This
grand turn-of-the-century home was built for Dr. Joseph Arthur who
named it Beild House (a Scottish word for shelter). Each of the guest
rooms features its own unique decor, a gentle blending of antique
furnishings with modern amenities. Dr. Arthur's original office has
been refurbished into a comfortable 3 room suite. All rooms have either
king or queen size canopy beds and our deluxe rooms have fireplaces
and televisions. Our spacious living room, warmed by two fireplaces,
presents a wonderful opportunity to sample tempting hors doeuvres
and to relax after an enjoyable days activities.
As we make our home at the Inn we endeavour to provide the utmost
in personal attention and service. We want your stay to be a memorable
occasion. Beild House is a leisurely stroll to downtown shopping and
a convenient base close to all the many year-round attractions in
the Collingwood area.
Consider this your invitation to discover the delightful accommodation
offered by Beild House Country Inn.
The Bield 1909 1912, 64 Third Street
Built on a corner lot across from Dr. Donald McKays
modern version of a French chateau ~ The Bield represented an architectural
point of view that was almost diametrically opposed to the prevailing
school of thought.
Only a few years earlier, in 1900, Dr. Joseph Robbins
Arthur had chosen Philip C. Palin, the Collingwood architect who designed
Dr. McKays house, to prepare plans for a residence-cum-office
on Hurontario Street. This time, however, he selected Torontos
Eden Smith.
The architect of choice for Toronto's wealthy facilities
in the early 1900s, the English-born Smith has been credited with
single-handedly revolutionizing domestic architecture in Canada. Smith
disliked the massive arches, ostentatious towers and fussy Victorian
verandahs that characterized most of the large houses being built
at the turn of the century. His pared-down designs, stripped of extraneous
ornamentation, reflected his fondness for the comfortable country
cottages of the old country and became known as the English Cottage
style.
Like the Eden Smith houses that give such distinctive
character to Toronto's Wychwood Park and Forest Hill, The Beild incorporates
many of the elements that were Eden Smith trademarkssteeply
pitched roofs, tall chimneys and rows of casement windows
For Eden Smith the Collingwood project could not have
been an easy one. Construction began in 1909, but was not completed
for another three years. According to Dr. Arthurs daughter,
Bethia Elliot, whom was seven
when the family moved into their new home, construction was delayed
by an unexpected encounter with bedrock. Beneath the rich topsoil,
that had supported the market garden of former police chief Benjamin
F. Lewis, was limestone that had to be blasted to make trenches for
the water pipes.
Smiths plan called for the construction of an
unusual-looking red brick and shingle-sided structure supported by
massive steel beams. In typical Eden Smith Style, the doctors
consulting rooms and offices were relegated to the colder, noisier,
north end of the building, while the familys sunny living and
dining rooms, trimmed in gumwood and warmed by simple, but elegant,
back to back fireplaces, faced south to the garden.
On the spacious attic floor was the billiard room and
the childrens playroom where Bethia, her younger brother and
their friends spent many happy hours swinging from a set of gymnastics
rings. "Anyone who could swing high enough could write their
initials on the ceiling," recalls Bethia.
Reaching lofty heights was a specialty for members of
Bethia's family. Her father, a respected physician who practiced into
his eighties, served as Mayor of Collingwood in 1919 and again from
1923 to 1929. Bethias mother, Katherine, was a commissioner
of the Girl Guides and Regent of the IODE. Her aunt, Margaret Rose
( Mrs. Margaret Watts), one of the first women to earn her MA from
the University of Toronto, was awarded an M BE (Member of the British
Empire) for her international work with the Womens Institute.
Katherine and Margaret (Madge) were the daughters of
Henry Robertson, a pioneer lawyer who played an active part in Collingwoods
development and was well known in the Masonic Lodge. Robertson came
to live with the Arthurs after he spent his considerable wealth on
an extravagant trip around the world. A man of strong convictions,
he believed he was destined to die in his sixtieth year. The trip
was to be his Swan Song. To his great disappointment, however, he
lived to be eighty-two.
The spacious house where Henry Robertson spent the rest
of his days has lived up to the name Dr. Arthur so carefully chose
for it. Over the past seventy-eight years," The Bield"Scots
English for the shelter"has been the sight of many
community gatherings, and, during the Depression, transcients who
passed through the town could be sure of a hot meal and fresh clothes
in Dr. Arthurs office quarters.
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