William Thomas (architect)
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William Thomas (c. Template:TrimScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". – 26 December 1860) was an Anglo-Canadian architect. His son William Tutin Thomas (1829–1892) was also an architect, working mostly in Montreal, Quebec.
Life
Thomas was born in Suffolk, England. He was apprenticed to a local builder after his family moved to Gloucestershire. His two older brothers became master glaziers and younger brother was the sculptor John Thomas, apprenticed under Sir Charles Barry and A. W. Pugin (born 1813).
On completion of his apprenticeship, William moved to Birmingham to work for Richard Tutin, a builder and surveyor. He became a member of the Tutin family by marrying Martha, a member of the Tutin family. During this time he revised his title to architect, however, a depression in the city forced the closure of the firm and he moved to Leamington.
Thomas began his own practice at Leamington Spa in 1831 where he designed many buildings, but in 1837 went bankrupt. In 1843, during a depression in the British building industry, he emigrated to Canada with his wife and 10 children to Toronto, where his career flourished. He designed some of the finest Decorated Gothic Revival architecture in Ontario.
Between 1845 and 1850, Thomas worked extensively with the trio of Scottish sculptors John Cochrane and Brothers. They were responsible for work such as the interior decorations of St. Paul's Cathedral, stone and stucco ornamentation inside St. Michael's Cathedral Basilica and stone carving, including the coat of arms in the central gable, at Bishop's Palace, and exterior embellishments on St. Lawrence Hall.[1]
He was also Toronto's city engineer when John George Howard made a trip to England in 1853.[2] He died in Toronto, aged about sixty. Two of his sons, William Tutin Thomas and Cyrus Pole Thomas, also became architects.
Thomas is sometimes incorrectly credited with the architectural design and the elaborate stone carvings on Victoria Hall in Cobourg, Ontario. In fact, Kivas Tully designed the building and the fine sandstone carvings are the work of master stone carver Charles Thomas Thomas (no relation).
Works
| Project | Location | Dates | Notes | Source | Image |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lansdowne Circus | Royal Leamington Spa, England | 1832–1835 | Horseshoe-shaped project of eight pairs of Georgian semi-detached houses and two end-villas in English spa town. | [2][3] | File:Lansdowne Circus, Royal Leamington Spa - geograph.org.uk - 29415.jpg |
| St. Paul's Cathedral | London, Ontario, Canada | 1844–1846 | Anglican cathedral in the Gothic Revival style. | [4] | File:London-OntarioChurch2.jpg |
| St. Michael's Cathedral Episcopal Palace | Toronto | 1845 | Gothic and Tudor Revival episcopal residence, cathedral rectory, and chancery office. The carved coat of arms on the exterior view here is the work of John Cochrane and Brothers[1] | [2] | File:St. Michael's Cathedral Episcopal Palace.jpg |
| 6 Dublin Street South | Guelph, Ontario | 1847 | Limestone commercial building in the Georgian style. Home to the Guelph Civic Museum between 1980 and 2011. | [5] | File:Guelph civic museum 6 dublin.jpg |
| St. Michael's Cathedral | Toronto | 1845–1848 | Designed in the English Gothic Revival style, it was Toronto's largest church upon completion. | [2] | File:St-michaels-toronto.jpg |
| Toronto House of Industry | 110 Edward Street, Toronto | 1848 | Tudor-Gothic workhouse now used as the Laughlen Lodge seniors residence. | [2] | File:Toronto House of Industry.JPG |
| Oakham House | 322 Church Street, Toronto Metropolitan University, Toronto | 1848 | Thomas' Gothic Revival residence and office. Later additions replaced the office wing. | [2] | File:Oakham House.JPG |
| Niagara District Court House and Town Hall | Niagara, Ontario | 1846–1848 | Neoclassical building used to house courts, the town hall, and a market in Niagara-on-the-Lake. Now used as a theatre. | [2] | File:Court House N-O-T-L.jpg |
| Kent County Courthouse and Jail | 81 Stanley Avenue, Chatham, Ontario | 1848–1850 | The Neoclassical limestone building was completed in 1850, and features a balustraded balcony, a prominent pediment, and a crowning cupola. | [6] | File:Kent County Courthouse and Jail Building.jpg |
| St. Lawrence Hall | Toronto | 1850–1851 | Designed in the Renaissance Revival style, it was Toronto's first public meeting hall. | [7] | File:St Lawrence Hall123.jpg |
| Brock's Monument | Queenston Heights, Queenston, Ontario | 1853–1856 | Monument with 56-metre (185 ft) column dedicated to Major General Sir Isaac Brock, one of Canada's heroes of the War of 1812. | [8] | Brock's Monument, Queenston, Ontario |
| St. Paul's Presbyterian Church | Hamilton, Ontario | 1854–1857 | Originally St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church. Gothic Revival in style. | [2] | File:St Pauls Presbyterian Church Hamilton Ontario 2009.jpg |
| Old City Hall | Guelph, Ontario | 1856–1857 | Renaissance Revival town hall and market. | [2] | File:Guelph City Hall cropped.jpg |
| New Quebec Customs House | Quebec City, Quebec | 1856–1860 | Neoclassical customs house. | [9][10] | File:New Quebec Custome House.jpg |
| St. Matthew's United Church | Halifax, Nova Scotia | 1857–1860 | Originally St. Matthew's Presbyterian Church. Gothic Revival in style. | [2] | File:St Matthews, Halifax.JPG |
| Halifax Old County Court House | Halifax, Nova Scotia | 1858–1862 | Renaissance Revival courthouse. | [2] | Halifax Old County Court House |
| Don Jail | Toronto | 1859–1864 | Italianate jail. | [2] | File:Historic Don Jail.jpg |
| Lansdowne Crescent | Royal Leamington Spa, England | 1835–1838, 1866 | Curving terrace of Neoclassical rowhouses. | [3] | File:SP3266 Lansdowne Crescent, Leamington Spa.jpg |
| Duncan McIntyre House (Craguie) | Montreal | 1880s | Romanesque Scottish Baronial residence of Duncan McIntyre. | [11] | File:Duncan McIntyre House (Craguie).jpg |
| Ballinahinch | Hamilton, Ontario | 1848–50 | Mid-Victorian mansion commissioned by merchant Æneas Kennedy. | [12] | File:Ballinahinch pos 1909s BK - Copy.jpg |
See also
References
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- ↑ a b John Cochrane – Dictionary of Canadian Biography
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- ↑ Archdiocese of Toronto Template:Webarchive
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- ↑ Customs building. 2, rue Saint-André // Building and ornamental stones in old Québec. — P. 54.
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Bibliography
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External links
- Biography at the Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
- A list of William Thomas' projects at the Biographical Dictionary of Architects in Canada, 1800–1950Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- Pages with script errors
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- 1799 births
- 1860 deaths
- Canadian architects
- 19th-century English architects
- Architects from Birmingham, West Midlands
- Persons of National Historic Significance (Canada)
- Architects from Gloucestershire
- British emigrants to Canada
- Burials at St. James Cemetery, Toronto