Leslie R. Fairn


Leslie Raymond Fairn was a Canadian architect whose career is notable for its longevity and for the range of styles it encompassed, including Beaux Arts and Modernism. Most of his work was completed in the Maritimes.

Biography

He was born in Waterville, Nova Scotia, the oldest of three children of W. H. and Laura Fairn. His father was a schoolteacher. He was married twice, first to Bessie Maude Fairn who died of Spanish Influenza and second to Ethel Elizabeth Fairn. He had two daughters from his first marriage and five children from his second.
He attended Acadia University and later studied architecture in Boston, later apprenticing with Edward Elliot in Halifax. Beginning about 1901, he earned a living as Principal of Drawing and Manual Training at Horton College in Wolfville. One of his first commissions was the Kings County Courthouse, completed in nearby Kentville in 1903, and in 1904 he moved to Aylesford where he began to practice full-time. He became a charter member of the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada in 1907 and was made a Fellow in 1939. He was also a founder of the Nova Scotia Association of Architects.
In 1932 he moved to Wolfville where he continued to practice until his death at the age of 96. Meanwhile, around 1946 he opened an office in Halifax which was managed by his son Laird L. Fairn. This company handled large projects and was known as Leslie R. Fairn & Associates.
His career lasted 65 years, earning him the unofficial title of dean of Nova Scotia architects.
His style ranged from Beaux Arts to Richardsonian Romanesque to Classical Revival and Modernism.
His brother, Clifford William Fairn, also practiced architecture, partnering with Charles Hay and designing several schools in Calgary between 1911 and 1914.

Notable projects

Nova Scotia