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S. George Curry

Samuel George Curry
Born 1854
Port Hope, Ontario
Died 1942
Nationality Canadian
Occupation Architect
Buildings The Toronto Club, Victoria Hospital for Sick Children, Hockey Hall of Fame

Samuel George Curry (Port Hope 1854 — 1942) was a Canadian architect who practiced in Toronto as the junior partner of several of Toronto’s leading architects, among them Frank Darling and from 1892 Darling's partner John A. Pearson, Henry Sproatt, Francis S. Baker, Ernest Rolph and W. F. Sparling.

In 1880, in partnership with Frank Darling (architect), he designed the first-place entry for the new Canadian Parliament Buildings; through delay and politicking the design was not executed. Darling and Curry built the former Bank of Montreal building at the corner of Yonge and Front streets (now housing the Hockey Hall of Fame) and the Victoria Hospital for Sick Children, on College Street, Toronto.

Curry, who was a member of the Toronto Architectural Guild also worked on his own, designing the John McKay Store (1898) formerly located 36 King Street West and in the 1980s relocated at 11 Adelaide Street West, to form part of Scotia Plaza. The structure is an example of Renaissance Revival style and incorporates architectural terracotta details.

Curry is also associated with a few other firms, with Francis Spence Baker as Curry and Baker, from 1895 to 1897, with William Frederick Sparling as Curry and Sparling 1909 to 1917 and on his own 1898 to 1904 and in from the 1920s to his retirement.

Curry was a member of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts.

Curry died in 1942.

1892 architectural sketch by Frank Darling (architect) and S. George Curry of Victoria Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, 1889–1892


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