Friday, 1 June 2012

Miscellaneous Photos


TCR car at Yonge and Queen
20101220-1910-QueenYongeWilliamJames.jpg
William Davies Store 1910
201215-davies-1910-f1244_it0339a.jpg


Hanlan's Point Lacrosse Grounds
File:Lacrosse Grounds Hanlans Point 1900s.jpg

Hanlan Point Amusement Park
Toronto, Toronto Islands, Hanlan's Point Amusement Park
Toronto, Toronto Islands, Hanlan's Point Amusement Park
Hanlan's Point Amusement Park offered numerous attractions, such as a carousel, scenic railway, roller coaster, swing-around rides, shooting galleries, assorted games, a tea garden, grandstand, small theatre and a dance pavilion. In addition, rather peculiar (and politically incorrect by today's standards) types of entertainment were also available.
Toronto, Toronto Islands, Hanlan's Point Amusement ParkThey included J.W. Gorman's diving horses, King and Queen. The horses jumped from a platform that was suspended at forty feet and according to the Star Weekly, they supposedly plunged into the water on their own accord, "without a whip and with the horses own volition."
Another peculiar attraction was a standard tasteless freak show, dubbed as "the great and only museum of living curiosities." I'll leave to your imagination as to what it exhibited. Live entertainment was also diverse and included orchestra band, comic opera, plays, vaudeville, and burlesque. The Maple Leaf Stadium, with a seating capacity of 18,000 was opened in 1910, hosting lacrosse and baseball games.

2011713-hanlan's-point-stadium-f1244_it0200b.jpgLacrosse in 1910

Christie Pits or Riverdale Park
2011713-chiristie-pits-hockey-1912-f1244_it0476.jpgPro hockey outdoors, 1912
2011713-boxing-christie-pits-1915-f1244_it0971b.jpgBoxing match, 1915

