Library and Ballroom
Introduction
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Images
Image 1, Library, 2020
Image 2, Library, 2020
Image 3, Hon. James Alexander Lougheed, Minister Without Portfolio, 1909
Image 4, Lady Isabella Lougheed Reading, N.D.
Image 5, Ballroom, 2020
Image 6 Ballroom, 2020
Image 7, Dorothy Lougheed, c. 1920s
Backstory and Context
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This is the Ballroom (Images 5 & 6).
The Lougheeds led a busy social life, and that required a space for activities like dancing. So it was in 1907 that much of the home’s basement was transformed into a ballroom.
The family hosted its annual New Year’s Day Levee in this room, as well as numerous other social functions. In 1914, the Morning Albertan newspaper reported that “the much talked-of tango was the anticipated feature of Mrs. Lougheed’s dansant Saturday afternoon for her daughter, Miss Dorothy (Image 7).”
Keeping guests entertained in the ballroom also meant getting refreshments to them from upstairs. At the south end of the room, a window opening in the wall acted as a pass-through to transfer food and drinks from the kitchen staff to the servants.
Dances are still held occasionally in the ballroom, which today serves double-duty as a gallery.
Sources
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Chris Stutz, Chris Stutz Custom Photos
Chris Stutz, Christ Stutz Custom Photos
Library and Archives Canada PA-33982
Collection of LHCS
Chris Stutz, Chris Stutz Custom Photos
Chris Stutz, Chris Stutz Custom Photos
Glenbow Archives PD-132-20-42