Tripti Joshi (Editor)

John Campbell Merrett

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Nationality
  
Canadian

Books
  
The Merretts in Metis

Occupation
  
Architect

Children
  
Brian Merrett

Name
  
John Merrett

Structures
  
Central Station

Role
  
Architect


Born
  
August 26, 1909
Montreal, Canada,

Projects
  
Central Station; Royal Victoria Hospital

Died
  
November 3, 1998, Montreal, Canada

Education
  
McGill University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, University of London

John Campbell Merrett (born August 26, 1909 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, died there on November 3, 1998), was a Canadian architect whose most noteworthy work was the interior design of Montreal’s Central Station.

Contents

Early life

The fourth child of Thomas Edward Merrett, banker, and his wife, Katherine Stuart Campbell, Merrett's childhood summers were spent in Métis-sur-Mer. He attended Selwyn House School in Westmount, Quebec, and Ashbury College, Ottawa, Ontario.

Marriage and family

Campbell Merrett married Hazel Howard, one of four daughters of Judge Eratus Edwin Howard and his wife, Evalyn Peverley, in 1937. His two sons – Timothy Howard Merrett, professor of computer science at McGill, and Brian Merrett, photographer – live in Montreal.

Education

Merrett graduated in 1931 from the School of Architecture at McGill University and subsequently did formative work traveling on scholarship in Europe. He did post-graduate studies in London, England, resulting in a certificate in Town Planning from the University of London in 1934. In 1944 he took a Special Planning Course at M.I.T., Boston.

Career

From 1936 to 1942 Campbell was staff architect for the Canadian National Railway, for whom he designed the concourse of Montreal’s Central Station. In 1944 and 1945 he was the Town Planning Director for the City of Saint John, New Brunswick, following which he joined Ernest Isbell Barott to form Barott, Marshall, Montgomery and Merrett, where he worked until his retirement in 1977. His projects included the town plan of Pointe Claire, Quebec, as well as buildings for regional school boards, universities and pharmaceutical companies. His real joy came from the many expansion projects at Montreal's Royal Victoria Hospital and much of the modern skyline of that institution can be attributed to him.

References

John Campbell Merrett Wikipedia