Toronto's Dundas Streetcar - 1960s

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 24 авг 2019
  • Vintage film footage of the TTC's Dundas streetcars in the 1960s. Part of this route included the Dundas tripper service to the waterfront docks.
    This video is cut from the GPS Video DVD "Roncesvalles Division" and is narrated by the late Ray Neilson.
    Come out to the Halton County Radial Railway and take a ride on vintage Toronto streetcars!
    Learn more at www.hcry.org
    You can also follow us on Facebook or streetcarmuseum
  • РазвлеченияРазвлечения

Комментарии • 18

  • @streetcarjay
    @streetcarjay 4 года назад +12

    Correction, The Eaton Centre opened in 1977.

  • @lawoftheuniverse8089
    @lawoftheuniverse8089 4 года назад +7

    I'm still standing here waiting for my Streetcar since 1965 !!!

    • @lovesmusic36
      @lovesmusic36 3 года назад +4

      I can believe it! If it finally gets there, don't pay more than what the fare was in 1965! I can remember children's tickets 4 for 25 cents!

  • @barbaraleszczynski2214
    @barbaraleszczynski2214 3 года назад +8

    I still live in Toronto since 1955.....and remember it all to this day. I miss those simple old days! I love Toronto.

    • @eddiep812
      @eddiep812 2 года назад

      Lived in Toronto as a young kid from 1963 through 1970. I fondly remember those electric powered trolley/streetcars. (Watching American-based television shows in Toronto as an impressionable lad... I couldn't understand why the Toronto Police insisted on yellow squad cars back in those days)

  • @monicapushkin3274
    @monicapushkin3274 8 месяцев назад

    Awesome historic video.

  • @brian13105
    @brian13105 3 года назад +1

    Remember it all, including the loop around Eaton's Annex Store behind Old City Hall and the Vincent Loop (the little half block long street that isn't there anymore) across Dundas from where Dundas West Stn. is today, were the King Cars used to loop.

  • @railsedge5746
    @railsedge5746 2 месяца назад

    Dundas streetcar went right by my house 😮

  • @FelixAn
    @FelixAn 4 года назад +4

    For now, we only have the replacement buses on the 505, because Bombardier hasn't even delivered all the new streetcars yet.

    • @mikeythesoulace
      @mikeythesoulace 4 года назад +1

      I thought the 505 was doing bustitution because of construction

    • @FelixAn
      @FelixAn 4 года назад +1

      @@mikeythesoulace That too.

    • @drezamuller5400
      @drezamuller5400 4 года назад

      Yah good bye

  • @emmerichkremeth1840
    @emmerichkremeth1840 3 года назад +2

    I still remember that China Town was on Dundas just west of Bay up to University. It was not China Town at Spadina at that time.

    • @eddiep812
      @eddiep812 2 года назад

      I was a young child at the time... but I remember the China Town streets were paved with bricks.

    • @user-sj7xv1er1u
      @user-sj7xv1er1u 2 месяца назад

      WoW that IS a while back, I remember on Dundas between Huron & Beverly the huge old houses with teeny store fronts stuck to the fronts, one of them was a fortune cookie factory.
      would be the early-mid 1960s.

    • @mapleveritas2698
      @mapleveritas2698 Месяц назад

      Yeah. When I came in 1981, we had three Chinatowns. The old Chinatown was in the Dundas and Bay area. The midtown Chinatown was at Gerrard and Broadview. And the new Chinatown was at Spadina and Dundas. I heard, not sure whether it was true or not, that people had to move away from the old Chinatown because they wanted to build the new city hall there. That is the Nathan Phillips Square as we know it now. In 1981, the old Chinatown was more or less gone. Some Chinese restaurants and shops were still there, but it was obvious its days as Chinatown were numbered. The new Chinatown was where we all went for dimsum in the 1980's.
      Of course, when the new wave of immigrants from Hong Kong came in the 1990's, they did not go to the Chinatowns at all. Instead, they started developing in Scarborough, and later Richmond Hill and Markham. I don't think we really have true Chinatowns in Toronto any more. Many areas have Chinese restaurants and frankly, Chinese is just one of the diverse groups in Toronto. Since the second generation usually does not even understand the written Chinese language, I doubt they will purposely choose a Chinese store, other than for Chinese food.
      As is the tradition of the Spadina and Queen/Dundas areas, once the immigrants gained certain wealth and status, they move out. That is what happened to the new Chinatown. New groups of immigrants moved in. And the new Chinatown lost much of its characteristics soon after.
      I watched a wonderful documentary about the Jewish era of Spadina and Queen recently. I wonder whether there is such a documentary about Chinese immigrants in Toronto.

  • @Steve-ov5ri
    @Steve-ov5ri 6 месяцев назад +1

    No tents

  • @glen6945
    @glen6945 3 года назад

    OOOHHHHYES