{"@context":"http://iiif.io/api/presentation/2/context.json","@type":"sc:Manifest","@id":"https://iiif.quartexcollections.com/qstarter29/iiif/ebc2d8e8-b09b-42c6-8987-1ad24634ce81/manifest","label":"bhs_205280","metadata":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"bhs_205280"},{"label":"Rights","value":["Copyright status unknown. Responsibility for determining the copyright status and any use rests exclusively with the user."]},{"label":"Language","value":["EN"]},{"label":"Format","value":["JPEG"]},{"label":"Type","value":["Photograph"]},{"label":"Subject","value":["Houses"]},{"label":"Source","value":"Justine DiCesare CD"},{"label":"Description","value":"A two-and-a-half-storey Tudor Revival Style building clad with brown stretcher-bond brick. The gable roof is broken by a slightly projecting large gable clad with exposed timber and stucco. A group of three 4/4 wood sash windows under the gable on first and second level with soldier course header and brick sills. The front oak entrance is recessed under stepped arches with radiating voussoirs protected by a gable roofed enclosure. A side bay with a flared hip roof has several multi-paned windows.,Plan 218, Roseland Park, was registered by Hughes Cleaver in 1923. n 1924 Cleaver sold Lot 176 and other land to John W. Duggan; in 1925 to Luther Wellington Roderick; in 1928 Lot 176 only was sold to William Marriott. From 1929 to Johannah Wintemute; from 1938 to 1946 owned by Peter Alvey Wintemute. Built in 1928 for W. G. Marriott. (C.R., xlii, 25 July 1928, 66) Architects: Frederick Wilson Warren & Reginald E. MacDonell WARREN, Frederick Wilson (1887-1959) was born at Hamilton, Ontario on 8 October 1887 and attended public school and the Hamilton Art School in that city. He was not formally educated in architecture at a university but instead obtained his practical experience with several Hamilton architects, including E. B. Patterson, with whom he was employed first as an apprentice, and then as a draftsman, between 1902 until 1908. He worked for Stewart & Witton for three years and with Mills & Hutton for two years before commencing his own practice in Hamilton in 1912. In 1922 he formed a partnership with Reginald E. McDonnell but this was dissolved in early 1929 and Warren then maintained his own office until his retirement in 1951. His residential works drew inspiration from Tudor and Elizabethan sources, and with R.E. McDonnell he planned many of the homes in Roseland Park in neighbouring Burlington, Ont. Their most distinctive and accomplished work was that for W.H. Ballard School (Toronto) (1922-23), a modern interpretation of sixteenth century English Renaissance architecture with impeccable details executed in carved Indiana limestone. It was, at the time of its completion, the largest public school in Canada, accommodating nearly two thousand students. ÔÇ¿Warren was a nationally known horticulturist and active in provincial politics, serving with the C.C.F. party in the Ontario Legislature from 1943 until 1945. He died in Hamilton on 12 December 1959 and his practice was taken over by William W. Allen (obituary in the Spectator [Hamilton], 12 Dec. 1959, 7; inf. from Ontario Association of Architects). The Ontario Archives hold a small collection of his drawings and photographs (OA, Acc. 13834). This house was built on the site of one of Kate Greene's famous rose gardens (after which Roseland was named), and some original rosebushes were preserved in the garden until the addition was built in 1992. The 1992 additions of garage, breezeway and rear rooms were well matched in style and material and were recognized by a Heritage Award in 1994. Not removed in 2012 from the Heritage Burlington heritage property registry, because of its historical, architectural, and contextual value. Digital Photograph."},{"label":"Contributor","value":"Justine DiCesare"},{"label":"Creator","value":"Justine DiCesare"},{"label":"Title","value":"304 Rossmore Boulevard, 2012"},{"label":"Repository","value":["Burlington Historical Society"]}],"description":"304 Rossmore Boulevard, 2012","sequences":[{"@type":"sc:Sequence","canvases":[{"@id":"https://iiif.quartexcollections.com/qstarter29/iiif/ebc2d8e8-b09b-42c6-8987-1ad24634ce81/canvas/_1","@type":"sc:Canvas","label":"304 Rossmore Boulevard, 2012","height":1064,"width":1600,"images":[{"@type":"oa:Annotation","motivation":"sc:painting","resource":{"@id":"https://iiif.quartexcollections.com/qstarter29/iiif/ebc2d8e8-b09b-42c6-8987-1ad24634ce81/full/full/0/default.jpg","@type":"dctypes:Image","format":"image/jpeg","service":{"@context":"http://iiif.io/api/image/2/context.json","@id":"https://iiif.quartexcollections.com/qstarter29/iiif/ebc2d8e8-b09b-42c6-8987-1ad24634ce81","profile":"http://iiif.io/api/image/2/level2.json","tiles":[{"width":512,"scaleFactors":[1,2,4]}]},"height":1064,"width":1600},"on":"https://iiif.quartexcollections.com/qstarter29/iiif/ebc2d8e8-b09b-42c6-8987-1ad24634ce81/canvas/_1","metadata":[]}],"thumbnail":{"@id":"https://iiif.quartexcollections.com/qstarter29/iiif/ebc2d8e8-b09b-42c6-8987-1ad24634ce81/full/500,500/0/default.jpg","@type":"dctypes:Image","height":500,"width":500}}]}],"thumbnail":"https://iiif.quartexcollections.com/qstarter29/iiif/ebc2d8e8-b09b-42c6-8987-1ad24634ce81/full/500,500/0/default.jpg","logo":"https://iiif.quartexcollections.com/qstarter29/iiif/logo"}