Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Gilbert H. Grosvenor Hall

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Location
  
532 Chebucto Street

Completed
  
1886

Designated
  
1983

Town or city
  
Baddeck

Construction started
  
1885

Country
  
Canada

Structural system
  
Sandstone

Opened
  
1886

Province
  
Nova Scotia

Architect
  
Thomas Fuller

Gilbert H. Grosvenor Hall httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Type
  
Provincially Registered Property

Architectural style
  
Romanesque Revival architecture

Similar
  
Saint Peter's and Saint Joh, Kidston Island Lighthouse, Victoria County Court Ho, Telegraph House, Uisge Ban Falls Provincial

Gilbert H. Grosvenor Hall is a historic building in Baddeck, Nova Scotia, Canada. The 19th-century building has served as a post office, library, and interpretive centre.

Contents

Map of Gilbert H. Grosvenor Hall, Baddeck, NS, Canada

History

The building was originally built as the Baddeck Post Office and Custom House, Opening in 1886. The post office was located on the main floor with the custom house on the upper floor. The post office relocated in 1956, and the building was sold to Samuel Gayley who gave it to his wife Gertrude Gayley -- the granddaughter of Alexander Graham Bell. Gertrude Gayley named the building after her father, Gilbert Hovey Grosvenor a former editor of National Geographic Magazine. The building was given to the Baddeck Library Board and housed the Baddeck Library until the 1980s. The property was recognized as an historic property by Nova Scotia's Heritage Property Act in 1983. In 1999 the building became home to the Bras d'Or Lakes and Watershed Interpretive Centre.

Design

The building is three storeys tall and built of red sandstone excavated from Boularderie, Nova Scotia. It was designed by Thomas Fuller, Chief Architect of Canada and co-designer of Ottawa's first Parliament buildings. Its design is typical of 19th-century Canadian post offices, featuring Romanesque Revival elements. The face of former local Member of Parliament Charles J. Campbell is carved into the stone above the entrance. The clock, located on the west gable, was added in 1912.

References

Gilbert H. Grosvenor Hall Wikipedia


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