Green Bush Inn (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Green Bush Inn" in English language version.

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books.google.com

  • F. R. Berchem (1996). "Opportunity Road: Yonge Street 1860-1939". Dundurn Press. p. 33. ISBN 9781896219158. Retrieved 2013-03-08. Of lesser standing, but closer to the old days of pot-hoisting and roistering, was the Green Bush Inn, probably started in the pioneering era by the well-known but never apparently too successful Joseph Abraham whose original inn of that name was on the northeast corner of what is now Yonge and Steeles Avenue.
  • Michiel Horn (2008). "York University: The Way Must Be Tried". McGill-Queen's Press. pp. 80, 121. ISBN 9780773577244. Retrieved 2013-03-08. A Key event in student social life took place when the 1969 session began. On 11 September, the Green Bush Inn, the first student-run pub on campus, served its first drink.

rittenhouse.ca

  • Wes Porter (2000). "Home Horticultural History". Hort-Pro. Archived from the original on 2012-07-30. One such was Thomas Steeles who ran the inn that bore his name at today's northwest corner of Yonge Street and Steeles Avenue. But for some time at least, according to Wise and Gould, it was named Green Bush Inn, "after a fine balsam tree that grew in front of it."

torontopubliclibrary.ca

archindont.torontopubliclibrary.ca

  • "Information on Building Name: Green Bush Inn". Architectural Index of Ontario. Archived from the original on 2013-03-11. Tavern, situated near Yonge and Steeles, initially known as the Green Bush Inn, and renamed the Steeles Hotel. Reportedly one of the meeting places of Upper Canada rebels during the 1834 Rebellion.

torontopubliclibrary.ca

torontosun.com

web.archive.org

webcitation.org

  • "Information on Building Name: Green Bush Inn". Architectural Index of Ontario. Archived from the original on 2013-03-11. Tavern, situated near Yonge and Steeles, initially known as the Green Bush Inn, and renamed the Steeles Hotel. Reportedly one of the meeting places of Upper Canada rebels during the 1834 Rebellion.