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Wickson also designed the
Marmaduke Cartage warehouse, owned by Marmaduke Rawlinson, the owner of Toronto's first storage and moving business. This warehouse was on land once owned by Frank's father, John Wickson. The building was taken down and rebuilt around a new condominium project, housing the
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commissioned a new hall in response to an increase in membership. Dick and
Wickson were responsible for the design of the new IOOF hall, which included the first electric elevator used by a society building in the city. Following his partner's death in 1895 at the age of 35, Wickson continued
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Frank
Wickson married Annie Elizabeth Fisher. They had one son, Carl Jennings Wickson (February 1896 – November 21, 1960). Carl and his wife Frances had three children: John Alexander Wickson, William Fisher Wickson and Julia Wickson.
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From 1918 to 1920, Wickson was
President of the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada. In this capacity, he led a Canadian delegation to the first Pan-American Congress of Architects held in
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Wickson was elected as
President of the Ontario Association of Architects (OAA) in 1900. Starting in 1902, Wickson was a delegate of the Ontario Association of Architects to the
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Frank
Wickson was the son of John and Eliza Wickson. John was a prominent member of the Toronto business community, who once owned a summer home that he called
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94:. Buildings designed by Dick and Wickson include the Hazelton Avenue Congregational Church and the original clubhouse for the
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referred to him as "an architect of judgment and ability and a man of quaint and friendly humour." He is buried at
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practising by himself until 1904, when he formed a second partnership with Alfred Holden Gregg, as the firm of
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Frank
Wickson was born in Toronto on March 30, 1861, to John and Eliza Wickson. He received his education at
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In 1890, Wickson formed a partnership with Norman
Bethune Dick, another Toronto architect, as the firm of
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Wickson died at his home on Oriole Road in
Toronto on December 22, 1936. His obituary in
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and the home of
Marmaduke Rawlinson, located on 22 Maple Avenue, Rosedale, Toronto.
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114:. He helped design the exhibition's ground plan in cooperation with Edmund Burke and
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upscale "The Wickson Social" restaurant located at 5 St. Joseph Street in Toronto.
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architect who was responsible for the design of numerous buildings, including
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The Wickson and Gregg firm was responsible for the design of three
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Toronto Architect Edmund Burke: Redefining Canadian Architecture
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Frank Wickson was a member of the executive committee of the
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Other buildings designed by Wickson, and associates include
30:(March 30, 1861 – December 22, 1936) was a prominent
405:"Activities of Members in the Field of Architecture"
337:James P. Cramer; Jennifer Evans Yankopolus (2006).
389:Constitution of the Arts and Letters Club, Toronto
129:commissioned the design of a large residence on
289:. McGill-Queen's Press – MQUP. pp. 164–.
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366:"First Pan-American Congress of Architects"
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340:Almanac of Architecture & Design 2006
133:from Wickson and Gregg, which they named
310:Bruce Allen Kopytek (21 October 2014).
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56:Royal Architectural Institute of Canada
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316:. The History Press. pp. 84–.
98:. In 1893, Toronto's branch of the
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437:19th-century Canadian architects
432:20th-century Canadian architects
234:Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Toronto
100:Independent Order of Odd Fellows
364:Toutloff, M.B. (October 1919).
313:Eaton's: The Trans-Canada Store
256:Eric Arthur (1 February 2015).
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221:. He contributed articles to
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112:Canadian National Exhibition
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403:Moorhouse, Walter (1938).
180:Calvin Presbyterian Church
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62:Early life and education
442:People from Old Toronto
28:Alexander Frank Wickson
154:Koffler Student Centre
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259:Toronto, No Mean City
215:Arts and Letters Club
158:University of Toronto
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283:Angela Carr (1995).
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269:978-1-4426-5779-3
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452:1861 births
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204:Forest Hill
127:Flora Eaton
426:Categories
376:(10): 329.
240:References
190:, for Sir
169:Montevideo
116:Eden Smith
121:In 1911,
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74:and the
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156:at the
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