1903 - Queen’s Hotel - Fort Macleod, AB
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member T0SHEA
N 49° 43.531 W 113° 24.504
12U E 326424 N 5510897
Established in 1886, this, the second Queen’s Hotel, was built in 1903. Though a wood frame building, it is faced with sandstone walls, which allowed it to survive the devastating fire of 1906 that removed Macleod’s main street from the map.
Waymark Code: WMPEKK
Location: Alberta, Canada
Date Posted: 08/18/2015
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member saopaulo1
Views: 1

Queen’s Hotel
DESCRIPTION OF HISTORIC PLACE
The Queen’s Hotel was built in 1903. It is a three-story, flat-roofed building with a horseshoe-shaped footprint. The centrally-located entrance is flanked by two slightly projecting wings. The hotel’s primary (south-facing), east and west elevations are constructed of rough-faced sandstone blocks and are crowned by a prominent cornice. The rear (north-facing) elevation is constructed of rubble stone. The first floor contains a lobby, office space and an eating area while the upper floors contain individual rooms. A T-shaped addition that wraps around the east and north sides of the building was added in the early 1970s. The hotel is situated on one and a half lots on the northeast corner of 24th Street and Second Avenue in Fort Macleod’s main commercial district. It is also within the boundaries of the Fort Macleod Provincial Historic Area.

HERITAGE VALUE
The Queen’s Hotel is a fine example of the kind of substantial hotels built in Alberta’s urban centres during their boom periods. Its heritage value lies in its contribution to the heritage character of the Fort Macleod Provincial Historic Area.

In early Alberta, certain communities developed as centralized service points. These communities attracted a number of essential businesses and services, including hotels. Hotels provided short-term lodging for farmers and ranchers in town to do business, for tourists looking for comfortable accommodations, for newcomers evaluating a community as a place to settle, and for commercial travelers looking for sales and investment opportunities. Through their associated restaurants, taverns and pool rooms, hotels also served as recreational centres for a region’s established population. In many communities, hotels were often the most substantial buildings and would be constantly improved with the latest technological and architectural improvements to attract business from competing establishments or to market themselves to particular classes of clients.

In the late 1800s and early 1900s, Macleod was an important administrative, distribution and service centre for southern Alberta. Unlike many Alberta communities, where the town layout was determined by the railway right-of-ways, Macleod pre-existed the railways and its main street and hotels are located some distance north of the tracks. Despite this distance between the railway and Macleod’s established commercial district, the town flourished during the years between 1897 and 1914 with many substantial sandstone buildings being constructed, including the Queen’s Hotel.

The Queen’s Hotel was established in 1886 and consisted of two frame buildings on Macleod’s main street. In 1896, Harry Stedman purchased the Queen’s Hotel and, in 1903, began construction on a much more substantial hotel, which is the current building. The new hotel was an impressive three-story, frame building on a slightly U-shaped plan with primary exterior walls clad in rough-faced, locally quarried sandstone. It boasted a large lobby, bar and restaurant on the ground floor and 40 rooms arranged around central hallways on the upper two floors. Adding to its air of sophistication were design elements that included sandstone windows sills and belt courses and, notably, a classically-inspired pressed metal, bracketed cornice running along the parapet of the primary facades. Upon completion, the new Queen’s Hotel was touted as Macleod’s finest lodgings and was the most expensive hotel in town. The Queen’s Hotel soon became the lodging of choice for business people, government officials and well-heeled visitors to the area.

Although there were older brick buildings in Macleod, the Queen’s Hotel was the first substantial sandstone building in town. The hotel’s robust construction allowed it to survive the 1906 fire that devastated Macleod’s main street. The hotel’s stately appearance, the local availability of sandstone, and restrictive building codes in the wake of the fire resulted in the establishment of sandstone as the preferred construction material in pre-First World War Macleod. Like many small town hotels throughout Alberta, the fortunes of the Queen’s Hotel declined in the later decades of the twentieth century. The hotel became primarily a downtown tavern with low-cost apartments on the upper floors. Nonetheless, with its impressive scale and form, sandstone construction and classically-inspired details, the Queen’s Hotel continues to serve as a defining anchor in Fort Macleod’s historic commercial district.

CHARACTER-DEFINING ELEMENTS

Exterior
- slightly u-shaped footprint;
- sandstone clad walls on the primary (south, east and west) elevations;
- rubble stone construction of the north exterior wall;
- parapet with a pressed metal cornice with brackets at the roofline of the primary elevations;
- date stone on the west side of the front elevation reading “AD 1903” and a corresponding name stone of the east side of the front elevation reading “STEDMAN BLOCK”;
- sandstone and brick chimney with a sandstone cap, centrally-located at the rear of the building;
- brick enclosure covering the roof access;
- pattern of window openings;
- sandstone window sills throughout the building;
- sandstone beltcourse between the second and third storey and between the third storey and the cornice;
- extant historic window frames, sashes and storm windows.

Interior
- basic layout of the second and third floors with rooms opening off central hallways;
- extant historic millwork;
- extant historic lath and plaster walls;
- openings for transom windows over the room doors;
- skylight;
- dumbwaiter.
From HeRMIS ALberta
Year of construction: 1903

Cross-listed waymark: [Web Link]

Full inscription:
AD 1903 STEDMAN BLOCK.


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