Redpath Building - McGill University
The Redpath Library was bestowed upon McGill in 1893 due to the beneficence
of Peter Redpath, owner of Redpath Sugar and one of Montreal's leading citizens
at that time, and his wife Grace Wood. The couple also donated the Redpath
Museum, located just northeast of the library. This was a very timely gift since,
prior to this building, all the University's acquisitions had resided in Molson Hall,
the west wing of the Arts Building. The University had begun to rapidly expand in
the 1890's and all the rooms in Arts were needed as lecture spaces. The first
librarian of Redpath was Charles H. Gould who initiated the Library School and
the Traveling Libraries Program which lent books to towns not fortunate enough
to have their own library. He was one of the most prominent and pioneering
librarians in North America and from 1908 to 1909 was made president of the
American Library Association.
The architect of this Richardsonian Romanesque building was Sir Andrew Taylor,
born in 1825, who hailed from Edinburgh and had been educated at the Royal
Academy in London. His wife was related to Sir William Dawson, the current
principal, and he himself was a member of the Redpath family. Redpath Library
was one of six edifices commissioned from Taylor for the McGill campus. In
designing this structure, Taylor put its function, layout, and special needs ahead of
its proportion and ornamentation. The building was considered one of the most
innovative of its time. Taking into account the purpose of the building, he
proposed that the stacks be defined by a steel frame and grids with thick glass
floors to allow the light to pass through all three floors while making the whole fire
proof, an amazing feat for 1893. A fire proof door separated the stacks from the
main library and reading room which had floors of terra cotta and a roof of slate
and copper. The only wood used was in the massive, oak beams that supported
the upper floors and were capped at either end by fearsome dragon heads both
inside and outside the building.
Although the stacks were very thoroughly designed, the reading room was not as
well thought out. The high stone walls echoed even the smallest whisper, making it
necessary to forbid conversation of any sort, although there was apparently a
considerable amount of traffic in note passing. The extensive use of stained glass
windows kept out much of the natural light. The chandeliers hung from the high
ceiling and the reading lamps could not compensate enough for the lack of light.
The entrance to the building was grandiose, yet it opened onto the reading room
which caused further disturbance to the students within. Taylor was criticized,
even in his time, for creating an unused tower over the front entrance of the
building, yet it gave the building a look of dignity and importance appropriate to a
university campus.
There is a considerable amount of ornament about the Redpath Library, even
though Taylor's primary concern was with its function. Mrs. Grace Redpath
donated a large amount of stained glass which she commissioned from Clayton
and Bell in London, England. Poetry, the Fine Arts, and Music are the subject of
the three large lancets in the east. Homer and Virgil are among the poets depicted,
the writers include Shakespeare and Molliere, artists from Zeuxis to Michelangelo
and Rubens to Wren are shown, and Bach, Beethoven, and Wagner stand with
many other composers. The five lancets in the west above the balcony represent
Law, History, Philosophy, Astronomy, and Medicine. Several wood and stone
carvings exist on the timbers and exterior walls. Strange creatures and gargoyles
adorn the roof at the ends of the beams. Two in the interior are portraits of Peter
Redpath and Sir Andrew Taylor themselves. The outer walls, built of Montreal
limestone in fitting with the rest of the campus, have the symbols of the Four
Evangelists carved onto them to remind students of the highest possible wisdom.
On the south facade are the crests of two major publishing companies, one
represented by a swan, the other by a dolphin. Over the door is the Redpath
crest, an ostrich holding a key.
Between 1900 and 1901, Taylor extended the already full stacks at the request of
Mrs. Grace Redpath. In 1921 the library was again expanded, this time by Percy
Nobbs and George Taylor Hyde. Their expansion fit in very well with Taylor's
style, unlike the later expansions which provide much more space, but do not even
attempt to continue Taylor's idea. From 1952 to 1954 the firm of McDougall,
Fleming and Smith extended the library to the south creating several large new
reading areas with glass walls on the main floor, and room on other floors for
several special libraries, such as the Blacker-Wood Library of Zoology and
Ornithology (now the Blacker-Wood Library of Biology) and the
Blackader-Lauterman Library of Architecture and Art. When McLennan Library
was erected just south of Redpath in 1969, the main floor of the 1952 addition to
the library was extended to create a walkway between the two buildings. In
constructing the 1952 expansion to Redpath, the east wall of the Nobbs and Hyde
1921 projection was entirely enclosed and the use of Taylor's reading room as
part of the library came to an end. At this time, the floor of the Taylor's elegant
room was redone in wood, the tables were cleared away, and the reading room
was reopened as Redpath Hall, an auditorium for the University used today mainly
for music recitals and receptions. In 1981, a replica of a French Renaissance
organ was donated to the hall to emphasize its new musical role and can still be
heard regularly during the year.
Picture(s) from McGill website