Toronto Feature: The Crystal Palace | The Canadian Encyclopedia

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Toronto Feature: The Crystal Palace

This article is from our Toronto Feature series. Features from past programs are not updated.

This content is from a series created in partnership with Museum Services of the City of Toronto and Heritage Toronto. We gratefully acknowledge funding from the Ontario Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Sport, and the Department of Canadian Heritage.

Crystal Palace
Circa 1890s (courtesy CNE Archives).
The Mail and Empire (sketch in The Telegram, 19 October 1906).
Horticultural Building
The Horticultural Building was built soon after the Crystal Palace burned to the ground (photo by James Marsh).

"Crystal Palace Razed by Fire"

After the success of London's 1851 Exhibition, a glass and iron building resembling the original Crystal Palace seemed to be a requirement for any self-respecting fair. Toronto's first version (1858) was considerably larger than competing buildings in Ottawa and other cities in Ontario. In the 19th century, agricultural and industrial fairs were expressions of progress, and a Crystal Palace was the centrepiece of this showcase of the modern world.

In Toronto, the first Crystal Palace was dismantled and most of the ironwork was incorporated in a new building east of Dufferin Street in 1878--just in time for the inaugural year of what is now the Canadian National Exhibition. It had an undeniable grandeur and its symbolic importance was assured by its use as an icon for the whole fair, its image appearing on postcards, programs, prizes and medals.

Inside the Palace were displayed an eclectic array of products: wedding cakes, pianos, firearms, artificial flowers, fishing tackle, condensed milk and tools--all randomly placed.

On October 18, 1906, a spark ignited the Crystal Palace. All efforts to save it were fruitless and it dissolved in a fearsome pyrotechnic display. The dome-topped Horticulture Building was erected the following year in its place.