MACDONELL HOUSE, ST. ANDREW'S EAST

Author:
Ray & Dianna Baillie (Text reproduced with permission from Imprints: Discovering the Face of English Quebec, 2001)

Image removed.This Georgian house was built in the 1830s for Col. Charles MacDonell, an officer in the British army, who organized the Argenteuil Rangers during the 1837 Rebellion. He married Ann Turner, the niece of the English painter J. William Turner; his grandfather was Sir John Johnson.The house was one of the finest of its day and a centre of much of the social life of the time. The original six-foot surrounding wall was controversial as it cost almost as much as the house. Was it built as a defence during the rebellion (the house is said to have been a barracks at that time)? Was it to prevent parading soldiers behind the house from eyeing the colonel's daughters? "Eyes forward!", he would yell. Or was it merely Victorian exclusivity?