James Ross House - McGill university (Montreal)
(Click here for another picture)
In 1892, James Ross commissioned Bruce Price, a renowned American architect,
who also designed McGill's Royal Victoria College and the Chateau Frontenac in
Quebec City, to build a house for him on Peel Street on the Square Mile. Ross
was an entrepreneur of the Canadian Pacific Railroad, whose interests included
yachting and collecting masterpieces. As such, he was the commander of the St.
Lawrence Yacht Club and, later in his life, helped to create the Montreal Museum
of Fine Arts. The house, with its two circular turrets and larger central tower, was
constructed of Credit Valley limestone and was designed in the French Chateau
style. Between 1897 and 1912, Edward and William Maxwell, a pair of
well-known Montreal architects, were commissioned to redesign and expand
parts of Price's original work. Part of this work involved adding to the mansion an
art gallery wing, a breakfast room and bedroom, and several wrought iron and
carved details. In 1913, James Ross died and his son, J.K.L. Ross inherited the
house and a considerable fortune. He hired the firm of Trowbridge and Livingston
to expand and remodel his late father's home, giving it a more austere, Classical
appearance. In 1935, having spent all of his fortune on parties, horse racing, and
yachts, J.K.L. Ross went bankrupt and the house was sold for a mere $51,000.
John W. McConnell bought the Ross Mansion in 1948 as a gift to McGill. At this
time, it was renamed Chancellor Day Hall, after one of the University's first
Chancellors, and was given to the Faculty of Law, which still occupies it today. In
1966, the firm of Bland and Lemoyne erected a six-storey, precast concrete
tower just west of Chancellor Day Hall and connected to it by a corridor. This
extension, which blends with the adjacent Stewart Biological Sciences Building,
provided more classrooms and library space.
Picture(s) from McGill website