Welcome to Maple Leaf Gardens : photographs and memories of Canada's most famous arena / Graig Abel & Lance Hornby ; foreword by Darryl Sittler. --
Record details
- ISBN: 1770411631 (pbk.)
- ISBN: 9781770411630 (pbk.)
- Physical Description: xxiii, 218 p. : ill. (chiefly col.)
- Publisher: Toronto : ECW Press, c2013.
Content descriptions
| Immediate Source of Acquisition Note: | LSC 39.95 |
Search for related items by subject
| Subject: | Maple Leaf Gardens Ltd. > History. Maple Leaf Gardens Ltd. > History > Pictorial works. Arenas > Ontario > Toronto > History. Arenas > Ontario > Toronto > History > Pictorial works. |
| Location | Call Number / Copy Notes | Barcode | Shelving Location | Status | Due Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lakeshore Branch | 796.068713541 Abe | 31681002629640 | NONFICPBK | Available | - |
- Bookmasters
Built against all odds in the Great Depression, the Maple Leaf Gardens is not just a building, itâs a story. Never-before-seen photos are revealed in this extensive, eye-opening, and nostalgic history. - Bookmasters
Explore the unseen Maple Leaf GardensGenerations have come to marvel and celebrate spectacles of all kinds at Maple Leaf Gardens. With its soaring roof and massive walls, this iconic building tells a story with an unlikely beginning and an ending yet to be written. Built against all odds, in the grip of the Great Depression, the Gardens went on to host 2,533 hockey games, with the Toronto Maple Leafsâ final regular season record 1,215 wins, 768 losses, and 346 ties. When it closed in 1999, it was the last Original Six arena still standing and remains in use for hockey today as Ryerson Universityâs Mattamy Athletic Centre.In Welcome to Maple Leaf Gardens, Graig Abel and Lance Hornby have composed a rare, stunning, and historically invaluable tribute to what many would consider the Mecca of Canadian sport. Abelâs years as the Maple Leafsâ photographer make him the perfect guide for sports fans, music lovers, and star-gazers. Readers will experience the buildingâs many innovative features from the rafters to the clock, from the rinkside gold seats right up to the greys, where the âreal fansâ sat. Alongside Abelâs humorous first-hand stories about Harold Ballard, Doug Gilmour, and the celebrities who frequented the Gardens, Hornby gives a press box perspective on covering the Leafs at the end of the Gardensâ eventful era and the buildingâs place in history. - Independent Publishing Group
Generations have come to marvel and celebrate spectacles of all kinds at Maple Leaf Gardens. With its soaring roof and massive walls, this iconic building tells a story with an unlikely beginning and an ending yet to be written. Built against all odds, in the grip of the Great Depression, the Gardens went on to host 2,533 hockey games, with the Toronto Maple Leafs’ final regular season record 1,215 wins, 768 losses, and 346 ties. When it closed in 1999, it was the last Original Six arena still standing and remains in use for hockey today as Ryerson University’s Mattamy Athletic Centre. In Welcome to Maple Leaf Gardens, Graig Abel and Lance Hornby have composed a rare, stunning, and historically invaluable tribute to what many would consider the Mecca of Canadian sport. Abel’s years as the Maple Leafs’ photographer make him the perfect guide for sports fans, music lovers, and star-gazers. Readers will experience the building’s many innovative features from the rafters to the clock, from the rinkside gold seats right up to the greys, where the real fans” sat. Alongside Abel’s humorous first-hand stories about Harold Ballard, Doug Gilmour, and the celebrities who frequented the Gardens, Hornby gives a press box perspective on covering the Leafs at the end of the Gardens’ eventful era and the building’s place in history.
- Perseus PublishingGenerations have come to marvel and celebrate spectacles of all kinds at Maple Leaf Gardens. With its soaring roof and massive walls, this iconic building tells a story with an unlikely beginning and an ending yet to be written. Built against all odds, in the grip of the Great Depression, the Gardens went on to host 2,533 hockey games, with the Toronto Maple Leafs’ final regular season record 1,215 wins, 768 losses, and 346 ties. When it closed in 1999, it was the last Original Six arena still standing and remains in use for hockey today as Ryerson University’s Mattamy Athletic Centre. In Welcome to Maple Leaf Gardens, Graig Abel and Lance Hornby have composed a rare, stunning, and historically invaluable tribute to what many would consider the Mecca of Canadian sport. Abel’s years as the Maple Leafs’ photographer make him the perfect guide for sports fans, music lovers, and star-gazers. Readers will experience the building’s many innovative features from the rafters to the clock, from the rinkside gold seats right up to the greys, where the real fans” sat. Alongside Abel’s humorous first-hand stories about Harold Ballard, Doug Gilmour, and the celebrities who frequented the Gardens, Hornby gives a press box perspective on covering the Leafs at the end of the Gardens’ eventful era and the building’s place in history.
- Simon and Schuster
Explore the unseen Maple Leaf Gardens
Generations have come to marvel and celebrate spectacles of all kinds at Maple Leaf Gardens. With its soaring roof and massive walls, this iconic building tells a story with an unlikely beginning and an ending yet to be written. Built against all odds, in the grip of the Great Depression, the Gardens went on to host 2,533 hockey games, with the Toronto Maple Leafsâ final regular season record 1,215 wins, 768 losses, and 346 ties. When it closed in 1999, it was the last Original Six arena still standing and remains in use for hockey today as Ryerson Universityâs Mattamy Athletic Centre.
In Welcome to Maple Leaf Gardens, Graig Abel and Lance Hornby have composed a rare, stunning, and historically invaluable tribute to what many would consider the Mecca of Canadian sport. Abelâs years as the Maple Leafsâ photographer make him the perfect guide for sports fans, music lovers, and star-gazers. Readers will experience the buildingâs many innovative features from the rafters to the clock, from the rinkside gold seats right up to the greys, where the âreal fansâ sat. Alongside Abelâs humorous first-hand stories about Harold Ballard, Doug Gilmour, and the celebrities who frequented the Gardens, Hornby gives a press box perspective on covering the Leafs at the end of the Gardensâ eventful era and the buildingâs place in history.