Details
Trillium and Toronto Island
The Centennial Edition3. Aufl.
19,99 € |
|
Verlag: | Dundurn |
Format: | |
Veröffentl.: | 14.05.2010 |
ISBN/EAN: | 9781459704923 |
Sprache: | englisch |
Anzahl Seiten: | 120 |
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Beschreibungen
<p>The year was 1910 and signs of progress were in the air. That June, a new steam ferry for the Toronto Island Company was launched and christened the <i>Trillium</i>. Only briefly mentioned in the local dailies at the time, the double-end, side-padded island ferry cruised the waters of Toronto Bay for nearly fifty years. After forty-six years of service, the <i>Trillium</i> retired in 1956, only to be saved from the scrap yard in 1973. The <i>Trillium</i> made its second debut in 1976 as a fully operational steam ferry and is still in service today.</p>
<p>As the <i>Trillium</i> reaches the century mark, Mike Filey revisits the history of this fascinating Canadian ship. With a new preface and updated photographs, including some in colour. Filey traces <i>Trillium’s</i> remarkable rise, fall, and rebirth in a book that honours one of Toronto’s most interesting treasures.</p>
<p>As the <i>Trillium</i> reaches the century mark, Mike Filey revisits the history of this fascinating Canadian ship. With a new preface and updated photographs, including some in colour. Filey traces <i>Trillium’s</i> remarkable rise, fall, and rebirth in a book that honours one of Toronto’s most interesting treasures.</p>
In June 1910, the new steam ferry for the Toronto Island Company was launched and christened the Trillium. As it reaches the century mark, Mike Filey revisits the history of the memorable Canadian landmark. With updated photographs, Filey traces the Trillium’s remarkable rise and fall and commemorates one of Toronto’s finest treasures.
<p>The year was 1910 and signs of progress were in the air. That June, a new steam ferry for the Toronto Island Company was launched and christened the <i>Trillium</i>. Only briefly mentioned in the local dailies at the time, the double-end, side-padded island ferry cruised the waters of Toronto Bay for nearly fifty years. After forty-six years of service, the <i>Trillium</i> retired in 1956, only to be saved from the scrap yard in 1973. The <i>Trillium</i> made its second debut in 1976 as a fully operational steam ferry and is still in service today.</p>
<p>As the <i>Trillium</i> reaches the century mark, Mike Filey revisits the history of this fascinating Canadian ship. With a new preface and updated photographs, including some in colour. Filey traces <i>Trillium's</i> remarkable rise, fall, and rebirth in a book that honours one of Toronto's most interesting treasures.</p>
<p>As the <i>Trillium</i> reaches the century mark, Mike Filey revisits the history of this fascinating Canadian ship. With a new preface and updated photographs, including some in colour. Filey traces <i>Trillium's</i> remarkable rise, fall, and rebirth in a book that honours one of Toronto's most interesting treasures.</p>
<p>Mike Filey has written nearly two dozen books on various facets of Toronto's past, including <i>A Toronto Album</i> and <i>Toronto: The Way We Were</i>, which received a 2009 Heritage Toronto Award of Merit. For more than thirty-five years he has contributed a popular column, "The Way We Were," to the <i>Toronto Sunday Sun</i>, and co-hosts "Mike Filey's Toronto" on AM 740 radio. He lives in Toronto.</p>