Thursday, 31 May 2012

Ambrose Small Mystery


Ambrose Small Mystery Toronto


On the 2nd December, 1919, theatre tycoon Ambrose Small was hard at work in his office at the Grand Opera House on Adelaide Street West. The day before he'd sold his empire and deposited a massive $1 million cheque in to his personal account. F. W. M. Flock, Small's attorney, also in the office that evening, would be the last person to see the millionaire alive.
Just after 6:00 pm, his work for the day complete, Small left his office and bought a newspaper from a street vendor. Turning up the velvet collar on his jacket, he disappeared into the cold night, never to be seen again. In the years to come, the vanishing of Ambrose Joseph Small would become one of Toronto's most sensational mysteries and one of its most enduring unsolved crimes — if indeed it was a crime at all.
Ambrose Small Missing NoticeKnown to many Canadians as a character in Michael Ondaatje's In the Skin of a Lion, Ambrose Small was born January 11, 1863, in Brantford, Ontario, to Daniel Small and Ellen Brazil. An ambitious and intelligent child, Ambrose was 17 when his father moved the family to Toronto where he had agreed to run the Grand Hotel on Adelaide Street West.
Small got his start the theatre business across the laneway from his father's hotel at the Grand Opera House, ripping tickets, running the bar, ushering patrons and taking underhanded bets on racehorses for $10 a week. A calculating and ruthless businessman, Small quickly rose to treasurer of the Grand Opera House but a fight with the owner caused him to leave for the vaudeville Toronto Opera House.
Despite a reputation as a reckless gambler, Small elbowed his way into management and over the next decade worked his way to chairman of the Canadian Theatrical Managers' Association, buying theatres across Ontario and amassing a vast personal fortune.
Ambrose Small Grand Hotel Adelaide Street WestSmall loved money and women, in particular chorus girls from his theatres who he rewarded with chocolate and seduced in a secret room at the Grand Opera House decked out with a lavish bed, bar and salacious paintings of nude women. Despite his lecherous ways, he married the daughter of his step-mother, Theresa Kormann, and in doing so positioned himself to inherit a significant sum from his new in-laws. Small continued to have affairs after his nuptials, many to the knowledge of his wife.
A thin man standing 5'6", Small was described as "hawk-like" by the Milwaukee Journal in the years after his disappearance, and his trademark moustache made him easily recognisable to people on the street. His closest platonic relationship was with his secretary and right-hand man, John Doughty, who he paid a meagre $45 a week at a time when Small was among the Toronto's wealthiest men. A fact that provides a key insight into the tycoon's parsimonious personality.
Ambrose Small Theresa Small WifeIn 1919 Small sold his theatre empire amid rising costs to Trans-Canada Theatre Limited for a whopping $1.7 million, $1 million of which was paid in a single check he deposited a day before his disappearance at the Dominion Bank at King and Yonge. Norman J. O'Flynn, the bank clerk, recalled Small in a "cheery mood" to the Saskatoon Star-Phoenix on that day.
"It was all over in a matter of moments. I reached for a deposit slip and gasped when I saw the amount of the cheque".
The next day, Small vanished, leaving no trace or clue to his whereabouts. Any leads the police might have had in the early going were missed when it took Theresa Small a full two weeks to report her husband missing.
Ambrose Small Events Diagram Milwaukee JournalAssuming Ambrose was simply out enjoying his fortune with one of his paramours, or at least that's what she told police, Mrs. Small initially offered a $500 reward for information. Presuming a kidknapping, police convinced her to up the money to $50,000, the highest ever offered in Canada at the time, when no ransom arrived.
In the two-week period before Small was reported missing, John Doughty, the tycoon's closest ally, accepted a new position in Montreal, moved to a boarding house in the city and fled when word of his former employer's mysterious vanishing became an international sensation. The police would later discover Doughty had visited Small's personal vault twice on the day of his disappearance and taken $150,000 in bonds.
Eleven months later, in November, 1920, John Doughty was picked up working under a false name by a local police officer in Oregon City, Oregon, who recognised him from a photo circulated by Canadian authorities. Back in Toronto, Doughty led police to the missing bonds stashed in his sister's attic. His claim the money was a raise pending the approval of Small didn't hold water and he was sentenced to six years in jail for larceny. Despite threats and offers of a reduced sentence for information, police were never able to charge Doughty in connection with Small's disappearance.
Ambrose Small Illustration DisappearanceWithout a body, evidence or a ransom note the authorities had no case and practically nothing to go on. In desperation, Toronto Police sent a copy of the case file in 1922 to Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, the creator of Sherlock Holmes and a leading spiritualist, in the hope the author could shed some light on the disappearance. Although he took an interest, Conan Doyle was not able to spare the time to properly investigate.
Theories Small's body had been incinerated could never be proved despite thorough examination of the Grand Opera House, several city incinerators and garbage dumps. It was also suggested Small had met with an accident or been murdered and buried in Rosedale Ravine. Digs in the area turned up nothing.
Small's fortune is perhaps the most obvious motive for any crime, if one took place. The tycoon's will, dated September 6, 1903, left all $2 million of his real estate and personal property solely to Theresa Small. After several years of probate, Small's sisters, Gertrude and Florence, were also awarded $100,000.
The year after Mrs. Small's death in 1936 a sensational injunction was brought by Patrick Sullivan, the publisher of Toronto tabloid The Thunderer, and Ambrose's sisters to prevent the distribution of Ambrose Small's estate, claiming Theresa had paid an assassin $20,000 to kill her husband and even signed a confession before her death. The alleged killer came forward claiming Theresa persuaded him to "go in on" the murder.
A judge, Mr. Justice Nicol Jeffrey, dismissed the action in 1936, citing the confession as a forgery. During his judgment he went to great lengths to ensure the late Theresa Small's name remained untarnished by the accusation. When the will was finally settled in 1954 after years of charitable donations, litigation and succession fees, just $141,000 was left.
Ambrose Small John Doughty Austin Mitchell Edward HammondSo what really happened in this baffling case? A special enquiry by the office of the Ontario Attorney General concluded Theresa Small had nothing to do with her husband's disappearance butdocumentary recently pitched by Dr. Peter Vronsky to History Television claimed to have unearthed accusations of a cover-up within the police. According to Vronsky, Inspector Hammond, an officer involved in the investigation, had evidence that Theresa Small was present at the crime and that Austin Mitchell, the office in charge, had suppressed facts and scared off witnesses.
So many mysterious elements surround the case of Ambrose Small that it's hard not view every single subsequent event with suspicion. Take for instance the fate of Gertrude Small, who drowned beside her new husband when their car plunged into the Nottawasaga River in Wasaga Beach just days after their wedding.
Alex McCathie, a 38-year veteran cop with ties to the case, told the Saskatoon Star-Pheonix on December 3, 1959, "we have had many letters from various parts of the United States and Canada offering information of one kind and another in connection with the case. Many have been from cranks, but all those that appeared genuine have been investigated. They produced no result."
Sporadic sightings of Ambrose Small in various locations across the globe made headlines but always turned out to be a case of mistaken identity. On December 4, 1960, Toronto police officially closed and discarded the three-foot thick file on Ambrose Small after decades spent travelling, consulting clairvoyants and desperately searching for the faintest scrap of evidence. To this day the disappearance of Ambrose Small remains unsolved.
--

