9 Culture
The NHL Had Decided That
It Would Operate
A Four-team Circuit
Made Up Of
The Canadiens
Maroons
Ottawa
And One More Club
In Either Quebec Or Toronto
Toronto's Inclusion
In
The NHL's Inaugural Season Was Formally Announced
On November 26
1917
With Concerns Over
The Bulldog's Financial Stability Surfacing
The League Granted Temporary Franchise Rights
To
The Arena Company
Owners Of
The Arena Gardens
The NHL Granted
The Arena Responsibility Of
The Toronto Franchise
For Only
The Inaugural Season
With Specific Instructions
To Resolve
The Dispute With Livingstone
Or Transfer Ownership Of
The Toronto Franchise Back
To
The League At
The End Of
The Season
The Franchise Did Not Have An Official Name
But Was Informally Called "the Blueshirts" Or "the Torontos" By
The Fans
And Press. Although
The Inaugural Roster Was Made Up Of Players Leased From
The NHA's Toronto Blueshirts
Including Harry Cameron
And Reg Noble
The Maple Leafs Do Not Claim
The Blueshirts' History
As Their Own. During
The Inaugural Season
The Club Performed
The First Trade
In NHL History
Sending Sammy Hebert
To
The Senators
In Return
For Cash. Under Manager Charlie Querrie
And Head Coach Dick Carroll
The Team Won
The Stanley Cup
In
The Inaugural 1917�18 Season
For
The Next Season
Rather Than Return
The Blueshirts' Players
To Livingstone
As Originally Promised
On October 19
1918
The Arena Company Formed
The Toronto Arena Hockey Club
Which Was Readily Granted Full Membership
In
The NHL
The Arena Company Also Decided That Year That Only NHL Teams Were Allowed
To Play At
The Arena Gardens�a Move Which Effectively Killed
The NHA. Livingstone Sued
To Get His Players Back
Mounting Legal Bills From
The Dispute Forced
The Arenas
To Sell Some Of Their Stars
Resulting In
A Horrendous Five-win Season
In 1918�19
With
The Company Facing Increasing Financial Difficulties
And
The Arenas Officially Eliminated From
The Playoffs
The NHL Agreed
To Let
The Team Forfeit Their Last Two Games. Operations Halted
On February 20
1919
With
The NHL Ending Its Season
And Starting
The Playoffs
The Arenas' .278 Winning Percentage That Season Remains
The Worst
In Franchise History
However
The 1919 Stanley Cup Finals Ended Without
A Winner Due
To
The Worldwide Flu Epidemic
A Collection Of Photographic Head-shots Of
The Toronto St
Patricks Team For
The 1921�22 Season
. . 1.2.2 Members of
the Toronto Public School Board
15 References
Map of Upper Canada
See also: Energy policy of Canada
Renewable energy
in Canada
and Smart grid. . Semifinals Mexico Santos Laguna
Hydro (22.0%), John Robinson
Acknowledged leader of
the Family Compact
Member of
the Legislative Assembly
and later
the Legislative Council
William Henry Boulton
8th Mayor of Toronto
and member of
the Legislative Assembly
Sir Allan Napier MacNab
1st Baronet Legislative Assembly of Upper Canada
Henry Sherwood
13th Parliament of Upper Canada representing Brockville
Reform Movement; University of Toronto Schools, Main articles: Ontario Line
and Relief Line (Toronto), 3.4 Sydenham and
the Union of
the Canadas.
The Toronto Board of Education
officially
the Board of Education for
the City of Toronto
governed education
in pre-amalgamation Toronto from 1904
to 1998
it was created from
the merger of
the existing boards of education
in
the city (The Toronto Public School Board
the Toronto Collegiate Institute Board
and
the Toronto Technical School Board) following
a municipal referendum
in 1904
the board governed education
in Toronto until 1998
Metropolitan Toronto School Board and
the Toronto District School Board, Toronto Ontario Canada Business directory, 82 1810
In 2011
the most commonly reported religion
in Toronto was Christianity
adhered
to
by 54.1% of
the population
a plurality
28.2%
of
the city's population was Catholic
followed
by Protestants (11.9%)
Christian Orthodox (4.3%)
and members of other Christian denominations (9.7%)
Other religions significantly practised
in
the city
are Islam (8.2%)
Hinduism (5.6%)
Judaism (3.8%)
Buddhism (2.7%)
and Sikhism (0.8%)
Those with no religious affiliation made up 24.2% of Toronto's population
Language. . . . . 1911 2,527,292 +15.8%
J
Tunnel boring machine
for Line 5 Eglinton being extracted
in 2017
9.1.1 Visual arts
8 Demographics
Lutherans 4,524. John Robinson
Acknowledged leader of
the Family Compact
Member of
the Legislative Assembly
and later
the Legislative Council
William Henry Boulton
8th Mayor of Toronto
and member of
the Legislative Assembly
Sir Allan Napier MacNab
1st Baronet Legislative Assembly of Upper Canada
Henry Sherwood
13th Parliament of Upper Canada representing Brockville
Reform Movement.
Magill Atkinson Dermer LLP