I haven’t shown up for Thursday Doors in a long time, but after discovering an unpublished post in my draft folder, I thought this might be a good opportunity to slide back in.
I actually found a number of unfinished posts and out of curiosity, I pulled up this one. I was surprised to discover it had been written almost 2 years ago.
I don’t really know why I never published it. Sometimes I do that. Draft something up and then subsequently trash it. This one apparently survived that fate, so today it’s getting its proverbial moment in the sun.
*********************************************************************
I remember this day very well.
It was a sunny afternoon in the heat of summer after a rare lunch with my sister in Kensington Market.
I could see a tower poking out of the trees a short distance away and knew there had to be a treasure lurking there, waiting for discovery.
I’ve written previous posts about ‘ghosts’ of buildings and other structures that get left behind – hinting at a time that once was. These silent sentinels fascinate me – time capsules to the past.
This tower is all that remains of St George the Martyr Anglican Church. Its history dates back to 1844 and once had a grand spire on top.
It would have been an imposing landmark at the time, but now it is dwarfed by all the concrete and glass towers of downtown.
In 1955 a fire destroyed the church and all that remained was the bell tower, parish hall, and rectory. The spire had already been removed prior to the fire, but I could find no information on when or why it was removed.
For lack of funds, the church was never rebuilt, but the tower was salvaged – with no purpose that I could see, except as a reminder of a glorious past.
Thursday Doors is a weekly photo feature hosted by Norm Frampton at Norm 2.0.
So many of my draft posts never make it out of my head into a drafts folder. Glad you found this one.
Jude
LikeLike
There are some people who have no filter, and then there are those – like us – who have very thick filters 😉
LikeLike
Welcome back. Glad to see your pictures.
LikeLike
Always did love your Thurs Doors — thanks!
LikeLike
Thanks 🙂
My biggest problem right now is squeezing in the time to write the posts. My photo library is backing up with potential contenders!!
LikeLike
I’ve always wondered about those squared off church towers. They look so unprepossessing, dare I say even ugly. Now I know, thanks to you, that they probably lost their steeples. Its like a dog with docked ears or a tail. Now I must go look at my drafts folder and see what is hidden away, forgotten, like that lovely door.
LikeLike
To me, those squared off towers always remind me of the watchtowers of a fairytale castle. I was surprised to discover this one once had a steeple. Finding the old photo gave new life to this old tower amputated from its host.
LikeLike
Ooh!! I love this find Joanne. Both in your coming across it in real life and also in your drafts! This looks like a beautiful church and I love arched doorways like that. It could definitely use some TLC, but it sure does have lots of character! 🙂
LikeLike
It sounds like we both love unexpected discovery 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person
It’s really interesting to see the archived photo of the complete structure. It’s a shame how a fire destroyed the church. I thought brick would be more invincible. I am glad this post didn’t end up in the trash, Joanne.
LikeLike
It’s the old photo that sealed the post’s fate and why I finally posted it. This lovely old church deserved to be remembered.
LikeLike
What a great find, Joanne. Too bad it’s locked up.
LikeLike
Someday Dan, I need to return. I have reason to believe there is more here to discover.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Ahh, I’m so glad you rescued it! And that you can smell a door treasure from a distance. I can do it too sometimes. 😉
LikeLike
Isn’t it grand when it works?! 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person
How fun to find a draft. Like a bill found in an old purse.:) I love seeing the old photo in comparison.
LikeLike
hahaha! Oh Sue, you must have richer pockets than I do. At best I find only a loonie 😆
I have so many scraps of potential posts laying around. In fact I just scribbled another one this morning. Getting them published is an entirely different challenge.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Well at least you are writing them down. Mine just wander around in my head.
I’ll have you know I found a 20 dollar bill in an old purse just the other day. Apparently my memory is far worse than yours. 😊
LikeLike
It’s almost like winning the lottery 🙂
I do have odd stashes of money around – deliberately. Like a baggie with some emergency cash in my hiking pack and the baggies with US$ and Euros left over from various trips that I keep with my passport. Eventually they get pulled out when needed 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person
A friend and I discovered this tower a couple of months back after leaving the AGO. Thank you for the history on it – we searched to see if there was a plaque that would give us an explanation but no such luck.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I love it when I discover something unexpected like this 🙂
LikeLike
Beautiful building! Good save!
