Victoria Memorial Museum National Historic Site

Victoria Memorial Museum was designated as a national historic site 1990.

Commemorative plaque: 240 Mcleod Street, Ottawa, OntarioFootnote 1

Victoria Memorial Museum Building

Built between 1905 and 1911, this Tudor Revival structure with its crenellated roofline holds a prominent place in the history of Canadian museums. Originally constructed for the Geological Survey of Canada to feature well-lit exhibition areas, it is Canada’s first building designed specifically for national museum collections and research. Over the years, it has been home to no fewer than four national museums devoted to natural history, science and technology, human history and fine art.

Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada
English plaque inscription
Plaque commemorating the national historic importance of the Victoria Memorial Museum in Ottawa
Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada's commemorative plaque for Victoria Memorial Museum National Historic Site, located at 240 Mcleod Street, Ottawa, Ontario, 2025
© Parks Canada / Meranda Gallupe-Paton

Description of historic place

Victoria Memorial Museum is a large Tudor Gothic-style Tyndall-stone building located near downtown Ottawa. It sits alone, prominently sited on a city block surrounded by green space and parking areas. The building and its property terminate the south end of Metcalfe Street, which runs north to south from Parliament Hill to the Museum. The designation refers to the building and the property on which it is located.

 

Black and white photo of a large Gothic building, the Victoria Memorial Museum, designated as a national historic site
Victoria Memorial Museum, 1919
© John Woodruff / Library and Archives Canada / PA-045628 / Copyright: Expired
Black and white photo of the entrance to Victoria Memorial Museum, where stand two persons
Entrance to the Museum, circa 1911
© William James Topley / Library and Archives Canada / PA-009852 / Copyright: Expired

 

Heritage value

Victoria Memorial Museum was designated a national historic site of Canada in 1990, because of its prominent and early place in the development of museology in Canada and because of its architecture.

The construction of the Victoria Memorial Museum in 1905-11 coincided with the pre-World War I boom in the building of encyclopaedic museums in most major cities in Europe and North America. As the first purpose-built federal museum in Canada, its construction was the culmination of decades of effort by Geological and Natural History Survey of Canada staff and by Canadian scientists to house Canada’s natural history and human history collections in a suitable building. When completed in 1911, the structure housed the National Gallery, the Geological and Natural History of Canada Survey collections, and some of the Survey’s offices. From its earliest days, the museum was a leader in new exhibit techniques, and it was the home-base for notable Canadian museologists and anthropologists including Charles Sternberg, Diamond Jenness, and Edward Sapir. The success of the building, its expanding collections and the work of its scientists led to the creation in 1927 of the National Museum of Canada as a body apart from the Geological Survey of Canada. The museum continued to occupy the building until 1950. The Canadian Museum of Man and Nature became the sole occupant in 1959. In 1988 the institution was divided into the Canadian Museum of Civilization and the Canadian Museum of Nature, with the latter institution remaining in the Victoria Memorial Museum.

Black and white photo of four stone cutters at work during the construction of the Victoria Memorial Museum
Stone cutters at work during the construction Victoria Memorial Museum's construction, 1899
© James Ballantyne / Library and Archives Canada / PA-130013 / Copyright: Expired
Black and white photo of a field, representing the Victoria Memorial Museum under construction in Ottawa, Ontario
Victoria Memorial Museum under construction, Ottawa, Ontario, 1907
© Public Works Department / Library and Archives Canada / PA-053167 / Copyright: Expired
Black and white photo of a field, representing the Victoria Memorial Museum under construction in Ottawa, Ontario
Victoria Memorial Museum under construction, Ottawa, Ontario, 1907
© Public Works Department / Library and Archives Canada / PA-053186 / Copyright: Expired

Authorized in 1901, the Victoria Memorial Museum was the most ambitious of five buildings designed for the capital in the Tudor Gothic style by David Ewart, Chief Architect of the Department of Public Works. The architectural quality, scale and location of the five buildings did much to solidify the image of Ottawa as a capital city. The Victoria Memorial Museum was built by local contractor George Goodwin to plans by Ewart.

The museum was built for the Geological Survey of Canada on a discrete, landscaped parcel of land at the south end of Metcalfe Street. Its location, visibility from Parliament Hill, grand scale, public function and park-like setting were particularly appropriate responses to Laurier’s vision for the capital. The design of the building and its orientation on the site were based on Beaux-Arts principles. The detailing of the building, inside and out, was drawn from a Tudor-Gothic vocabulary. Its towered entrance, in the centre of its highly symmetrical main elevation, was a focal point of its design. Due to unstable soil conditions, however, the tower was substantially reduced in height five years after the building opened. In 2004-2005, the museum underwent a large-scale rehabilitation which added a new glass tower to its façade and undertook major interior modifications.

The Victoria Memorial Museum building also served as the home of the Parliament of Canada from 1916 to 1920 after fire destroyed the Centre Block of the Parliament Buildings.

Sources: Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada, Minutes, February 1990; Commemorative Integrity Statement, July 2003.

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