Timeline

Time immemorial - 1793

The Dish With One Spoon Wampum Covenant extended to European settlers

The “Dish with One Spoon” covenant was originally a treaty between the Haudenosaunee and the Anishinaabe peoples, recognizing how the various peoples (the spoon) must communally and peacefully live off of the land (the dish). In 1701, this covenant was extended to the French settlers and ratified during the “Great Peace of Montreal.”

1793

Castle Frank Established

In 1793, John Simcoe, the Lieutenant-Governor of Canada, wanted a summer cottage. So he built a relatively basic log cabin and thought it would be funny to name it Castle Frank (after his son).

1793

Fort York is Established

On this day, York was named the “temporary” capital of Upper Canada by Lieutenant-Governor John Graves Simcoe after he gave up on his idea to base the captial in the nearby city of London. Three years later, York would become the permanent capital.

1797

A portion of traditional 13,000 year old trail, Gete-Onigaming, renamed Davenport Rd

Today, Davenport Road and Toronto’s waterfront feel worlds apart. But thousands of years ago, they were closely connected.

1817

Toronto's Last Fatal Duel

Toronto’s last fatal duel took place near the present-day intersection of Bay and Grosvenor Streets — an area that was farmland at the time.

1823

Mary Ann Shadd Cary born

Mary Ann Shadd Cary dedicated her life to the abolition of slavery, desegregated education, and women’s rights.

1831

Emily Stowe born

Emily Stowe was a founder of the Canadian Women’s Suffrage Association and the first female physician to publicly practice medicine in Ontario.

1837

Where the Mayor Tried to Overthrow the Government

The Toronto Rebellion may sound distant from the city we know today, but one of its most important moments unfolded near present-day Yonge Street and Eglinton Avenue.

1840

Arrival of Irish Immigrants through the 1840s

Impoverished families fleeing the Great Famine arrive on the eastern edges of Toronto.

1846

Secret Brothel Owned By 19th Century Mayor

Toronto’s political history has never been free of scandal.

1847

Susan Bailey born

Susan Bailey, head nurse of the Emigrant Hospital, was a front-line worker and one of the first healthcare professionals to respond to the typhus epidemic in 1847. Bailey herself contracted the fever in her dedicated service to her patients.

1851

North American Convention of Colored Freemen

In 1851, Toronto was a hub for abolitionist activities and anti-slavery gatherings. Leading figures in the abolitionist movement included Henry Bibb, Mary Bibb, Frederick Douglass, and Mary Ann Shadd

1855

The Circus Riots

In 1855, a visiting American circus troupe found themselves at the centre of one of Toronto’s strangest public riots.

1856

Mimco was named after now extinct pigeons

Mimico was named for the vast flocks of passenger pigeons that once filled the skies over Toronto, so many that their migration darkened the horizon and sounded like thunder.

1856

Kit Coleman born

Kit Coleman was the world’s first female war correspondent. She delivered ground-breaking coverage on the Spanish-American War and was the first president of the Canadian Women’s Press Club, an organization which offered support to further women’s journalism careers.

1860

Slova Greenberg born

Slova Greenberg was a foundational advocate for healthcare, women’s empowerment, and elder care in Toronto. Today, her impact is seen through the success of Mount Sinai Hospital, the Baycrest Centre, and more.

1867

Toronto's Most Multicultural Neighbourhood

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, The Ward was one of Toronto’s most diverse neighbourhoods and often the first home for newcomers arriving in the city.

1867

Flora MacDonald Denison born

Flora MacDonald Denison, president of the Canadian Suffrage Association from 1911 to 1914, was an unwavering advocate for gender equality in Toronto and beyond.

1869

Emma Goldman born

Emma Goldman dedicated her life to anti-war activism and social justice organizing. Her lectures on anarchist philosophies attracted thousands and fostered dedicated community organizing networks.

1873

The Argonaut Rowing Club forms a football club

In order to stay in shape during the off-season, the Argonaut Rowing Club decided on this date to start their own football team.

1875

Clara Cynthia Benson born

As the first woman to graduate, complete a PhD, and teach in chemistry at the University of Toronto, Clara Cynthia Benson’s career of firsts transformed more than her scientific field.

