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Gladstone Hotel (Toronto)

1889 establishments in OntarioHotel buildings completed in 1889Hotels established in 1889Hotels in TorontoPages with non-numeric formatnum arguments
Romanesque Revival architecture in CanadaUse mdy dates from August 2017
Gladstone Hotel
Gladstone Hotel

The Gladstone House is a hotel in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It was built in 1889 and named after Gladstone Avenue, next to the hotel. The Parkdale area hotel was designed by local architect George Martell Miller in the Romanesque Revival style. The Gladstone House is one of the oldest hotel buildings still operating as a hotel in Toronto. Since renovations in the early 2000s, the hotel has become an arts hub in the West Queen West neighbourhood of Toronto. In June 1973, the City of Toronto assigned a Part IV historical designation to the property.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Gladstone Hotel (Toronto) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Gladstone Hotel (Toronto)
Queen Street West, Toronto

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

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N 43.642683 ° E -79.427 °
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Gladstone House

Queen Street West 1214
M6J 1J6 Toronto
Ontario, Canada
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Website
gladstonehouse.ca

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Gladstone Hotel
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Diamond Park (Toronto)
Diamond Park (Toronto)

Diamond Park was a baseball stadium in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It was the home of the Toronto Maple Leafs professional baseball club from 1901 until 1907. It was located at the south-east corner of Liberty Street and Fraser Avenue. The stadium was also used for rugby football and lacrosse. The Maple Leafs, who had been playing at Hanlan's Point Stadium on the Toronto Islands were sold in 1900 to a group of 52 Toronto businessmen, spearheaded by Ed Mack, a tailor and former baseball player. The organization decided to construct a new stadium for the team on the mainland, which they named Diamond Park. The stadium was not ready in time for the 1901 season, forcing the team to play its first 13 games on the road. The team played its first game in the new stadium on May 10, 1901, to 5,200 fans, losing 6–5 to Worcester. The game was preceded by a parade from downtown to the stadium. The ceremonial first pitch was thrown by School Inspector James L. Hughes. Tickets for the games cost 25 cents for general admission, 40 cents for the grandstand and 50 cents for reserved seating.Led by manager Ed Barrow, who was also co-owner, the Leafs won the International League pennant in 1902 with a record of 85–42. The team faltered after its championship season, falling to eighth place by 1905. Debt holders called in their loans and the team was purchased by James J. McCaffery, who served as team president from 1908 until his death in 1922, and Lawrence "Lol" Solman, president from 1922 to 1931. Former major league star Joe Kelley took the reins as manager in 1907 and the team's fortunes immediately turned around. Kelley was drafted by the Boston Doves the next season, when the Leafs returned to Hanlan's Point Stadium. The site was sold in 1907 by the ball club to H. C. Harris under the condition that "no games or amusement enterprises" were to take place without the ball club's consent. In 1908, a strip of land 96 feet (29 m) in left field was subdivided, making it smaller for baseball, although it would continue in use for amateur baseball and other sports. However, the Maple Leafs were to return to the park in August 1909 to finish the 1909 season after Hanlan's Point Stadium burned down. Owner Harris offered the field at no charge to the Maple Leafs, who had to quickly build a new left field bleacher after the old bleacher had been torn down.In 1911, construction began on a new E. W. Gillett Company factory complex on the site, which opened in 1912. The factory is now the headquarters of Kobo Inc. Across the street to the north is Lamport Stadium, used for rugby, field hockey and soccer, built on the site of the Mercer Reformatory.