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Little Italy, Toronto


FieldValue
nameLittle Italy
settlement_typeNeighbourhood
image_skylineCollege St at Grace St 2023.jpg
image_size275px
image_captionStreet view of Little Italy from Grace St and College Street
image_mapLittle Italy map.PNG
map_captionApproximate Little Italy boundaries
mapsize220px
pushpin_mapCanada Toronto
pushpin_label_positionnone
pushpin_map_captionLocation within Toronto
pushpin_mapsize220
coordinates
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_name
subdivision_type1Province
subdivision_name1
subdivision_type2City
subdivision_name2Toronto

Little Italy, sometimes referred to as College Street West, is a district in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is known for its Italian Canadian restaurants and businesses. There is also a significant Latin-Canadian and Portuguese-Canadian community in the area. The district is centred on a restaurant/bar/shopping strip along College Street, imprecisely between Harbord Street and Dundas Street, and spreading out east and west between Bathurst Street and Ossington Avenue. It is contained within the larger city-recognized neighbourhood of Palmerston-Little Italy.

History

College Street was fully laid out in the area by 1900 and the area was filled with buildings from the early 1900s. College Street is fronted by two- and three-story buildings, with commercial uses on the ground floor and residential or storage uses on the upper floors.

Italians arrived in Toronto in large numbers during the early 20th century. Italians first settled in an area then known as The Ward, centred on University Avenue and College Street. Approximately 40,000 Italians came to Canada during the interwar period of 1914 to 1918, predominantly from Southern Italy where an economic depression and overpopulation had left many families in poverty. Son to Italian immigrants, Johnny Lombardi was born in The Ward in 1915, and went on to found one of the first multilingual radio stations in Canada, CHIN in 1966, in Palmerston–Little Italy.{{Cite news | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20051204212536/http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/1024896817683_20306017// | access-date = April 11, 2010 | archive-date = December 4, 2005 | url-status = dead

A tourist attraction of the area is the Italian Walk of Fame. Granite and brass stars line the sidewalk with the names of noteworthy Italian Canadians. At Clinton Street, on the north side, is the Royal Cinema, which was recently renovated and has an upgraded projection system as it is used for movie editing purposes during the day and repertory cinema in the evenings. While the commercial units are dominated by cafes and restaurants, there are numerous other small businesses serving the neighbourhood.

The side streets are mostly detached or semi-detached single family homes dating to the early-1900s Edwardian period, with front porches and smaller lots, as was the custom at the time.

As early as 1961, the presence of new immigrants had already started changing Little Italy. That year, 15,000 Italians, 12,000 being immigrants, lived in Little Italy (35 percent of the population), declining to 8,000 in 1971, and further to 3,600 in 1991 (13 percent of the population). Although the character of the neighbourhood is still has several Italian restaurants and bakeries, the demographics of this neighbourhood have changed drastically with a smaller Italian population than originally.

Landmarks

Portuguese Canadian Walk of Fame
  • Italian Walk of Fame
  • Church of St. Mary Magdalene
  • Church of St. Francis of Assisi
  • College Street United Church
  • Mod Club Theatre
  • Weldon Park
  • Portuguese Seventh-day Adventist Church

Education

Secular and Catholic schools for Anglophones, as well as a secular public school for French speakers, are operated in Little Italy by the Toronto District School Board, Toronto Catholic District School Board, and Conseil scolaire Viamonde, respectively.

Public primary schools in the area include:

  • Clinton Street Junior Public School, on Clinton Street (TDSB);
  • École élémentaire Pierre-Eliott-Trudeau, on Grace Street (Viamonde);
  • Montrose Junior Public School (TDSB), on Montrose Avenue (TDSB), which also houses Delta Alternative Senior School (TDSB);
  • Saint Francis of Assisi Catholic School, on Clinton Street (TCDSB).

Public high schools in the area, all operated by the TDSB, include:

  • Central Toronto Academy, formerly Central Commerce, is located on Shaw Street, built in 1916.
  • Harbord Collegiate Institute is located on Harbord Street, built in 1892.
  • West End Alternative School is located within the Bickford Centre on Bloor Street, built in 1965 as Bickford Park High School.

References

Little Portugal

References

  1. Zucchi, p. [https://books.google.com/books?id=by07wyU7qbMC&pg=PA36 36].
  2. "History - Pier 21".
  3. "Johnny Lombardi".
  4. Sturino, Franc. (1990). "Forging the chain: a case study of Italian migration to North America, 2000-1930". Multicultural History Society of Ontario.
  5. Jordan Stanger-Ross. (2010). "Staying Italian: Urban Change and Ethnic Life in Postwar Toronto and Philadelphia (Historical Studies of Urban America)". University of Chicago Press.
  6. (August 26, 2005). "The littlest Little Italy slowly fades away". theglobeandmail.com.
  7. "Awesome Movies Filmed in Toronto".
  8. Burpee, Matthew. "We're now in New York City".
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