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Rodman Hall109 St. Paul Crescent St. Catharines, Ontario L2S 1M3
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Left: Rodman Hall. Top Right: Walker Botanical Gardens in the autumn. Bottom Right: Tree maintenance in the arboretum (all photos by Lauren Garbutt).
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SECORD SIGNIFICANCELaura Secord, on her historic walk from Queenston to Decew House, St. Catharines passed the Rodman Hall property. The Hall had not yet been constructed at that time however it is a landmark along the Laura Secord Legacy Trail.
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Stately and elegant Rodman Hall was originally the private residence of Thomas Rodman Merritt, the fourth son of the Honourable William Hamilton Merritt - the man who built the first Welland Canal. The imposing linestone building was constructed betwen 1854 and 1863.
Operating as an art gallery since it was acquired by the City of St. Catharines in 1960, Rodman Hall has a permanent collection of approximately 850 works of art by 19th and 20th century Canadian, American and European artists. It presents a year-round exhibition program featuring contemporary, historical, regional, national and international works of art, as well as being a performance venue for Niagara's musicians. In the fall, Rodman Hall welcomes the public to view their fall exhibits at no cost. The facility also runs art classes year round.
A 1975 addition to the building houses the Harris-Godwin Gallery, as well as collection storage, receiving, and preparation areas.
Rodman Hall was acquired by Brock University in 2003. The old house now contains the Hansen Gallery, the board room, art studios and digital art lab, an exhibition catalogue reference library and administrative offices. The former servants’ quarters on the third floor have been turned into studios.
On the grounds of Rodman Hall overlooking 12 Mile Creek is the Walker Botanical Garden, a public garden containing an array of exotic and native plantings, an old outdoor wooden amphitheatre, and an arboretum with many different species of trees. The gardens were first imagined and created by English landscape designer Samuel Richardson in 1862. The arboretum was established in 1985 through donations from Walker Industries and with the efforts of the John Howard Society. It wasn't until June 23rd, 1988, that the garden site was officially named the Walker Botanical Garden.
At its peak, the garden included exotic trees from Europe, China and the Carolinas. Today, the Walker Arboretum includes over 200 plants and shrubs, 15 types of magnolias, a North African cedar (Cedrus atlantica), and one of the largest Empress trees in Canada (Paulownia tomentosa, also known as the Princess Tree or Foxglove Tree; pao tong ?? in Chinese; kiri ? in Japanese). Some of the other trees include maple trees, birch trees, mulberry trees, and black cherry trees.
Below is the path with destinations along the way