1876

High Park opens to the public

John and Jemima Howard deed their 165-acre country estate to the City of Toronto.

1877

Rowena Hume born

Rowena Hume co-founded the first birth control clinic in Canada and was the first president of the Women’s College Hospital.

1878

Ned Hanlan, defeat American champ Fred Plaisted

Excitement was so high the city declared it an official holiday. Organisers built grandstands on the water, and people scaled onto rooftops along the waterfront.

1879

The CNE Debuts as the Toronto Industrial Exhibition

At just a quarter for admission, a hundred thousand eager attendees flocked to witness the celebration of agriculture, industry, and the arts.

1880

Reformatory "For Women Unable to Be Improved or Fixed"

Before Liberty Village became known for condos, cafés, and Lamport Stadium, the site at 1155 King Street West housed the Andrew Mercer Reformatory for Women — an institution created in 1880 to confine women considered “undesirable” by Victorian society.

1887

Lillian H. Smith born

Lillian H. Smith, the first children’s librarian in the British Empire, established guidelines for the inclusion and classification of children’s literature in Toronto libraries.

1887

Frances Loring born

Frances Loring was a community leader who opened her home to Toronto’s arts community. Her art haven was recognized as the “most fascinating gathering place in the country” by A.Y. Jackson.

1893

The first Stanley Cup is awarded

Dedicated to Governor-General Lord Frederick Stanley, the first-evr Stanley Cup is awarded to the Montreal Amateur Athletic Association.

1894

Cecilia Krieger born

Cecilia Krieger was the first woman to graduate with a PhD in mathematics from a Canadian university. As a Jewish immigrant, she worked to translate Polish mathematics texts into English, making them available to wider audiences.

1895

Mary Fix born

Through her trailblazing career of firsts, Fix championed community-led development and civic historical preservation that continues to influence Toronto today.

1900

Toronto underground PATH opens

The original pedestrian tunnels are built to connect Eaton’s buildings and, later, to link Union Station to the Royal York Hotel.

1902

Myrtle Cook McGowan born

Myrtle Cook McGowan was part of Canada’s first women’s track team in 1928 – setting the stage for a lifetime of sports leadership that transformed women’s professional sports in Canada.

1904

Fanny "Bobbie" Rosenfeld born

As a medal-winning Olympian and a leading sports journalist, Fanny Rosenfeld’s multi-faceted career changed the landscape of women’s sports in Canada.

1905

Elizabeth "Elsie" MacGill born

Canada’s first practicing female engineer, Elizabeth MacGill, advanced the field of Canadian aeronautics while leading a dedicated fight for gender equality.

1909

Verna Johnston

Between operating a boarding home for Indigenous youth in Toronto and playing a foundational role at the Native Canadian Centre of Toronto, Verna Johnston’s community leadership has shaped generations.

1909

Toronto's Varsity Team wins the first Grey Cup

Named after Governor-General Earl Grey, the first Grey Cup championship took place between University of Toronto and Parkdale Collegiate. In the end, the U of T varsity team claimed the win.

1914

The Buried Bridge

Hidden beneath Trinity Bellwoods Park is one of Toronto’s strangest buried pieces of infrastructure: a fully intact bridge.

1914

Martha, the last known passenger pigeon, passes away

Passenger pigeons were wild North American pigeons, sleeker and longer than the common rock pigeons we see in the city today. Overhunting by European settlers drove the species to extinction, with the last of their kind, Martha, passing away at the Cincinatti Zoo in 1914.

1914

Babe Ruth Hits His First Home Run in Toronto

While playing an exhibition game for the Providence Grays, a then 19-year old Babe Ruth scores his first professional home run at Hanlan’s Point Stadium.

1916

Jane Jacobs born

Jane Jacobs devoted her life’s works to fighting for cities that are designed for people and quality of life. Her advocacy and academic accomplishments shaped Toronto’s social and physical landscape as we know it.

1916

Formation of No. 2 Construction Battalion

Canada’s first all-Black First World War unit. The enlistment office was located on King Street West near University Avenue where fifteen men from Toronto enlisted in the unit.

1917

Bernice Redmon born

Bernice Redmon, appointed to the Victorian Order of Nurses in Canada, was a trailblazer in public health as the first Black Canadian nurse. Through her advocacy work, she paved the way for other Black women to work in Ontario hospitals.

