Elmcroft


Elmcroft is a 19th-century house in Smiths Falls, Ontario, Canada, built in 1895 by the town's mayor, Francis Theodore Frost, who also served as director of the local Frost & Wood foundry, as a Member of Parliament and as a senator. It is an example of Queen Anne Revival architecture.

Architecture

The house, initially built by W. B. Taylor's construction firm, boasts two halls, a dining room, two staircases, a library and stables. It used to also have a sweeping circular staircase in the front entrance and a rotunda which led to the ballroom, but these were removed by later renovations.
The Carriage House at 97 Chambers St is adjacent and was built for Frost's groundskeeper; 65 Chambers St was built for Frost's brother Edwin, and 69 Chambers St was built for a cousin of Frost's, who founded the Rideau Record newspaper in 1887.

History

The Canadian prime minister Wilfrid Laurier visited the house, taking tea with the Frost family. The Roper family of Alton, Illinois, were similarly noted in the media as guests at Elmcroft for a week in 1889.
The house was burgled in July 1907, when a thief carried off all the jewellery in the house. Upon Frost's unexpected death inside the house in 1916, his widow remained in the house for a decade before leaving it vacant.
In 1938, the vacant house was purchased by J. Clark Ketchum, the founder of Rideau Beverages, who paid $1 for the property and removed the top storey, citing water damage and leaving the house at 2,300 square feet per storey.

Grounds


The property initially ran to Elmsley Street, but a later owner sold off the property's southwest lawn, on which three other homes were subsequently built, and Chambers Street was built through the old property, obstructing the view of Elmcroft from passersby. In 1987, owner Bill Murphy stirred controversy by announcing his plans to build 10 garden homes at the foot of the property.

Recent history

The property was purchased by the Thom family for $200,000 in 2008; they converted the house into a 3-room bed and breakfast after insulating the basement, moving the garage to the other side of the house and relocating a porch back to its original site. In 2012, the house was issued a heritage certificate by the Municipal Heritage Committee. The property has been featured as part of the Doors Open program in Lanark County.