I have 92 drafts, and I rarely trash any of them. Obvs. lol
LikeLike
92!! Wow – you are prolific! Often my drafts are just scribbled on scraps of paper.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I love that bell-tower, too. And these are such good photos! They did rebuild the church, using the parish hall as a base, next door (to the east). It’s quite a charmer. It’s separated from the tower by a pretty walled memorial garden. Definitely go back for a look when you can. The church’s services are currently (or… soon) on hiatus as some structural work is being done. (I recall hearing that there was damage caused by some nearby construction, but … that may be apocryphal.)The building is sometimes used for events. I’ve attended several concerts there, and also a really interesting play with music (about Toronto’s immigration history). Good acoustics, and lovely to see the space being used in various ways. I gather the bell in the tower still functions, but I’ve never been there at the right time to hear it. My grandmother used to live across the street, in the early days of the Village by the Grange. Alas, she’s no longer around to remind me of whether or not she heard the bell on Sundays.
LikeLike
Oooh – thank you so much for the added info!! I’ve been meaning to go back after I had read about a memorial garden, but now you’ve given me extra reasons to go back!!
I didn’t realize there was a bell in the tower!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Well, they did save the bell, so I am pretty sure it is still there. Not sure whether they were ringing it for services or not. And I wonder if the tower ever opens, or the bell rings, during Doors Open Toronto.
To be discovered!
LikeLike
ooooh – thanks for the hint. It wouldn’t have occurred to me to check the Open Doors event. Thanks!
LikeLike
A lovely door, so glad you discovered the post. I have several ideas for posts that are scribbled down on bits of paper but have yet to make it as far as the draft folder. Sometimes other things come along that seem much more exciting and then before you know it years have gone by!
LikeLiked by 1 person
You just described my ‘creative process’ perfectly! I have at least a dozen of those scraps of paper floating around 😏
LikeLiked by 1 person
Interesting just leaving the tower. I wonder why? We came across a similar remnant in Glasgow recently where the footprint of the rest of the church had been turned into a little park. I thought that was a nice idea.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I discovered one of those in Quebec City in the fall. It was a lovely, peaceful place.
LikeLiked by 1 person
It is difficult to see where the door knobs once were. A beautiful relic, and glad you found it hidden amongst your rubbish! Happy New Year Joanne.
LikeLike
Happy New Year, Denny!
Maybe I should go dumpster diving in my draft folder again. Who knows what I may find! 😉
LikeLiked by 1 person
A historic tower with handsome doors with no handles? I do love a good mystery. 🙂
LikeLike
Me too … and sometimes the best mysteries are those where you get to write your own version of the story 🙂
LikeLike
Glad you went digging, Joanne. 🙂 I haven’t participated for some time, either, but with the new year, I’m back at blogging. I hope your 2019 is off to a wonderful start and just keeps getting better.
janet
LikeLiked by 1 person
Sometimes real life just gets in the way 🙂
2018 was a great year for me with tons of inspiration to write about … just little time to actually do it.
I hope 2019 is as kind and generous!
LikeLike
I hope so, too, Joanne. I understand about so much to write about (or photograph) and not enough time to do it. I’m trying to start a journal this year, but it takes time. I could do it online (with faster typing), but there’s something about an actual book that I really like.
LikeLike
That makes 2 of us 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person
Yes it may need some TLC but it’s not hard to see that it was a beauty at one point.
Happy New Year Joanne – I hope your holidays were filled with joy 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person
Back at you, Norm. I hope all is well in your world.
LikeLike
Have the opposite problem looking at old posts – WHY did I post this? Then when I look at the comments, I am surprised what others “saw” in it:)
With this beautiful tower with so much character, the sheer angles with which you captured would have been enough – am glad you came back to it! That this New Year may be full of unexpected surprises, and closure of things that have been laying around unfinished:)
LikeLike
The comments are sometimes the best part of the post 🙂
I’m afraid that sometimes I look at my drafts and think ‘so what?’ … and then it never gets posted.
LikeLike
That was quite a tower. Sometimes its less expensive for a church to move to a new building rather than renovate an old one.
LikeLike
So very true … the same goes for houses.