1917

Toronto plays their first NHL game

Played in Montreal, the Toronto team lost to the Wanderers 10-9 game. The unnamed Toronto team (which would later become the Arenas, St. Patricks, and eventually the Maple Leafs) lost their opening match 10-9 to the Montreal Wanderers.

1918

Gar Yin Hune born

Gar Yin Hune, escaping a war back home, toured Canada performing Cantonese Opera at the age of 19. Hune’s troupe’s performances held gathering space for flourishing Chinese-Canadian communities across various Chinatowns.

1918

Canadian National Institute for the Blind founded after World War I

Edwin A. Baker co-founded the Canadian National Institute of the Blind (CNIB) and helped thousands of Canadians realize their dreams.

1919

Jean Lumb born

Jean Lumb was the first Chinese-Canadian woman to receive the Order of Canada in 1976, honouring her efforts in changing immigration laws and helping save Chinatown.

1919

UNIA officially established in Toronto

Toronto’s division originated earlier that year in April as the Coloured Literary Association, meeting at 318 Spadina Avenue, before receiving its official charter from the Harlem headquarters.

1921

Hazel McCallion born

Hazel McCallion was appointed to both the Order of Canada and the Order of Ontario, recognizing her dedication to exemplary city infrastructure. Through her experience with the mayorship of Mississauga, McCallion helped turn the city into the 6th largest in Canada.

1921

"Big Train" captures two different championships in a single day

West enders watched Lionel “Big Train” Conacher drive in the winning run to clinch the local city baseball championship. Afterward, Conacher raced across town to the Beaches, where his lacrosse team was trailing in another championship game. He led them to a comeback victory, scoring the winning goal. 

1921

Beatrice Worsley born

Beatrice Worsley is recognized as Canada’s first female computer scientist. Her lifetime of research and work in the field were at the forefront of Canada’s burgeoning computer science sector.

1922

Site of Sin and Debauchery

Like much of Toronto, this building reinvented itself many times over.

1922

Jeanne Parkin born

Jeanne Parkin is a proponent of public Canadian art. In 2006, the City of Toronto awarded Parkin with a Lifetime Achievement Award, celebrating her decades-long contributions to the visual arts scene of Toronto.

1923

Blanche Lemco van Ginkel born

Modernist architect Blanche Lemco van Ginkel was the first woman and Canadian president of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture. She advocated for equal pay amongst male and female faculty members resulting in a 2002 University of Toronto pay equity settlement for female colleagues.

1924

June Rowlands born

An unstoppable force, June Rowlands was the first woman to be Toronto’s Mayor, TTC Commissioner, and Chair of the Toronto Police Commission.

1925

Toronto's most popular soccer team was fiercely Protestant

The city’s most popular soccer team was known as Ulster United or the Red Handers – names that reference to Northern Ireland – and attracted a fiercely Protestant fanbase to Ulster Stadium in the east end.

1926

Birthplace of Pregnancy Racing

In 1926, Toronto became home to one of the strangest inheritance disputes in Canadian history.

1928

World Coloured Heavyweight Championship

Larry Gains is disqualified against George Godfrey

1929

Two Toronto Star Writers Box in Paris

One of history’s strangest boxing matches took place in Paris, France, between two Toronto Star writers.

1930

Conn Smythe's big bet pays off

Maple Leafs owner Conn Smythe was a notorious gambler. He even bought a race horse named Rare Jewel for $250, entered her in the Coronation Futurity Stakes at odds over 100-1, and won!

1933

Riot Takes place at the Christie Pits Park

A riot broke during a baseball game at Christie Pit Park when three youths flew a swastika flag to provoke Jewish Canadians in the audience. A fight broke out amongst the over 10,000 people in the audience.

1935

Jean Lumb Moves to Toronto

1937

Softball Player Billie Hallam Wins Miss Toronto

At 17-years old, softball player Billie Hallam won the Miss Toronto paegent. She wore her evening gown under police escort to celebrate her victory.

1937

Diana Carter born

As the first woman to win a car race in Canadian history, Diana Carter was destined to trailblaze her way through a career at the top of Canadian race car driving.

