archives (OJA), there are posts from ordinary people who’ve shared photos, video and descriptions of their COVID-19 experiences. We apologize, but this video has failed to load. Try refreshing your browser, or 2020, the year you want to forget? Archivists say not so fast Back to video

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