Missing poster: Various Toronto newspapers, 1919-1920
Sequence of events illustration: The Milwaukee Journal, September 28, 1932
Street scene illustration: The Spokesman-Review, March 7, 1937
John Doughty: The Globe, November 24, 1920
OPP Inspector Hammond and Detective Austin Mitchell: The Disappearance of Ambrose Small: Case Closed! by Peter Vronsky
All other images from the City of Toronto Archives

Wednesday, 30 May 2012

Daddy What did You do During the Great War



With the outbreak of the First World War in 1914, a recruiting poster for the Canadian army was put up on the South African War memorial.  In this one, a young girl asks her father, "Daddy, what did you do in the Great War?".  Those who remembered the war in South Africa must have been terrified by the global scale of the First World War.  At the bottom left hand corner of the sign, volunteers are directed towards the old Armoury Building, which once stood where the University Avenue courthouse does today.  One of Toronto's grandest buildings, the Armoury was demolished when Nathan Phillips Square was built.

For some, the name, “The Armouries” immediately conjures up images of a majestic building on University Avenue.
The Armouries long since demolished, were built between 1891 to 1893 by architect Thomas Fuller to house the local militia regiments and host trade shows and social engagements. Initiated by the federal Department of Public Works, it was one of several across Canada that were built in the 1880s and 1890's. For a time, they were the largest buildings of their kind in North America, and certainly in Canada, located north of Queen Street on the east side of University Avenue. The architect designed the Armouries in the Romanesque style using red brick and fine Kingston limestone to echo the solidity and power of the militia. To some, it had the look and feel of a castle!
Inside could be found a massive drill hall, bowling alleys, and rifle ranges. The Armouries were used during the Boer War, and the First and Second World Wars. In 1963 they were demolished in response to need for space to accommodate the provincial courts at Osgoode Hall.
The Armouries is remembered by the naming of Armoury Street that runs near the site. To some, the Armouries was among the greatest buildings of 19th century Toronto.


