Earle Ingram
Earle Ingram was born in 1929, went to school at McGill (graduated 1952), was a member of the OAQ before moving to Ontario. Mr. Ingram was an architect who bridged the evolution of modern design in Ottawa. He began by working as a draughtsman in the office of arch-revivalist W.E. Noffke in 1945 as a teenager and ended by heading a mainstream practice that produced a steady stream of proficient, and occasionally exceptional, schools, churches, healthcare facilities and municipal buildings all firmly rooted in a contemporary style. The Provincial Registry Office and Courthouse Extension is one of his best.