Van Horne Mansion

Van Horne Mansion
French: Maison Van Horne
The Van Horne Mansion, c. 1890
Map
General information
TypePrivate house
Architectural styleItalianate
LocationGolden Square Mile
AddressSherbrooke Street, Montreal, Quebec
Construction started1868
Completed1869
Demolished1973
ClientJohn Hamilton
LandlordJohn Hamilton
Sir William Van Horne
Technical details
Floor count3
Design and construction
Architect(s)John William Hopkins and Daniel Berkley Wily

The Van Horne Mansion (French: Maison Van Horne) was a classic greystone house on Sherbrooke Street at the corner of Stanley Street in Montreal's Golden Square Mile. It was built in 1869 for John Hamilton, President of the Merchant's Bank of Montreal, Quebec.[1]

In 1889, Sir William Cornelius Van Horne, President of the Canadian Pacific Railway, purchased the property and it remained in his family until it was controversially demolished in 1973. Despite the public outcry over its proposed destruction, Mayor Jean Drapeau declared that it could not be preserved for cultural reasons as it was not part of Quebec's culture, its history being Anglo Canadian, not French Canadian. With Drapeau's support, it was bulldozed in the middle of the night by developer David Azrieli, who replaced it with a concrete tower block. The Sofitel Hotel today stands at the spot once occupied by the Van Horne mansion.[2]

  1. ^ Van Horne Mansion at IMTL.org
  2. ^ John David Gravenor (2008-04-03). "Rubens, Rembrandt, Velasquez — Up in flames on Sherbrooke Street". Coolopolis. Retrieved 2008-04-05.