1939

Laura Bulger born

Laura Bulger, a Portuguese immigrant, was one of the first teachers of her heritage to work at the Toronto District School Board. Her passion for her culture shone through in her support of other immigrants, especially children, as she helped them maintain a sense of identity through the Portuguese language.

1939

Adrienne Clarkson born

A leading figure in Canada’s cultural life, Adrienne Clarkson has transformed broadcasting, journalism, the arts, and public service.

1939

Margaret Atwood born

Atwood’s leadership as a visionary writer, cultural influencer, and champion of literature and the arts continues to inspire Toronto and beyond.

1940

Jackie Shane born

Jackie Shane was a transgender pioneer of 1960s soul music. Putting on emotionally compelling performances, Shane was an icon in the Toronto music scene for her commitment to authenticity in life and art.

1942

Josephine Mandamin

Anishinaabe Elder, Josephine Madamin, was a revolutionary leader in the fight to protect water rights for Indigenous peoples.

1942

Menaka Thakkar born

Menaka Thakkar established Canada’s first professional Indian dance company in 1978. Thakkar blended different cultural dance styles to co-create a performance called “East Meets West” in which she bridged cultural divides.

1942

Daphne Odjig moves to Toronto

After living in Parry Sound, ON for four years, she and her sister Winnifred made the move

1943

Phyllis "Yogi" Bomberry born

Phyllis Bomberry was a trailblazer for Indigenous women in sports. As a vocal advocate for racial unity within sports, her legacy lives on in Canadian sports today.

1945

Roberta Bondar born

Roberta Bondar is Canada’s first female astronaut and neurologist in space. Her pursuits in the fields of science, medicine, and education continue to inspire generations of Canadians.

1946

Rosalie Silberman Abella born

Rosalie Silberman Abella was the first Jewish woman appointed to the Supreme Court of Canada. She founded the concept of “employment equity” and shaped the first decision made under the 1989 Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

1946

The NBA Started Here

Long before the Raptors, Toronto played a historic role in professional basketball.

1947

Rally to Support Children's Candy Bar Strike

In 1947, Christie Pits became the centre of one of Toronto’s most unusual protests: a citywide movement led almost entirely by children.

1948

Ken Whitlock integrates the Argos

Ken Whitlock Integrates the Argos

1949

Judith Snow born

Born with quadriplegia, Judith Snow was Canada’s first person to receive individualized care funding from the Government. Her activism enabled an additional 600+ people in Ontario to receive funding.

1950

Cheri DiNovo born

Cheri DiNovo was the first minister to perform a legal same-sex marriage in Canada. Her support for 2SLGBTQIA+ rights shines through in her political work of passing inclusive legislation.

1950

Coded Tiles of Little Portugal

Across Toronto, small details hidden in plain sight often carry deeper meanings for the communities that placed them there.

1950

The Continental Hotel

For much of the last century, Toronto was not a welcoming place for many of the people who called it home. But across the city, small pockets of safety and community emerged in unexpected places.

1950

Lee Maracle born

Lee Maracle revived Indigenous stories through her innovative writing. Working to “decolonize the feminine,” Maracle’s first book was among the first Indigenous-authored works published in Canada.

1950

Argos beat Winnipeg at the "Mud Bowl"

Argos Beat Winnipeg at the “Mud Bowl”

1951

Jennifer Hodge de Silva born

Hodge de Silva’s commitment to storytelling and representation broke barriers in the Canadian filmmaking industry.

1951

Karen Kain born

Karen Kain worked as the Artistic Director of the National Ballet for 16 years. Kain began her career showcasing her passion and dedication to ballet by starring as the Swan Queen in Swan Lake and quickly thereafter becoming a Principal Dancer.

1951

Agnes Clinton becomes the first Black woman to graduate from Women's College Hospital

Agnes would go on to work as a public health nurse. Following 13 years of working in Toronto, she went to Yale to study alcohol addiction. Agnes then moved to Detroit, where she set up a mobile medical team for homeless people.

1952

Cathy Crowe born

Cathy Crowe, as one of Canada’s first street nurses, received the Order of Canada in 2018. Her documentaries platform the vulnerable, depicting her advocacy for the health and rights of the homeless.

