Speaker Rhodes' Chair
This oak chair was created for Edgar Nelson Rhodes when he became Speaker in 1917 and was the last to be made for an individual. With its gothic revival style and elaborate carvings, it is very similar to the chair made for the previous Speaker, Albert Sévigny. Both were based on designs provided by the Chief Architect at the Department of Public Works and handcrafted in Montreal by the Bromsgrove Guild (Canada), Ltd.
Rhodes presided from this chair primarily at the Victoria Memorial Museum, where the Lower Chamber held sittings after Canada’s original Parliament Building was destroyed in a fire in 1916. The new Centre Block opened in 1920 and a permanent Speaker’s Chair was designed and installed in 1921. A century later, however, the Rhodes Chair is back in service in the temporary House of Commons Chamber in West Block while Centre Block undergoes extensive restoration and rehabilitation work.