When cars first rolled into Toronto in the early 1900s, chaos came with them. With no real traffic laws and zero driver training, new motorists simply bought a car and hoped for the best. In short, it didn’t go well.
Speed limits were laughably low—8 to 10 mph—but drivers blew past them. Pedestrians, horse-drawn carriages, and streetcars still ruled the streets, creating daily mashups of old and new.
Streetcar tracks tripped up drivers. Curbs were frequent crash sites. And streetcar-vs-car collisions? Practically a sport.
We’ve rounded up some incredible vintage photos from the City of Toronto Archives that show the early, bumpy road to modern driving. Bent fenders, bad decisions, and all.














Discover more from Moss and Fog
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

3 Comments
Bring back Driver’s Ed and Driver’s training. What I see where I drive is a s–t ton of people who don’t even know the rules of the road or how easily an accident can happen. E-bikers —- looking at you, you silly jerks speeding along with no lights, dressed all in black at dusk and dawn, blowing through stoplights/stop signs and wearing no helmet(s).
Makes a person realize just how good we have it now.
There are lots of people now who push their limitations and their vehicle.