Monday, May 21, 2012
Time capsule spills secrets
Friday, 27 January 2012 - 2:48pmTHE CANADIAN PRESS
TORONTO—A time capsule unearthed during renovations at Toronto’s famed Maple Leaf Gardens spilled its secrets yesterday, revealing hockey paraphernalia, news from the Dirty ’30s, and a tiny ivory elephant.
While some of the capsule’s contents relate to the time it was buried, as Canadians struggled through the worst of the Great Depression, there was little to explain the mysterious elephant.
More informative were the four Toronto newspapers found inside the copper box that served as the capsule.
The Toronto Daily Star, The Globe, The Mail and Empire and The Evening Telegram all are dated Sept. 21, 1931.
On that day, according to the papers, there were fears over Britain’s monetary system and Canada’s jobless while tensions were growing between China and Japan.
The box, which measures 30 cm by 20 cm by 20 cm, was buried beneath a stone at the front of Maple Leaf Gardens when it was built in 1931 by Conn Smythe, who owned the hockey team.
The historic arena at the corner of Church and Carlton Streets was home to the Leafs until 1999, when the team moved to a new building.
It also played host to The Beatles, Elvis Presley, and many other popular stars of the last century, as well as top sporting events.
In 2009, work began to turn the Gardens into a combination Loblaws grocery store and an athletic centre for nearby Ryerson University.
The somewhat tarnished copper time capsule was found during the renovations.
Other items found inside included a four-page letter from the directors of Maple Leaf Gardens describing the design and construction details of the new arena, three official hockey rule books, and a Toronto municipal handbook.
“Maple Leaf Gardens holds a lot of special memories for millions of Canadians and, it turns out, it also held a few surprises from 1931 that were just waiting to be found,” Sheldon Levy, president of Ryerson University, said yesterday.
“I wonder if those that put the time capsule there in 1931 would have ever imagined that 80 years later there would be a great Loblaws store there and a complex for a university that didn’t even exist,” he added during a ceremony at Ryerson.
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