LikeLike
What remains of the building is lovely, Joanne. Great to see the old image, too.
LikeLike
Finding the old photo was a bonus to help visualize what it used to look like … especially surrounded by the small homes compared to its neighbourhood now.
LikeLiked by 1 person
This was a nice find in your drafts folder! Interesting history and a mystery! I wonder what will become of it?
Hopefully, something good.
LikeLike
I don’t recall the details of why I didn’t post this when I originally wrote it. I vaguely remember reading something about the parish hall that also survived and wanted to return to the tower to investigate.
Needless to say, that never happened. It got bumped by the next new shiny thing that caught my attention 😉
LikeLiked by 1 person
Interesting that you can’t find much about the removal of the spire since 1955 wasn’t that long ago, really. Sad that the church is no longer operating with such a long history. Glad you pulled this out of your drafts folder. – Marty
LikeLike
I think some churches leave a bigger ‘footprint’ than others. If its work was modestly confined to its community, news about the church might not have caused enough of a ripple to warrant attention … although a really big devastating fire isn’t likely to be ignored.
LikeLiked by 1 person
That is a very cool building. Love that they have just left it there.
LikeLike
In a city that has seen so many of its heritage buildings destroyed in the 60s and 70s in the name of progress, it’s a relief to see bits and pieces like this one that has survived – in spite of devastating fire.
LikeLiked by 1 person
We the living are the voice of the ghosts. I agree it’s you that door require some TLC. I wonder what the church owner has in store for it or is it now government property with a ghostly sign KEEP OUT.
LikeLike
I think that’s why I didn’t originally post this story. I hadn’t noticed what became of the parish hall and rectory that also survived the fire and wanted to return for another look.
Best intentions not executed.
LikeLike
Please do take a peak and keep us posted for those skeletons rattling behind the door 🙄 🤗
LikeLike
I think there are many treasures in this area. I must return again someday.
LikeLike
The history is fascinating,Joanne, and it does raise questions, doesn’t it? What happened to that tall spire? Why did they leave the tower (I’m glad they did!). A lovely tribute to the past amidst all the glass and steel. Thanks for sharing!
LikeLike
I too am glad the tower survived. I love it when unusual little bits like this are unexpectedly discovered.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I love the “Doors” posts…and this is an incredible old building with stories to share, I’m sure. But the pure grace of the lines is just poetry of itself.
LikeLike
I’ve said it many times before, but sometimes I wonder if in a hundred years from now people will be admiring the grace and beauty of our modern architecture the same way we appreciate our heritage buildings.
As an aside, I’m having problems with your blog site. My comments seem to be going into never-land and repeated efforts to ‘follow’ your blog are met with an error message. I had been having issues with many other blogs, but they’ve now been resolved. Your’s appears to be the only one now. I’m wondering if the prob might be on your end? Just mentioning this in case you are experiencing an unusual decrease in traffic volume.
LikeLike
Beautiful building. Maybe one day some smart developer will rebuild it and turn it into a museum or mansion or something.
LikeLike
Let’s hope not. Developers rarely have intentions beyond making money.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Well then, some charitable developer. You know, a saint. Someone who doesn’t care about money. Well, hell, there goes that idea.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I love the term “ghosts of building.” I knew exactly what you meant.
LikeLike
Sometimes I think the ghosts that remain are more interesting than the original building. They are anarchronisms that stand out, and yet become invisible at the same time.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I agree that this Church does have incredible stories to share. Thank you for reviving this post for us. It is very thought-provoking…with fabulous photos!
LikeLike
I found very little information about the church. Perhaps it was in fact rather unremarkable during its lifetime.
I think one of the reasons why I didn’t post this originally was because I was hoping to go back there.
LikeLike
This is the strangest door. No doorknobs. And it was a church–how did they welcome people?
LikeLike
I can’t tell from the old photograph whether they were push doors only from the exterior or if door handles once existed and were subsequently removed.
What I liked about the door were all the knobby little studs 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person
This is a door I pass by all the time. It is so nice to see the drawing of the original building. Thanks so much for researching and posting this Joanne
LikeLike
I was thrilled when I found that old photo. I love finding these reminders of our history “hidden in the open” like this 🙂
LikeLike