Toronto Litho Canadian Sports Series—Football

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An unused copy of Toronto Litho's Canadian Sports Series card showing the sport of football has been added.

Toronto Litho Canadian Sports Series—Baseball

TorLithoBaseball
Another card from Toronto Litho's Canadian Sports Series has been added.

Toronto Litho Canadian Sports Series—Wheeling

TorLithoWheeling
A card from Toronto Litho's Canadian Sports Series illustrating the two sports of Bathing and Wheeling has been added. While written upon, the card has not been postally used.

Canadian Cities Series Business Use

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An example of Toronto Litho’s Canadian Cities Series showing vignettes of Montreal has been added. This card has been used by Dominion Express Company for advertising delivery of Christmas packages.

Nymphe Sloop Christmas Greeting 1899

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A very nice used example of Toronto Litho’s pioneer patriotic series featuring ships of war of the Boer War era, in this case the Nymphe sloop. has been added. This card bear’s the company’s Christmas Greeting on the front, with the address and a 1¢ Jubilee + 1¢ QV Numeral stamp cancelled December 26, 1899, paying postage to England on the back.

Toronto Litho Christmas Greetings

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This card represents the first instance I’ve come across of this particular patriotic series by Toronto Litho having their Christmas overprint. Other Christmas greeting cards in the Canadian Cities Series have also been added.

Toronto Litho Calliope 1900

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This posting shows a pioneer patriotic postcard from Toronto Litho from their War Ships series, popular in light of the Boer War in which Canadian soldiers were participating at that time. This card shows Calliope, a 3rd class cruiser. The card has been postally used June 4, 1900 from Sturgeon Falls, Ontario by Gordon L. Cockburn to Albert Rudler Jr. of 227 William Street in New York City, by way Hamilton, with a Hamilton transit postmark on the front to the card.

Toronto Litho Christmas Greetings

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This Canadian Cities Series card with one of the Toronto designs shows the text “Wishing You A MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A happy new year.” on a ribbon along with sprigs of holly. This card is not postally used, although bearing a 1¢ Jubilee stamp, so the date is unknown.

Toronto Litho Quebec with "Private Post Card"

An example has been added of the Quebec City design from the Canadian Cities Series Type I issue illustrating the “Private Post Card” text at the top of the card.

Toronto Litho from Toronto to Tokyo, 1903

TorLithoQuebecTokyo
This Toronto Litho Co. Ltd. pioneer postcard from their Canadian Cities Series illustrating one of the two Quebec City designs has been mailed with a 2¢ QV Numeral stamp from Toronto on April 22, 1903 to Miss Nora von Fallot, at 56 Tsukiji, Tokyo, Japan with a Tokyo receiving cancel dated May 18, 1903, on the reverse.

The reverse of the card contains extensive social history, with the author, Carla, noting that last Wednesday she had seen Sir Oliver Mowat’s funeral procession, and that she attended the Diocese of Toronto Women’s Auxiliary meeting last week, where Miss Cartwright was elected 1st vice president.

Toronto Litho Montreal early use

TorLithoMontrealJn98
A new example of the Montreal Victoria Bridge design has been added. This is one of the earlier uses of this series, postally used from Toronto to New York on June 28, 1898. An interesting aspect of this card is that it bears the text “PRIVATE POST CARD” in a purple ink stamp on the face of the card. I’ve often wondered the sequence that Toronto Litho issued the version of the card with the same text printed on the card. As a conjecture, this could be an example of the second design variation, the first being issued without the text, the second being issued with a rubber stamp of the text, and the third being with the printed text. As the printed text version is scarce, it could be that cards without the text soon became acceptable use through the postal service, and the text was dropped.

Toronto Litho Brantford paquetbot

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This Toronto Litho Canadian Cities Series pioneer postcard was mailed from St. John NB to Liverpool England in January 1902 and marked paid with a Liverpool Packet cancel.

Toronto Litho to Malta

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This example of a Toronto Litho pioneer postcard from the Canadian Cities Series shows a late use of a 2¢ Jubilee stamp, no. 52, mailed March 22, 1904 to Sliema, Malta. The use of the Jubilee stamp may be attributed to the sender working as a post office clerk.

There is extensive correspondence on the reverse from H.B. Currie to a collector in Malta with whom he had been corresponding. H.B. Currie was a post office clerk in Walkerton in the 1901 census, living as a roomer in a local residence at the time. Born October 14, 1875, he would have been 28 years old when he mailed this card. Currie sought to sell the collector a map of Kimberley & Boshof, South Africa. The 2’ x 3’ map on canvas folded into pocket size, and was given to him by his brother who served in the Boer War.

Toronto Litho president's mail to Belgium

TorLithoTorontoTooLate
This Toronto Litho Co. Ltd. pioneer postcard was mailed by the company’s president, William Stone, to Hotel de la Poste in Ghent, Belgium from the company’s headquarters at 680 King Street West in Toronto. It is postmarked with a Bathurst Street Toronto postmark dated October 10, 1899, and bears a 2 Map stamp as well as a “Too Late” cancellation. The card also bears a Gand October 24, 1899 receiving cancel. Stone writes:

“Dear Sir: Knowing your good Hotel by reputation, I take the liberty of asking you to kindly mail mean illustrated post card of your City. Hoping to pay you a visit in the near future. Yours sincerely,Wm. Stone”

This note by William Stone prompts the question, was Stone a postcard collector? Was this research into contemporary European postcard printing part of company business? Or was Stone just curious about a city he planned to visit?

New site design

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I’ve been slowly working through the older site and replacing it with an updated design that is responsive to the evolving ways in which the web is accessed. The new site design works better for people accessing the site with phones & tablets, rather than only with desktop computers. I’m also taking the opportunity to add additional content while I make the transition.