William Thomas - Halifax, NS
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member T0SHEA
N 44° 38.983 W 063° 34.475
20T E 454438 N 4944200
William Thomas was designated a National Historic Person on November 15, 1974. He was, in his time, one of the pre-eminent architects in Canada.
Waymark Code: WMZMCG
Location: Nova Scotia, Canada
Date Posted: 11/30/2018
Published By:Groundspeak Regular Member jhuoni
Views: 4

Fire had razed the block north of Duke Street in 1859 and, in 1860, the architectural firm of William Thomas & Sons was engaged to design the new buildings on the block for some of the more well-to-do merchants of Halifax. They were all designed in the Italianate style, most retaining their original styling details to this day. This, the CNHP plaque honouring William Thomas, is mounted in the centre of Granville Street amongst the buildings his firm designed.

The CNHS plaque reads as follows:
WILLIAM THOMAS
1800-1860

The buildings on the north end of Granville Street were designed by the firm of William Thomas and Sons after a fire had razed the block in 1859. Erected in the Italianate Style for prosperous merchants, the structures retain much of their original character. William Thomas began his architectural firm after arriving in Toronto from England in 1840, and became a leading architect in pre-Confederation Canada. His design and those of his students influenced the appearance of several cities in Ontario, Quebec and Nova Scotia.
William Thomas
William Thomas, architect, engineer, surveyor (born 1799 in Suffolk, England; died 26 December 1860 in Toronto, ON). One of the founders of the Canadian architectural profession, William Thomas's work in England would have ensured him a modest place in English architectural history. It was, however, for his mark on the fledgling communities of central and eastern Canada for which he is best remembered. From 1843 to 1860, his output in Canada included over 100 buildings, including some of the finest architectural specimens of mid-19th-century Toronto as well as a legacy of work spread throughout the province and country.

Thomas moved to Birmingham in 1819 to work for Richard Tutin, a builder and surveyor. He married Martha Tutin in 1826 and joined the firm as architect-partner until Tutin's death in 1832, when he opened his own practice in nearby Leamington Spa. The elegant late-Georgian speculative housing projects he entered into there would eventually lead to his bankruptcy in 1840. After executing further commissions in Birmingham, Thomas set sail with his wife and eight children for Toronto in 1843.

A leading ecclesiastical architect and the chief proponent of Gothic Revival in Canada, Thomas's churches include St Paul's Church, London (1844), St Michael's Cathedral and Bishops Palace, Toronto (1845-48), St Paul's Church, Hamilton (1854) and St Matthew's Church, Halifax (1857).

A lover of sculptural detail, Thomas's residential work, including his own Oakham House, Toronto (1848) and Inglewood House, Hamilton (1852), displays a florid array of stone-carved details. In this regard, the pinnacle of his career was the Brock Monument, Queenston (1852-59) with its fine quality of sculptural decoration; upon completion it was the second largest monument of its kind in the world.

Today Thomas is best known for his commercial and institutional buildings, which include the Commercial Bank of the Midland District, Toronto (1844), (whose reconstructed facade is now part of the BCE Place), the St Lawrence Hall and Market, Toronto (1845-50), courthouses of Niagara and Kent Districts (1846-47), Guelph Town Hall (1856), Québec Custom House and Halifax Courthouse (1858), and the infamous Don Jail, Toronto (1857-64).

A founder and president (until his death in 1860) of Canada's first professional association of architects, engineers and surveyors, Thomas's legacy includes the first Canadian trained architects in the province: William Storm (1826-99) and Thomas's own sons William Tutin Thomas (1829-92) and Cyrus Thomas (1838-1911).
From The Canadian Encyclopaedia
Website with more information on either the memorial or the person(s) it is dedicated to: [Web Link]

Location: Granville Street Promenade

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