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- MACDONALD HOTEL
The Macdonald Hotel can no longer claim to be one of Edmonton’s tallest buildings, but due to its prominent site on the edge of the river valley and its unique design, the “Mac” remains one of the city’s best known landmarks. - MANNING RESIDENCE
The floor plan and perspective for this home appear in The Radford American Homes, a book of house plans published by the Radford Architectural Company of Riverside, Illinois, in 1903. - MARGARET MARSHALL RESIDENCE
Katharine Tardrew “spinster,” received this lot in 1914, probably as a wedding gift, from Mary Tardrew “married woman”, who had purchased it that year. Katharine became “wife of William Ping Williams,” and in July 1914, he received a $2,000 permit for this, the smallest lot in The Highlands. - MASONIC TEMPLE
In the forty years which followed the formation of Edmonton’s first lodge in 1893, another twelve or so had been constituted, but no substantial meeting hall had been built. - MCCUTCHEON HOUSE
This brick and sandstone house was erected in 1911 by builder T.E.A. Stanley (subsequently the first principal of Western Canada High School). - MCDOUGALL UNITED CHURCH
At the time of its construction in 1909, this fine brick church was known as McDougall Methodist Church in honour of Edmonton’s first Methodist minister. - MCHUGH HOUSE
The Queen Anne Revival style of this substantial brick house was a popular choice for Victorian residences. Its asymmetrical massing and steeplycapped turret were considered picturesque in their day. - MCINTOSH RESIDENCE
Few brick buildings were erected in Red Deer between 1900 and 1917 for which Julius McIntosh did not lay at least some of the bricks. - MCLEOD BLOCK
The McLeod Block became an instant Edmonton landmark when it was completed in 1915. The crowning glory of Kenneth McLeod’s career as a businessman and developer, this was the city’s tallest building at the time, a distinction it retained for almost forty years - MCLUHAN RESIDENCE
Marshall McLuhan, born in Edmonton in 1911, lived here with his parents from 1912 to 1918. He received a Ph.D. from Cambridge in 1934, and taught English at various U.S. colleges before settling at the University of Toronto in 1944.