This image is available from the City of Toronto Archives, listed under the archival citation Fonds 1266, Item 18711.
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Image title
Item forms part of a fonds that consists of ca. 140,000 negatives created by and/or under the direction of the Globe and Mail's first staff photographer, John H. Boyd, between December 1922 and November 1953. The fonds begins with what an obituary described as Boyd's first assignment as staff photographer: a feature photograph of streetcar tracks being laid in front of the new Union Station on Front Street, December 7, 1922 (#1, TTC Construction, Front and York). For the next 42 years, Boyd continued to take pictures, and assign other photographers to take pictures, for the Globe and its successor, the Globe and Mail. The CTA now holds Boyd's surviving work for the first 31 years of his photojournalism career. Unfortunately, not all his photographs survive. The losses are greatest for the early years (e.g., only a third of the negatives logged between December 1922 and July 1928 have survived), although there are still significant losses in later years (e.g., only one of the shots taken when the Globe and Ma
John H. Boyd, portrait, 1/2 figure. - November 25, 1929
Credit/Provider
City of Toronto Archives
Short title
f1266_it18711
Author
Unknown
Usage terms
Copyright is in the public domain and permission for use is not required. The following citation must be used when exhibiting or publishing this image: City of Toronto Archives, Globe and Mail fonds, Fonds 1266, Item 18711.