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Nelson A. Boylen Collegiate Institute

1966 establishments in Ontario2016 disestablishments in OntarioDefunct schools in CanadaEducational institutions disestablished in 2016Educational institutions established in 1966
High schools in TorontoSchools in the TDSBToronto Catholic District School BoardToronto District School BoardToronto Lands Corporation

Nelson A. Boylen Collegiate Institute (Nelson A. Boylen CI, NABCI, Boylen CI, or Boylen); originally Nelson A. Boylen Secondary School is a Toronto Catholic District School Board secondary school facility located in Toronto, Ontario, Canada operated as a high school from 1966 to 2016. Opened by the former North York Board of Education in 1966, the school was part of the Toronto District School Board as a very small school, yet the student body is known to be one of the most multicultural in Toronto, with students representing countries from all around the world. The school ceased to exist as an operating school on June 30, 2016 and as of 2022, the school building remains vacant. The motto was "Veritas et Virtus" (Truth and virtue).

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Nelson A. Boylen Collegiate Institute (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Nelson A. Boylen Collegiate Institute
Falstaff Avenue, Toronto

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Latitude Longitude
N 43.71716 ° E -79.495756 °
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Falstaff Avenue 141
M6L 2E5 Toronto (North York)
Ontario, Canada
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De Lesseps Field

De Lesseps Field was a small, but important airfield in early aviation in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Opened sometime before 1910, an airfield was created from three farms by engineer William G. Trethewey (1865–1926). The airfield was located near present-day Hearst Circle and the Wishbone on a 600 acres (2.4 km2) site in York Township (just outside Weston, Ontario).The grassy airfield was later used by French aviator Count Jacques Benjamin de Lesseps (1883–1927) and later renamed after him. The property remained in the hands of the Trethewey family after the death of Trethewey, but in 1928 Trethewey's son Fred sold it to airline Skyways Limited. de Havilland Canada established their first home here in 1928 (building a small hangar) to build Gipsy Moth and Tiger Moth aircraft, but left for Downsview in 1929. Skyways remained owners until some time after 1931 and the airline moved to the Malton Airport. The farm and airfield was later re-developed as residential housing. No trace of the airfield remains in the area. Besides aircraft manufacturing, the airfield hosted air shows starting in 1910 (hosted by the Ontario Motor League).This airfield was one of many airfields in the greater Toronto area during the early 20th Century, but most of the airfields disappeared before World War II: Armour Heights Field 1917-1919 Barker Field 1927-1953 Downsview Airfield 1929–present Leaside Aerodrome 1927-1931 Long Branch Aerodrome 1915-1919 Toronto Aerodrome 1928-1939Most of the airfield related buildings were temporary or converted from farm use. De Havilland's first factory was in an old vegetable warehouse because it had double doors wide enough to accommodate assembled aircraft. A larger hangar was built in 1929, but it was moved along with the aircraft manufacturer to Downsview.The later owners of the airfield, Skyways Limited, used the facilities to train pilots.