• Source: Frank Darling (architect)
    • Frank Darling (17 February 1850 – 19 May 1923) was an important Canadian architect, winner of the RIBA Gold medal in 1915, who designed many of Toronto's landmark institutional and financial buildings, as well as scores of bank branches throughout the country. Darling is best described as an 'Edwardian imperialist' in his outlook and architectural approach, and accordingly left a legacy of fine Edwardian Baroque buildings in Canada's major cities, representative of the period's prosperity and optimism.


      Early life and education


      Born in Scarborough Township in the Province of Canada, Darling was the son of the rector of Scarborough and later of the Church of the Holy Trinity in Toronto. As a boy, he received his general education at Upper Canada College before entering Trinity College School, in Weston. He worked briefly as a bank teller before becoming apprenticed to architect Henry Langley from 1866 to 1870. He studied and trained in England under George Edmund Street between 1870 and 1873 and then returned to Canada.


      Career


      Apart from two brief solo periods in the 1870s, he practised with a series of collaborators:

      Henry MacDougall, 1873–74;
      Samuel George Curry (1855–1942 ), principal in Darling & Curry – 1880–90, in Darling, Curry & Co. - 1891, and in Darling, Curry, Sproatt & Pearson -1892;
      Henry Sproatt (1866–1934), principal in Darling, Curry & Co. -1891, in Darling, Curry Sproatt & Pearson – 1892, in Darling, Sproatt & Pearson 1892–95, and later draughtsman for Darling & Pearson – 1896,-97; and finally
      John A. Pearson (1867–1940), principal in Darling, Curry & Co. - 1891, in Darling, Curry, Sproatt & Pearson- 1892 ; in Darling, Sproatt & Pearson- 1892–95, and in Darling & Pearson – 1895–1937, after Darling' s death in 1923.
      In 1897 Darling formed his most long-lasting architectural partnership with John A.Pearson, named Darling and Pearson. This firm lasted beyond Darling's death in 1923. The firms in which he was a partnership influenced commercial development in Toronto during the 1910s to 1920s.
      Darling was the first Honorary President of the Toronto Beaux-Arts Club, member of the Holt Commission for planning of Ottawa (1913–1915), and was the first Canadian to win the Royal Institute of British Architects Gold Medal in 1915.
      Darling died in 1923 and was buried at St. John's Cemetery Norway in Toronto.


      Major works



      For projects after the formation of Darling, S. George Curry, Sproatt, & Pearson in 1892, see Darling and Pearson.


      See also


      Darling and Pearson
      Henry Sproatt – partnered with Darling from 1893 to 1896


      Notes




      References


      "Frank Darling". Dictionary of Canadian Biography (online ed.). University of Toronto Press. 1979–2016.
      Bank of Montreal Building
      Old Trinity College and Trinity College Gates
      Toronto, No Mean City, by Eric Ross Arthur, Stephen A. Otto


      External links



      Biographical Dictionary of Architects in Canada 1800–1950 Archived July 25, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
      Historicist: The Lasting Legacy of Darling and Pearson
      Historic Places in Canada
      "Toronto's Edwardian Skyscraper Row" in JSSAC 40 – 2015

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