In about 1923 the Ontario Ministry of Education made a film about the benefits of "consilodated" schools in rural areas. It highlighted the disadvantages of isolated one-room schoolhouses, and the benefits of busing rural students to larger schools.
The full film ("The Rugged Road to Learning"):
A colorized version of a short exerpt from inside the school:
What might be of interest to the followers of this thread is that the rural school in the film is in northern Etobicoke. The old one-room schoolhouse is the Smithfield school, which stood on the north side of Albion Road, between Martin Grove and Highway 27, precisely where Albion and Silverstone Drive now meet (on the NE corner of the current intersection).
The film follows a group of students as they trek to school in the morning, spend a less than fruitful time at school, and then trudge back home. (This school day is then contrasted with modern education in an impressive new building, and encourages all rural residents to take a stand in favour of consolidation.)
What I'm wondering is whether any of the places in the film can be identified. Of course, the outdoor scenes could have been shot anywhere, maybe nowhere near Toronto. But there are some scenes that were clearly shot in front of the school, and it may be reasonable to assume it would have been easier to do all the shooting on location.
If that's so, then the scenes should all be around Albion and Martin Grove. Are the roads in the film Albion and Martin Grove themselves? The neighbouring schools would have been in Woodbridge (Hwy 7) to the north, Claireville (427) to the west, Highfield (Rexdale Blvd) to the south, and Thistletown (Islington Ave.) to the east, so presumably the area within these locations is where the students are seen walking.
Unfortunately, there are no landmark buildings out in the country. In fact, there isn't much of anything. Perhaps most identifiable would be the telegraph poles, which differ along different roads. There is little relief in the landscape, and only a few building, so really not much to go on.
I'm including some stills from the film in case anyone wants to have a shot at identifying the views.
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