Grier Block - Fort MacLeod, AB
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member ScroogieII
N 49° 43.503 W 113° 24.530
12U E 326391 N 5510846
Highly distinctive, the Grier Block was the first and largest commercial building in Fort MacLeod.
Waymark Code: WM12PM6
Location: Alberta, Canada
Date Posted: 06/27/2020
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member bluesnote
Views: 1

The Grier Block retains its pressed tin facade, possibly the only one remaining in Southern Alberta. It is also Fort MacLeod's oldest brick building. At the time the Grier Block was built pressed tin façades had been in use for some time, the technology having been developed in the U.S. in the mid nineteenth century. They were intended to replicate the much more expensive cast iron façades employed in earlier construction. Manufacturers produced the façades in many types, styles and sizes, allowing builders to design buildings in part by selecting parts and pieces from a catalogue. This made the classical styling in vogue at the time available to a much wider range of builders and clients.

This particular façade was produced by the Mesker Brothers Iron Works of St. Louis, MO, manufacturers and designers of ornamental sheet-metal façades and cast iron storefront components from the 1880s through the mid-twentieth century. They became possibly the largest and best known company in their trade, producing thousands of façades, a great many of which are still seen throughout North America. As well as commercial façades, the company produced tin ceilings, iron railings, stairs, roof cresting, ventilation grates, iron awnings, skylights, and freight elevators.

Today still fully occupied, the Grier Block is one of 7 buildings in Fort MacLeod which contribute to one of only two locations in Alberta to become a Designated Historical Area (the other being Old Strathcona in Edmonton).
Grier Block
DESCRIPTION OF HISTORIC PLACE
The Grier Block is a pre-World War One, two-storey, red brick commercial structure with a pressed metal facade designed in the Edwardian classical revival style. It is located on an urban lot on 2nd Avenue in downtown Fort Macleod.

HERITAGE VALUE
The historical significance of the Grier Block lies in its association with the development of the business district of Macleod (later named Fort Macleod) in the early twentieth century. It is also significant as an excellent example of methods of construction in the period, and for its association with one of Fort Macleod's prominent developers and community leaders.

The Grier Block was the first and largest commercial building in Fort Macleod, housing multiple businesses. Its construction reflected the town's prosperity after the arrival of the Calgary and Edmonton Railway in 1892, and its role in the culture and economy of southern Alberta. The upper floor was initially used for professional offices and meeting space for fraternal organizations such as the Masons, and later converted to apartments, while businesses such as a saddlery, druggist, butcher and newspaper took advantage of the wide storefronts at street level.

The Grier Block is Fort Macleod's oldest brick building, and is clad with the largest, and possibly the only, facade of pressed tin in southern Alberta. Pressed and cast metal were important new construction materials for commercial and public buildings at the turn of the twentieth century. The Grier Block also showcased the larger window storefront areas made possible through metal posts and beams at this time.

It is also significant for its association with one of the town's most prominent developers and community leaders. Bruce Grier, a former North West Mounted Police (N.W.M.P.) officer, cattleman and farmer, financed the construction of the Block. In addition to varied business interests, Grier served as mayor between 1900 and 1918, when many of the public services such as electrical power, water, sewer and natural gas were installed.

The Grier Block is a major contributing element in the Fort Macleod Historic District as it remains the most substantial commercial structure in the downtown area. Its distinctive style combined with its highly visible central location makes it a town landmark.

CHARACTER-DEFINING ELEMENTS
The Edwardian-era commercial style of the Grier Block is expressed in character-defining elements such as:

Original features of the metal facade on the upper floor including:
- elaborate corbelled cornices with recessed panels, egg and dart mouldings, and dentils;
- the second floor pressed metal facadeof the east elevation, including details such as engaged columns with Corinthian capitals flanking each second floor window;
- masonry walls, sandstone sills and brick voussoirs on the north and west elevations;
- decorative parapet finials (urns);
- stepped parapet along the north and south elevations;
- fenestration and door pattern;
- double-hung painted wood sash windows on the upper east facade floor and north and west facades;
- three glazed four-sided metal beveled skylights;
- evidence of original pressed metal tin ceilings, trim and finishes on the second floor;
- remnants of hardwood flooring.
From the Alberta Register of Historic Places
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Official Heritage Registry: [Web Link]

Address:
2305/2311 - 2 Avenue
Fort MacLeod, AB
T0L 0Z0


Heritage Registry Page Number: Not listed

Visit Instructions:
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