Toronto Through My Lens

Tag: ParliamentSt

Chapel of St. James-the-Less

The Chapel of St. James-the-Less is located at 635 Parliament Street, in the grounds of the St. James’ Cemetery and Crematorium. It is a mid-19th-century funeral chapel built of stone in the High Victorian Gothic Revival style. The chapel is picturesquely set atop a small landscaped knoll, just inside the main gates of the cemetery.

The Chapel of St. James-the-Less was designated a national historic site in 1990 because this small funeral chapel is a splendid example of High Victorian Gothic design.

Designed by prominent Toronto architects Cumberland and Storm, St. James-the-Less exemplifies the small chapels built in the High Victorian Gothic Revival style. It maintains the liturgically correct interior, steep roof and prominent tower of earlier Gothic Revival designs, but presents its component parts in a manner that is both dramatic and harmonious.

The chapel is enhanced by its elevated site and the picturesque setting of St. James’ Cemetery, laid out by John G. Howard in 1842.

Character-Defining Elements

Key elements contributing to the heritage value of the Chapel of St. James-the-Less include:

  • its rectangular plan, typical of small parish churches in the High Victorian Gothic Revival style, with a nave, porch, tower and transept;
  • the clear articulation of its component parts, the nave, the porch, the tower, the transept and the prominent roof;
  • features typical of Gothic Revival churches, including, the steeply pitched roof with deep caves and low sidewalls, the Gothic-arched openings that are often paired, the use of buttresses, and the pinnacles executed in both stone and cast-iron;
  • its rough-cut stone walls;
  • the deep entrance porch, with its steeply pitched roof, low eaves, and intricate woodwork;
  • the short, square belltower set to the side and topped by a tall, thin broach spire with triangular dormers;
  • its fenestration patterns and windows, including, the deep-set trefoil side windows with stained glass, the stained-glass chancel windows, and the triangular roof dormers;
  • its materials, including Georgetown grey sandstone, white brick, Ohio stone trim, slate roofing, and wooden porch;
  • its interior finishes, including the exposed timbers of the roof structure and the wood panelling;
  • its siting on a slight rise;
  • its setting within the picturesque grounds of St. James Cemetery.

Chapel Interior

Source: Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada, February 1990

Cabbagetown Murals

The Cabbagetown area is home to many colourful and interesting murals. Here’s a few I’ve encountered during a walkabout in the ‘hood:

The Phoenix Concert Theatre
410 Sherbourne Street, Toronto
Fudger House
439 Sherbourne Street, on rear of building facing Bleecker Street

Darling Lane

West of Parliament Street, south of Wellesley Street East


“Welcome to Cabbagetown”
On side of LCBO building, 512 Parliament Street

Doctor O Lane

South of Carlton Street, west of Parliament Street


Number 9 Audio Group

Recording studio at 222 Gerrard Street East


Construction Murals

Southeast corner of Gerrard Street East & Sherbourne Street


Miziwe Biik

Aboriginal Employment & Training Centre, 169 Gerrard Street East

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