Just after Christmas, we took a short walk around Guildwood Inn Park where we encountered this cold but jolly fellow.
below: Once it led to the Granite Club (built 1926), now it leads to a path through the park
The Guildwood Inn (Guild Inn) property is now home to many pieces of stone and concrete that once adorned old Toronto buildings that were demolished many years ago. For a more thorough discussion of the history of the pieces, see History in Pieces of Stone a post from 2020.
below: Staging photographs, playing in the snow.
below: A pyramid of old blocks of rescued stone.
below: Representing Quebec…..sculpted panel by Frances Loring.
below: The park runs along the top of the Scarborough Bluffs.
below: Bits of the park fall into Lake Ontario each year – and occasionally parts of the old fence go too.




















That Guildwood Inn property has become such a strange and wonderful treasure trove of rescued bits of sculpture and local history. I’d never noticed that Frances Loring bas-relief in my own walks there, so thanks for showing it to us.