Articles From Other Newpapers

Vera Lavelle Guilty
http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=IjIjAAAAIBAJ&sjid=4oUFAAAAIBAJ&pg=4050%2C82676

From the Otsego Farmer (Dime Store Novel . . .)
http://fultonhistory.com/Newspapers%20Disk3/Cooperstown%20NY%20Otsego%20Farmer/Cooperstown%20NY%20Otsego%20Farmer%20&%20Republican%201919%20-%201920%20Grayscale.pdf/Cooperstown%20NY%20Otsego%20Farmer%20&%20Republican%201919%20-%201920%20Grayscale%20-%200206.pdf

From the Syracuse Journal (Crowds Cheer . . .)
http://fultonhistory.com/Newspapers%20Disk3/Syracuse%20NY%20Daily%20Journal/Syracuse%20NY%20Daily%20Journal%201919.pdf/Syracuse%20NY%20Daily%20Journal%201919%20-%202871.pdf#xml=http://fultonhistory.com/dtSearch/dtisapi6.dll?cmd=getpdfhits&u=ffffffffc0e9e6dc&DocId=10451370&Index=Z%3a%2fFulton%20Historical&HitCount=4&hits=92+14b+14c+1411+&SearchForm=C%3a%5cinetpub%5cwwwroot%5cFulton%5fNew%5fform%2ehtml&.pdf

From the New York Call (Detectives Murderer Hanged . . .)
http://fultonhistory.com/Newspaper%2014/New%20York%20NY%20Evening%20Call/New%20York%20NY%20Evening%20Call%201919/New%20York%20NY%20Evening%20Call%201919%20-%201528.pdf#xml=http://fultonhistory.com/dtSearch/dtisapi6.dll?cmd=getpdfhits&u=74b279f5&DocId=7676807&Index=Z%3a%2fFulton%20Historical&HitCount=3&hits=b62+b63+b70+&SearchForm=C%3a%5cinetpub%5cwwwroot%5cFulton%5fNew%5fform%2ehtml&.pdf

From the Auburn Citizen (Empire State Farm Hand is Hanged . . .)
http://fultonhistory.com/Newpapers%20Disk2/Auburn%20NY%20Citizen/Auburn%20NY%20Citizen%201919%20pdf/Newspaper%20Auburn%20NY%20Citizen%201919%20-%201597.PDF#xml=http://fultonhistory.com/dtSearch/dtisapi6.dll?cmd=getpdfhits&u=168dd46d&DocId=2031393&Index=Z%3a%2fFulton%20Historical&HitCount=3&hits=1202+1203+1211+&SearchForm=C%3a%5cinetpub%5cwwwroot%5cFulton%5fNew%5fform%2ehtml&.pdf

From the Morning Leader (Mystery Added . . .)
http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=c_5SAAAAIBAJ&sjid=tTcNAAAAIBAJ&dq=frank-mccullough%20williams&pg=4768%2C2511968

From the Morning Leader (Second Escape from Jail Gives Toronto Laugh)
http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=50cBAAAAIBAJ&sjid=HykDAAAAIBAJ&dq=frank-mccullough%20vera&pg=4785%2C2842131

From the Montreal Gazette (Kept Tryst Within Shadow of Prison)
http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=Fmw1AAAAIBAJ&sjid=WIUFAAAAIBAJ&dq=frank-mccullough%20toronto&pg=3391%2C5050446

From the Milwalkee Sentinel (5000 Cheer . . .)
http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=ypdRAAAAIBAJ&sjid=iAoEAAAAIBAJ&dq=frank-mccullough%20toronto&pg=1690%2C2844273

From the Calgary Daily Herald (Inspector of Prisons Exonerates . . .)
http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=5w5kAAAAIBAJ&sjid=zXoNAAAAIBAJ&dq=frank-mccullough%20toronto&pg=5512%2C6307710

From the Youngstown Vindicator (Doped Coffee of the Watch . . .)
http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=ivZJAAAAIBAJ&sjid=IoUMAAAAIBAJ&dq=frank-mccullough%20toronto&pg=1176%2C3123804

From the Morning Leader (Deth Watch Aided Escape . . .)
http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=nP5SAAAAIBAJ&sjid=uTcNAAAAIBAJ&dq=frank-mccullough%20toronto&pg=4871%2C723481