William Tutin Thomas

William Tutin Thomas (1829–1892) was an Anglo-Canadian architect.

William Tutin Thomas
Born1829
Died1892
NationalityAnglo-Canadian
OccupationArchitect
PracticeArchitecture
BuildingsSt. George's Anglican Church (Montreal)
Church of St. John the Evangelist (Montreal)
Shaughnessy House

Born in Birmingham, England, he was the son of architect William Thomas. He worked for a few years with his father, and also with his brother, Cyrus. His father emigrated with his family from England to live in Montreal, and there together they made many fine buildings, including some notable shopping arcades in Montreal, and many buildings in Old Montreal (such as the Dominion Block, the Recollet House, and the Caverhill Block). His association with his brother Cyrus finished around 1870 when Cyrus decided to pursue his career in Chicago.

Thomas continued on with his work, mostly in Montreal. He designed the St. George's Anglican Church (Montreal) (1869–1870) and the Church of St. John the Evangelist (Montreal) (1877–1879). He built many residential buildings for the upper middle classes of Montreal, notably the George Stephen House, later known as the Mount Stephen Club (1882–1884), and the house of Thomas Shaughnessy (1874–1875, which is now part of the Canadian Centre for Architecture. He also designed many buildings in other Canadian provinces.

He was a founding member of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts.[1]

Work

gollark: That sounds worrying.
gollark: If your problem actually is nice and differentiable - which it sounds like it *might* be, I think you're laying out cables or something? - then it should be a lot faster if you can use that instead of just moving around randomly.
gollark: "Borrow" a cutting-edge silicon fab and make your design on 5nm, for maximum good.
gollark: Again, computers are fast, so it can probably be optimized.
gollark: That's quite slow. I get bored if a program takes more than 5 minutes.

See also

References

  1. Records of the Founding of the Royal Canadian Academy of the Arts. Toronto: Globe Printing Co. 1879–80. p. 16.



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