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Canadian architect From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lt.-Colonel Colborne Powell Meredith (September 15, 1874 – January 29, 1967) was a Canadian architect.
Colborne Meredith | |
---|---|
Born | Colborne Powell Meredith September 15, 1874 St. Andrews, New Brunswick |
Died | January 29, 1967 92) Ottawa, Ontario | (aged
Education | University of Toronto |
Occupation | Architect |
Spouse |
Alden Griffien (m. 1901) |
Father | Edmund Allen Meredith |
Colborne Meredith was born in St. Andrews, New Brunswick on September 15, 1874, the son of Edmund Allen Meredith, CMG. He studied architecture at the University of Toronto in the early 1890s. He married Alden Griffien in September 1901.[1]
He was Commissioner of the Ottawa Improvement Commission (1908), President of the Ontario Architects Association (1912), and Councillor of the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada.[2] He designed many of the principal buildings and residences in Ottawa, including the Château Laurier Hotel,[3] as well as a number of schools and convents throughout Canada. Meredith chaired the conference of the Ontario Association of Architects in Ottawa 1911 and also chaired the 1912 Royal Architectural Institute of Canada convention in Ottawa.[2]
Meredith joined the Militia in 1892, and from 1915 to 1918 was camp engineer and later camp commandant of Camp Petawawa. From 1925 to 1934 he served as General-Secretary to the League of Nations Society in Canada.[3]
He died at his home in Ottawa on January 29, 1967.[4]
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