2a.Halifax Mk3

HALIFAX RESTORED

RESTORED – The Story of a Halifax Bomber published 2011 At 81, retired Lieutenant (pronounced ‘leff-tenant’) Colonel Bill Tytula is a walking encyclopaedia when it comes to the Halifax, a WW 2 4-engine bomber. An aeronautical engineer with both military and civilian careers, Tytula was Project Manager for the restoration of The Halifax bomber on […]

QUEEN’S PARK

QUEEN’S PARK Queen’s Park is one of Toronto’s “pre-eminent parks.” In the late 1820s, the new King’s College, the Church of England’s institution of higher learning, acquired a large campus at the north central edge of Toronto. Soon the public began using the eastern part of the campus recreationally. In 1849, the non-denominational University of […]

Henry's horses

THE SHEENY MAN

THE SHEENY MAN A recent column written by Marlene Black (Landowner magazine) in which she talks about rags and the value of a penny triggered the following. During the early 1950’s the ice man, the bread man and the milk man used to deliver their products door to door by horse drawn wagon. Tinkers used […]

1. Cat

CATS

HANK BUNKER’S CAT RANCH PROVES UNSUCCESSFUL No matter the times – whether they be in a recession, depression or bountiful – there are always entrepreneurs charged with optimism seeking their fame and fortune. Hank Bunker was such a man. The following tale was published in the August 23, 1923  edition of The Bancroft Times. On […]

1. Manure Spreader 005

MITCH

Mitch Hepburn Elected at 37, Liberal leader Mitch Hepburn became the youngest Premier in Ontario in 1934. An onion farmer, he ruled during the depression into the WW2 years. Hepburn created a volunteer police force – “Hepburn’s Hussars” – known by some as “Sons of Mitches” – as strike breakers, a strategy that failed. During […]