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Post One Monument

1967 establishments in CanadaMonuments and memorials in TorontoOntario building and structure stubsOutdoor sculptures in TorontoTime capsules
Toronto stubs
Ontario Post One plaque Queen's Park, Toronto, Ontario, Canada DSC01500
Ontario Post One plaque Queen's Park, Toronto, Ontario, Canada DSC01500

The Post One Monument in Toronto's Queen's Park commemorates Canada's centennial. Unveiled in 1967, the monument functions as a geodetic survey marker and has a time capsule that is slated to be opened in 2067.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Post One Monument (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Post One Monument
Wellesley Street West, Old Toronto

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Wikipedia: Post One MonumentContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 43.662694444444 ° E -79.390611111111 °
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Address

Ontario Legislative Building

Wellesley Street West 111
M5S 3K9 Old Toronto
Ontario, Canada
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Ontario Post One plaque Queen's Park, Toronto, Ontario, Canada DSC01500
Ontario Post One plaque Queen's Park, Toronto, Ontario, Canada DSC01500
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Nearby Places

Whitney Block
Whitney Block

The Whitney Block is a Government of Ontario office building located in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is located across the street from the Ontario Legislative Building, and contains the offices of the Premier of Ontario and most cabinet ministers. The street address of Whitney Block is 99 Wellesley Street West, though the principal facade faces west towards Queen's Park Crescent and the Ontario Legislature. The building is linked to the legislature by a tunnel under the street, by a bridge to the Macdonald Block, and through there via another tunnel to the subway. The Modern Gothic-Art Deco structure was built in 1926 by architect F. R. Heakes and the tower was added in 1932. Whitney Block is faced with Queenston limestone. The facade is ornamented by repeated sequences of quatrefoils, and figures designed by Charles Adamson, which represent abstract ideals like justice, tolerance, wisdom and power, as well as more ordinary pursuits such a mining, forestry, labour, law, education and farming. The floors are made of marble mined in Bancroft.At its completion it was one of the tallest buildings in Toronto. It was originally known as the East Block, but it is now known as the Whitney Block in honour of former Premier James P. Whitney. While no longer used for office space, the tower remains as a distinctive feature of the building and contains one of the few operational hand-cranked elevators remaining in Toronto. The building also once contained a bowling alley and a section set aside for live domestic and farm animals. The Ministries of Natural Resources and Forestry, Government and Consumer Services, and Northern Development and Mines are located at Whitney Block. Other government buildings nearby include: Mowat Block Macdonald Block Ontario Power Building Hearst Block Frost Building