Montreal Clock Tower
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45°30′44.44″N 073°32′44.84″W / 45.5123444°N 73.5457889°W | |
Location | Old Port of Montreal |
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Height | 45 metres (148 ft) |
Beginning date | October 31, 1919 |
Completion date | 1922 |
Dedicated to | Canadian sailors who died in World War I |
Montreal Clock Tower (Tour de l'Horloge) is located in Quai de l'Horloge, originally called the Victoria Pier, in the Old Port of Montreal in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Overview
Also called The Sailors' Memorial Clock, the cornerstone was laid by the Prince of Wales, on Oct. 31, 1919, with the 45-metre tower completed two years later as a memorial to the Canadian sailors who died in the First World War. The original plans called for the clockworks to be connected to five bells that would chime every hour, but the carillon was never built. The clock was constructed in Croydon, England by the firm of Gillett & Johnston, and its mechanism is similar to the one that drives Big Ben at the Palace of Westminster.[1]
Visitors can make the 192-step climb to take in the view.[2]
See also
References
- ^ "No time to lose: Custodian of the clocks has a busy schedule". Montreal Gazette. Canwest. 27 October 2008. Archived from the original on 2012-11-05. Retrieved 3 December 2008.
- ^ Clock Tower Pier, Old Port, www.oldportofmontreal.com
External links
- Media related to Montreal Clock Tower at Wikimedia Commons
- Travel Guide
- Canada's Historic Places