Thomas Seaton Scott

Thomas Seaton Scott
Born 16 August 1826
Birkenhead, (England),
Died 15 or 16 June 1895
Ottawa, Ontario
Nationality Canadian
Occupation Architect
Practice Chief Dominion Architect
Buildings Union Station, Parliament of Canada, Cartier Square Drill Hall

Thomas Seaton Scott (16 August 1826 15 or 16 June 1895) was a Canadian architect. Born in Birkenhead, England he immigrated to Canada as a young man first settling in Montreal. He was hired by the Grand Trunk Railway and worked for them on a number of structures including the Union Station in Toronto and Bonaventure Station in Montreal.

In 1871 he was hired by the Department of Public Works and he designed a number of Ottawa's new government buildings in the years after Canadian Confederation. Among his works are the West Block of the Parliament of Canada, the Cartier Square Drill Hall, and the now demolished Dominion Post Office. From 1872 to 1881 he held the position of Chief Dominion Architect and thus played at least a supervisory role in all major government projects. He is considered one of the creators of the Dominion Style that dominated Canadian institutional architecture in the nineteenth century. He was a founding member of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts[1] He was succeeded as Chief Architect by Thomas Fuller.

Works

Building Year Completed Builder Style Location Image St Luke's Church Notes
Aurora Armoury 1874 Thomas Seaton Scott Dominion Style Neo-Gothic style 89 Mosley Street at Larmont Street, Aurora, Ontario Still in use by the military.
Mackenzie Tower, West Block 1878 Thomas Seaton Scott Parliament Hill, Ottawa, Ontario Provided design in 1874
Second Supreme Court of Canada Building 1874 Thomas Seaton Scott Gothic Revival architecture Demolished 1955-56 and now parking lot
Cartier Square Drill Hall 1879-80 Thomas Seaton Scott Dominion Style Neo-Gothic style 2 Queen Elizabeth Driveway, Ottawa, Ontario Still in use.
Truro Armoury 1874 Thomas Seaton Scott Dominion Style Neo-Gothic style 126 Willow Street, Truro, Nova Scotia Still in use.
St. Bartholomew's Anglican Church (Ottawa) 1868 Thomas Seaton Scott Dominion Style Neo-Gothic style 125 MacKay Street, Rideau-Rockcliffe Ottawa, Ontario Still in use.
Summer House/Summer Gazebo, Parliament Hill 1877 Thomas Seton Scott Carpenter Gothic Parliament Hill, Ottawa, Ontario Built for the Speaker of the House of Commons and demolished 1956. It was re-built in 1995 on the same location.[2]
Toronto Union Station (1873) expansion 1888 Thomas Seaton Scott with Edward P. Hannaford Dominion Style Italianate /2nd Empire style Approximately at 7 Station Street, Toronto, Ontario Demolished 1927-1931 and now site of Skywalk c. 1989
Grand Trunk Railway, Bonaventure Station 1888 Thomas Seaton Scott with Edward P. Hannaford Dominion Style Neo-Gothic style Near corner of rue Peel and rue Saint-Jacques, on Chaboillez Square, Montreal, Quebec Heavily damaged by fire 1916, but remained standing until 1952. Now site of Dow Planetarium
Christ Church Cathedral (Montreal) Dominion Style Neo-Gothic style Thomas Seaton Scott Gothic Revival 635 rue Saint Catherine Street Ouest, Montreal, Quebec
St. Luke's Anglican Church, Waterloo QC 1870 Thomas Seaton Scott Neo-Gothic style 400 rue de la Cour, Waterloo, Quebec

Other buildings designed by Scott include:[3]

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Thomas Seaton Scott.
Preceded by
New post created 1871
Chief Dominion Architect, Canada
1872 1881
Succeeded by
Thomas Fuller


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