Journal article
The Growth of Toronto, 1861-1941 : A Cartographic Essay
Abstract
Introduction The built-up area of the city rarely corresponds to the municipal boundary. As the city expands, its political limits usually change more slowly, if at all. This has been especially true in the twentieth century, when the typical pattern has been for fringe districts to incorporate as separate municipalities.1 The result is that central city residents have come to be an ever-decreasing proportion of the total urban population. …
Authors
Harris R; Luymes M
Journal
Urban History Review, Vol. 18, No. 3, pp. 244–255
Publisher
University of Toronto Press
Publication Date
February 1990
DOI
10.7202/1017721ar
ISSN
0703-0428