T.L. Morrisey

Saturday, December 22, 2012

Darrell Morrisey at the Linton Apartments






Always a prestigeous address, the Linton Apartments in downtown Montreal--near the corner of Guy and Sherbrooke Street West--was home to Darrell Morrisey and her family; Darrell Morrisey is one of the "forgotten" Beaver Hall Artists, in the early years of the 20th Century.



From 1907

Linton Flats, 1907 - 1915

Linton Apartments on right



The Linton, 1912-13, photograph by Wm. Notman & Son,
built on James Linton’s front lawn. His house is still there behind it.



Photographed in 1947, Sherbrooke Street Linton Apartments
and Unitarian church Church of the Messiah


Medical Arts Building at the SE corner of Guy and Sherbrooke ,
looking east. The Linton in the upper left corner photographed in February 1927



Sherbrooke St. W., Linton Apts on right



The Linton apartments, Sherbrooke Street West


Note: Additional archival photographs added on 26 September 2024.

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Buckminister Fuller's geodesic dome at Expo 67




Here is a view of Buckminster Fuller's geodesic dome--this was the American pavilion at Expo 67--seen here from the South Shore. In the eyes of many, Expo 67 was the last expression of Montreal's greatness; money is conservative and business avoids political unrest. With the popularity of Quebec separation from Canada, many head offices left the province. Expo was followed by the summer Olympics in 1976... Montreal was still on a roll, but native Montrealers remember the Olympics because of corruption, the Olympic stadium cost about $1B and it wasn't paid off until the early 2000s. Later that same year, on November 15, 1976, the Parti Quebecois was elected to power and with it economic decline began in earnest. The PQ represented different things to different people, to English-speaking Quebec it represented ethno-centricity and the oppression of the English-speaking community. However, most English-speaking Quebeckers accepted the new order of things in Quebec, they recognized that the status quo could not continue, that the French-majority should be masters in their own province. The English-speaking population that didn't accept how things had changed (approximately 200,000 people) left the province for life in Toronto, Calgary, and Vancouver. For the French-speaking majority it was a time for independence, guaranteeing the future of the French language and culture in Quebec, it was a time to celebrate. 

Sunday, December 2, 2012