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      • A student boarding house that was part of Upper Canada College, when  it was locate on the north side of King Street, is the only building that has survived from the 19th-century campus. Today, its address is 22 Duncan Street, and it is on the southwest corner of Duncan and Adelaide Streets.
      tayloronhistory.com › 2016/01/31 › upper-canada-colleges-former-boarding-housetoronto
  1. Feb 3, 2016 · Upper Canada College boys’ boarding house on Adelaide Street in 1890. View is from the northwest. Duncan Street was eventually extended south to King Street, on the east side of the structure. The other buildings in the photo were demolished. Photo from the Toronto Public Library, 1890 r-2330.

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  3. Jan 31, 2016 · A student boarding house that was part of Upper Canada College, when it was locate on the north side of King Street, is the only building that has survived from the 19th-century campus. Today, its address is 22 Duncan Street, and it is on the southwest corner of Duncan and Adelaide Streets.

  4. Upper Canada College was founded in 1829 by the Lieutenant Governor of Upper Canada at that time, Major-General Sir John Colborne (later Lord Seaton), to serve as a feeder school to the newly established King's College (later the University of Toronto).

  5. Upper Canada College (UCC) is an independent day and boarding school for boys in Toronto, Ontario, operating under the International Baccalaureate program. The college is widely described as Canada's most prestigious preparatory school, [3] [4] [5] [6] and has produced many notable graduates.

  6. Upper Canada College (1831-1891), interior, upper corridor. 1890

  7. Long study room in the south wing of the boarding house - Upper Canada College interior (1831-1891) 134 years ago - King Street West - 1890 Link to archive record - Map location (From the Toronto Public Library)

  8. This archives is the repository of photographs, documents and artefacts documenting the history of Upper Canada College from the mid-nineteenth century to the present and serves as its institutional memory. Additional records relating to Upper Canada also reside at the University of Toronto Archives and Records Management Service (UTARMS).

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