1953

Columbia "Coco" Diaz born

Columbia Diaz empowered newcomers and caregivers through education and advocacy for rights through her relentless community organizing work.

1954

Toronto gets a subway

The opening 7.4-kilometer trip runs from Union Station north to Eglinton Avenue across 12 stations.

1954

Derailed: The History of Black Railway Porters in Canada

In 1954, porters boarded a railway car from Union Station to Ottawa to begin the fight to remake Canada into a more inclusive society.

1954

Marilyn Bell crosses Lake Ontario

The 16-year-old beat famed American swimmer Florence Chadwick to become the first person in recorded history to swim across Lake Ontario.

1954

Toronto Elects Nathan Phillips for Mayor

After 52 mayors since its incorporation, Nathan Phillips became the first non-Protestant mayor of Toronto.

1956

Black Railway Porters' Fight for Rights

On April 23, 1956, members of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters (BSCP) attended a special convention in the Coliseum of the Canadian National Exhibition in Toronto.

1957

Kathleen Taylor born

Kathleen Taylor breaks ground no matter what industry she stands in. An accomplished business leader, her career continues to break barriers and light the way for women at major corporate institutions.

1959

Leslie Street Spit created

Today, Tommy Thompson Park (or the Leslie Street Spit) is a richly biodiverse urban wilderness, but this wasn’t always the case. The land beneath the park is entirely humanconstructed. Workers began dumping fill at the foot of Leslie Street in 1959, eventually creating a 5.2 kilometre peninsula that extends into the lake.

1960

Hub of 1960s Hippie Counterculture

In the 1960s, Yorkville became the centre of Toronto’s growing counterculture movement.

1962

Mister Rogers debuts on CBC

The famous children’s television host Mr. Rogers started his iconic show here in Toronto.

1964

Angela James

Known as the “Wayne Gretsky of women’s hockey,” Angela James is known for her athletic excellence across Toronto, Canada, and the world. Her passion for the sport has propelled the popularity and recognition of women’s hockey.

1965

Lucio Casaccio of St. Jamestown

How One Man and His House Changed Toronto’s Landscape

1966

The Lost Subway Station

One of Toronto’s “lost” subway stations is hiding in plain sight beneath Bay Station.

1966

Ali vs Chuvalo at Maple Leaf Gardens

1967

Caribana debuts as part of Canada’s Expo 67 Centennial celebrations

A gift from Toronto’s Caribbean community to commemorate Canada’s centennial and foster a sense of cultural pride, mutual respect, and social unity. Inspired by carnivals throughout the West Indies, Caribana was specifically modeled after Trinidad & Tobago’s Carnival.

1969

Min Sook Lee born

Min Sook Lee is an industry-recognized filmmaker who advocates for social justice at the intersection of art and social change through her films and professorship at OCAD University.

1969

The Mosque That Was Once A W.A.S.P. Supremacist Lodge

For more than a century, the Orange Order — a Protestant fraternal organization rooted in British loyalism and anti-Catholic politics — held enormous influence over Toronto’s political and social life.

1969

Faye Urban-Mlacak wins the Canadian Open

Faye Urban-Mlacak wins the Canadian Open at the Toronto Lawn and Tennis Club beating Vicky Berner 6-2, 6-0.

1969

Activists hold a funeral to mourn the "death" of the river

Organized by Pollution Probe, an environmental advocacy group based out of the University of Toronto—the mock funeral featured a procession and a casket.

1971

The Sexual Supermarket

In the 1970s, Yonge and Bloor looked very different from the intersection many Torontonians know today.

1972

Naaz Theatre Opens on Gerrard Street East

Gian Naaz opens Canada’s first South Asian movie theatre.

1973

World Welterweight Championship at Maple Leaf Gardens

José Nápoles defending his welterweight title against Clyde Gray in 1973 might be the highest-stakes matchup ever fought in the city.

1973

The Toronto Toros debut at Varsity Arena

The Toros played to a 4-4 tie against the Chicago Cougars in front of a near-capacity crowd.

1974

Leslie Street Spit officially made accessible to the public

After a year of allowing very limited capacity, starting with guided Sunday afternoon bus tours, cyclists and hikers are granted their first access in 1974.

