Mike Filey (October 11, 1941 – July 30, 2022)[1] was a Canadian historian, radio host, journalist and author. He was awarded the Jean Hibbert Memorial Award in 2009 for promoting the city of Toronto and its history.
In 1972, Filey was an organizer of Heritage Toronto, a citizen's group interested in Toronto's history.[6] From 1975 to 2020, he wrote the column, The Way We Were for the Toronto Sun.[3]
Filey is the author of more than two dozen books about the history of Toronto. Among the topics covered are the Toronto Transit Commission (TTC), books with old photographs, and twelve books of Toronto Sketches. Over the years, Filey was a regular guest on several radio stations including CFRB,[7]CKFM,[8] and CHFI-FM and hosted his own weekly radio show, Mike Filey's Toronto, on Zoomer Radio 740.[3][9] His guided walks included topics such as Toronto, Then and Now.[3]
According to his friend Alan Parker, another columnist at the Toronto Sun, Filey has been called "Toronto's best-known historian".[10]
For his love for Toronto, his extensive research, and his "consistent willingness to share his knowledge" in the history of Toronto, he was bestowed the Jean Hibbert Memorial Award by the Etobicoke Historical Society in 2009.[3]
Mike Filey, Pierre Berton, John Robert Colombo, Ron Haggart, William Kilbourn, Robert McMann, Douglas Richardson and Anthony Adamson (1972). The Open Gate; Toronto Union Station. Peter Martin Associates. ISBN9780887780721.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^ ab"Mike Filey". The Belleville Intelligencer. Retrieved June 4, 2018.
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Mike Filey (November 17, 2018). "Memories of old Toronto". Toronto Sun. Retrieved November 14, 2018. No, more than that, because 758 is where I grew up while attending Palmerston Public School, playing in the back laneway that ran between Lennox and Bloor Sts., going to events at the K-Club in the basement of the old church at the corner of Bathurst and Lennox and watching movies at the Metro, Midtown or, most likely, Alhambra theatres.
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Alan Parker (November 9, 2008). "Five Questions for Mike Filey". Toronto Sun. Retrieved July 24, 2016. As a researcher, writer and raconteur, Mike has been chronicling the life and times — past and present —of the beloved city of his birth for four decades. He's been called "Toronto's best-known historian" — and deservedly so.[dead link]