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Queen Street..
Taken while crossing the skywalk between the Toronto Eaton Center and the Hudson's Bay above Queen Street.
The city that never sleeps and never rests, the hustle and bustle of getting ready for the colder months ahead, it was an unseasonably warm day in November and the denizens of "The Big Smoke" (as we affectionately call Toronto.) take advantage of those last few days of warmth to get out and walk the streets.
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© NICK MUNROE (MUNROE PHOTOGRAPHY)
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The Trip To The Big Smoke..
From the archives;
Nathan Phillips Square in Downtown Toronto.
Thank you for visiting for marking my photo as a favorite and for the kind comments,
Please do not copy my image or use it on websites, blogs or other media without my express permission.
© NICK MUNROE (MUNROE PHOTOGRAPHY)
You can contact me
by email @
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
or on Facebook @
www.facebook.com/MunroePhotography/
On Instagram
www.instagram.com/munroe_photography1/
David Gibson (1804-1864) Born in Scotland, he emigrated to Upper Canada, now the Province of Ontario, where he was appointed Deputy Land Surveyor in 1825. A supporter of William Lyon MacKenzie, he was twice elected to the Provincial Parliament as a Reform member. One of MacKenzie's chief lieutenants in the unsuccessful Rebellion of 1837. he fled to the United States. Fully pardoned he returned in 1848 and resumed his profession as surveyor. Later he was appointed as Inspector of Crown Land Agencies and Superintendant of Colonization Roads.
His home is a good example of an early Victorian farm house and was completed in 1851.