Walter Seymour Allward was probably Canada's most
important monumental
sculptor in the first third of this century. Born in Toronto in 1875, he
first worked as a draughtsman for an architectural firm and subsequently
modeled terra cotta decorative panels for the Don Valley Brick Company.
His first commission was for the figure of Peace for the North West
Rebellion Monument at Queen's Park, Toronto in 1894. While he later
received commissions for portrait monuments -- the Simcoe Monument, Sir
Oliver Mowat and J.S. Macdonald, all at Queen's Park -- his preference
was for more allegorical interpretations as evidenced in his South
African War Memorial
on University Avenue in Toronto and the Baldwin-Lafontaine Monument on
Parliament Hill in Ottawa. Yet his most notable early success was the
Alexander Graham Bell Monument in Brantford, Ontario.
In 1912 he was awarded the contract for the King Edward VII memorial
in Ottawa of which only two figures, Truth and Justice, were cast in
1923 and which are now installed in front of the Supreme Court in
Ottawa. The most important commission Allward received was for the
monument to Canadians killed in the First World War at Vimy, France, a
project which would occupy him from 1921 to its unveiling in 1936 on the
eve of the Second World War.
Allward passed away in 1955.

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