1975

George Foreman Fights Five

Foreman appeared in Toronto to fight five journeymen… consecutively over the course of an hour.

1976

Toronto hosts the fifth Paralympic Games

The opening ceremonies were held at Woodbine Racetrack, where a crowd of 24,000 welcomed athletes from more than forty countries.

1976

East York declares "War" on Raccoons

In 1976, East York—still politically separate from Toronto—voted to destroy any raccoon trapped by homeowners, regardless of the animal’s behaviour or health. Not everyone supported it. When Howard Chandler, the councillor responsible for the motion, ran for mayor, he was defeated by Alan Redway, who promised to leave raccoons alone. Toronto abandoned similar plans for a raccoon round-up, but authorities continued to euthanize nuisance animals into the early 2000s.

1977

Rosemary Sadlier born

Rosemary Sadlier’s commitment to the recognition of Black History continues to shape the education around and commemoration of Black histories in Canada.

1977

Keith Richards' Drug Bust

In 1977, Toronto briefly found itself at the centre of international rock-and-roll headlines when Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards was arrested at the Harbour Castle Westin Hotel.

1977

The Crash n' Burn Club

At 15 Duncan Street, beneath an otherwise unremarkable downtown building, Toronto’s punk scene found its first real home.

1978

Cecil Centre Opens in Chinatown-Kenstington

Located in Chinatown at 58 Cecil Street, the centre serves the catchment area from Bathurst Street to University Avenue, between Bloor and Queen Street West.

1979

The first annual Bi-National Lesbian Conference

1979

Kids of Degrassi debuts on CBC

1980

Saadia Muzaffar born

Tech entrepreneur and author, Saadia Muzaffar, is dedicated to empowering underrepresented communities to thrive in STEM.

1980

Gay Asians of Toronto Founded

Local activist and filmmaker Richard Fung establishes the Gay Asians of Toronto (GAT), a rights advocacy and peer support group aimed at providing for Toronto’s queer Asian community. It was the first ever organization in Canada to advocate for LGBTQ+ people of colour.

1981

Operation Soap

Operation Soap may sound almost absurd by name, but it marked one of the most significant turning points in Toronto’s LGBTQ2S+ history.

1981

Nerene Virgin's first television appearance on Today's Special

Actor, broadcaster, and educator Nerene Virgin premiered as Jodie, the titular character of the beloved Canadian children’s educational show Today’s Special. The series broadcasted for 7 seasons from 1971 to 1978 with over 122 episodes.

1983

Ausma Malik born

Ausma Malik is the first hijab-wearing woman in public office in Canada. Her dedication to Toronto’s wellbeing is prominent in her championship of affordable housing and racial justice.

1984

Nicky Furlano Faces Off Against Aaron Pryor

Nicky Furlano, nicknamed “Canada’s Rocky,” faces a rough fight against Aaron Pryor at Varsity Stadium.

1985

Jamaican Patty Wars

In the mid-1980s, Kensington Market became the centre of an unexpected national debate now remembered as the “Patty Wars.”

1987

Degrassi Jr. High launches

Created by Linda Schuyler and Kit Hood following the success of the 1979 series Kids of Degrassi Street, Degrassi Jr. High hits the airwaves. A true Toronto television classic, this show helped pioneer the teen drama genre by boldly addressing challenging topics like teen pregnancy, divorce, and bullying.

1988

YTV launches

YTV launched on September 1, 1988 with a primetime special hosted by Scarborough local John Candy. The company was active from 1968 to 1995. Program jockey (PJ) Phil Guerrero shares his experience working in this format.

1989

Site of Pioneering EDM Club

Long before electronic music became mainstream, Toronto’s underground club scene was taking shape inside a former club space at 185 Richmond Street West.

1992

"Winfield Wants Noise"

It’s very different today, but in the 1980s and ’90s, Jays fans developed a reputation for being quiet, polite, and reserved. Dave Winfield’s comments helped change that.

1994

The National Sports of Canada Act (Bill C-212) passes

1994

Dream Team II wins in Toronto

A sellout crowd showed up to the SkyDome to watch the United States’s “Dream Team II” throttle Russia.

1997

College in Good Will Hunting

85 St. George Street may look like an ordinary Toronto campus building, but it quietly played a role in one of the most recognizable films of the 1990s.

