Fulford Place

The home is now a historic house museum reflecting Edwardian era decorations, and it is operated by the Ontario Heritage Trust.

Architect Albert W. Fuller from Albany, New York, designed Fulford Place, and it was elaborately decorated in the Beaux-Arts style.

The property was reduced to three of its original 10 acres (4.0 ha) when George Taylor Fulford II was forced to section off prime lots of real estate to sell in order to afford the maintenance of the house.

It has been interpreted to how it looked in the Edwardian era; this was done relatively accurately because of the existence of early photographs of rooms (taken for insurance purposes) and a collection of original artifacts (not reproductions).

Among the original furnishings and artifacts are; a butterfly Steinway piano gifted to Mary Fulford by her husband, and a Tiffany Dragon Fly Lamp.

[5] The opulent and lavishly furnished mansion has been designated a National Historic Site of Canada, and is a major tourist attraction in the Brockville area.

The Italianate garden, designed by the Olmsted Brothers