Ramsay Traquair (29 March 1874 – 26 August 1952) was a Scottish architect and academic with strong links to Canada. He is remembered more for his numerous publications than for his buildings, which are limited in number. He was a particular expert on Early Canadian and French-Canadian architecture.
Life
He was born of distinguished parents. His mother was Phoebe Anna Moss, an important artist, best remembered under her married name of Phoebe Anna Traquair. His father was Dr Ramsay Heatley Traquair.
Immediately following qualification as an architect he began pursuing an academic career rather than practice architecture.
He was employed by the Turkish government to study and record the lesser Byzantine churches of the Constantinople area, working with Professor Alexander van Millingen.
He returned to Edinburgh in 1904 taking up the post of a lecturer in architecture and architectural history at the College of Art.
Although he set up a private practice in 1905 his work was both limited and highly interrupted by numerous returns to the east where he was also highly involved in work for the British School of Archaeology in Athens.
In 1909 Gerard Baldwin Brown proposed Traquair as successor to Percy Erskine Nobbs at McGill University in Montreal, Canada. This decision was delayed and he eventually took up this role in 1913. His final years in Edinburgh were spent at 4 Forres Street, a huge Georgian House on the Moray Estate.[1]
He worked at McGill until retirement in 1939 concentrating on studies in early Canadian and French-Canadian architecture. He was a regular contributor of papers for journals, in particular that of the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada.
He died in Guysborough in Nova Scotia on 26 August 1952.
Designs
Reconstruction of Skirling House (1908)
MacKenzie Boarding House for Edinburgh Academy, Kinnear Road, Edinburgh (1910)
Church of the First Christ Scientist, Inverleith Terrace, Edinburgh (1910–11)
In 1912 he worked on an unexecuted scheme to complete the National Monument on Calton Hill with Sir Frank Mears.