Neha Patil (Editor)

Fulford Place

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Location
  
Ontario, Canada

Original use
  
Private residence

Governing body
  
Ontario Heritage Trust

Province
  
Ontario

Year built
  
1901

Nearest city
  
Brockville

Current use
  
Historic house museum

Website
  
Fulford Place

Phone
  
+1 613-498-3003

Architect
  
Albert W. Fuller

Fulford Place

Address
  
287 King St E, Brockville, ON K6V 1E1, Canada

Hours
  
Open today · 11AM–4PMSaturday11AM–4PMSunday11AM–4PMMondayClosedTuesday11AM–4PMWednesday11AM–4PMThursday11AM–4PMFriday11AM–4PM

Similar
  
St Lawrence Park, Brockville Tunnel, Enoch Turner School, The Aquatarium at Tall Shi, Homewood Museum

Exploring the 1000 islands fulford place mansion


Fulford Place is the start of the 20th century mansion home of Senator George Taylor Fulford, a Canadian businessman and politician. The home is now a historic house museum reflecting Edwardian period decorations, and is operated by the Ontario Heritage Trust. It was designated a National Historic Site of Canada in 1992.

Contents

Fulford place 9


History

The Fulfords had a mansion built for them in Brockville, Ontario on the shore of the St. Lawrence River where several other beautiful estates were located, many of which were owned by other successful businesspeople. In 1898, Fulford commissioned their estate to be built on the King’s Highway, on the eastern edge of Brockville. Architect Albert W. Fuller from Albany, New York, designed Fulford Place and it was elaborately decorated in the Beaux-Arts style. It was finished in 1901, and had 35 rooms making up 20 000 square feet. Since Fulford was an important figure in both the political world and the business scene, entertaining was one of Fulford Place’s primary functions. The house thus contains a grand hall, a dining room to seat over fifty guests, a spacious verandah, and a rococo-style drawing room for the ladies and a Moorish smoking room adjacent to a billiard room for the gentlemen.

Notably, the grounds at Fulford Place were designed by the Olmsted Brothers, and the recently restored formal Italianate garden is a rare and important example of a privately owned Olmsted-designed garden.

The property was reduced to three of its original 10 acres (40,000 m2) when George Taylor Fulford II was forced to section off prime lots of real estate to sell in order to afford the maintenance of the house. He remained proprietor of Fulford Place until his death, when he bequeathed it to the Ontario Heritage Foundation (now Ontario Heritage Trust). All of its original contents were later donated by his widow and his son, George Taylor Fulford III.

Museum

The Trust did extensive restoration on the house, and opened it to the public as a historic house museum in 1993. It has been interpreted to how it looked in the Edwardian era; this was done relatively accurately because of the existence of early photographs of rooms (taken for insurance purposes) and a collection of original artefacts (not reproductions). The opulent and lavishly furnished mansion has been designated a National Historic Site of Canada, and is a major tourist attraction in the Brockville area.

The Museum is affiliated with: CMA, CHIN, and Virtual Museum of Canada.

References

Fulford Place Wikipedia