1997

Terry Parker wins landmark cannabis case

Terry Parker is acquitted of all charges, establishing that he had a constitutional right to use cannabis for his severe epilepsy.

1998

Raptors draft Vince Carter

Following the 1998-1999 NBA lockout, Vince Carter officially plays his first game with the Toronto Raptors, quickly becoming a household name in the city.

1999

A Snowstorm makes Mel Lastman call in the army

The infamous Blizzard of ’99 brought the entire city to standstill, which pressured Mayor Mel Lastman to call in the army to help with snow removal. At the time, Canadians across the country heard the news and took the chance to make fun of that fact.

2000

Penny Oleksiak born

With 9 career medals, Penny Oleksiak is Canada’s most decorated Canadian Olympian. She learned how to swim in her neighbour’s pool at the age of 9 and at 16, she won four medals at the Summer Olympics.

2000

Bianca Andreescu born

Bianca Andreescu has raised the global profile of tennis for Canadians. As one of the youngest winners of a Grand Slam singles title, Andreescu is the highest-ranked Canadian in Women’s Tennis Association history.

2002

Denham Brown scores 111 points

Prior to his move to the University of Conneticut Huskies, Denham Brown played for West Hill Collegiate Institute in Scarborough. In his closing game with the team, he scored 111 points in one game against the R.H. Academy.

2013

Robin Wall Kimmerer's novel is published

In her book Braiding Sweetgrass, Indigenous scientist and botanist Robin Wall Kimmerer outlines guidelines for what she calls an “Honorable Harvest.”

2015

Eastern Commerce closes, ending their High School reign

From 2002 until the school closed in 2015, Eastern won five provincial titles and three provincial silver medals. Sadly, due to low enrollment, the school was announced to be closing June 2015.

2015

Jose Bautista and the Bat Flip

Following a three-run home run against the Texas Rangers in game five of the division series, Toronto Blue Jay Jose Bautista performs his iconic “bat flip.”

2018

Dr. Jill Andrew becomes a member of the Ontario Provincial Parliament for Toronto—St. Paul's

Jill Andrew is the first Black and queer person elected into the Ontario Legislature. Her platform stands for race and social justice, healthcare equity, and the benefits of arts and culture.

2019

Kawhi hits 'the shot"

The ball bounced on the rim four times as a sold-out arena sat in silent suspense. When the ball dropped, the crowd erupted, and the Raptors advanced to the conference final.

2019

Sully’s gym survives eviction order

Sully Gym’s, founded in 1943, is the thread that connects much of Toronto’s post-1940s boxing history. In March 2019, Sully’s faced eviction.

2023

Ten of Toronto Launches

Museum of Toronto launches the Ten of Toronto exhibition, an exploration of some of Toronto’s most prominent neighbourhoods, their histories, and the communities that developed from them.

2023

Argos turn 150

After 150 years, what began as an off-season hobby for a rowing team has grown into the oldest pro sports franchise in North America.

2024

Toronto Gone Wild Launches

Museum of Toronto launches the Toronto Gone Wild, an exhibition focusing on the connections between the urban and natural worlds apparent in the city. From admiring our local green spaces to conteding with our neighbourhood raccoons, our relationship with plants and creatures is far deeper than we realize.

2024

Black Diasporas Tkaronto-Toronto Launches

Museum of Toronto launches Black Diasporas Tkaronto-Toronto. afrOURban Inc. worked in partnership with over 100 Black Canadians, 50 story contributors, 25 interviewers, and 10 filmmakers to produce a collection of stories that provide a more nuanced understanding of Black lives, and the diversity of diasporas, that contribute to life in our city.

2025

Launch of the 52

Museum of Toronto launches The 52: Stories of Women Who Transformed Toronto to the public at their 401 Richmond location. Representing how 52% of Toronto’s population identify as women, the exhibition highlights the contributions of 52 women who helped to lead and shape the city.

2025

Home Game Launches

Museum of Toronto proudly launches their exhibition “Home Game: Toronto Love Basketball” at their pop-up location next to Harbourfront Centre. It explored the city’s history and love for the sport in all of its facets, highlighting some of the key historical moments and local players that made the game what it is today.