He is probably the single most important person in moulding the city of Inverness, both socially and physically. He is responsible for a very high proportion of Inverness's churches, offices, public buildings, shops, tenements and villas.
Life
He was born on 9 July 1834 at Huntly Hill in Stracathro near Brechin in Angus, the son of James Ross, architect. The family moved to Inverness in 1838. He was educated at Inverness Royal Academy and Dr Bell's Institution. In 1848 he was briefly apprenticed to a stonemason to gain some practical experience before being articled in his father's architects office. In 1853 his father died and he took over the office.[1]
In 1859 he took William Joass into partnership, creating Ross & Joass. In the same year he joined as a volunteer in the Inverness Garrison Artillery (later rising to Colonel) and joined the St John Lodge of the Inverness Freemasons.
Ross & Joass was dissolved in 1865 and Joass set up in Dingwall.
In 1866 he secured a major commission to design St Andrew's Cathedral in Inverness.[2] This led to his nomination in 1872 for St Mary's Episcopal Cathedral, Edinburgh. He entered his three-spired design under the pseudonym "Fidelitas". However, this ended in a complicated legal dispute: George Gilbert Scott won the competition by one vote, but his design was for a complicated and expensive single spire design. The commissioning body asked for the design to be changed closer to Ross's design: Ross naturally objected. But Ross's design was then claimed to be that of George Freeth Roper who had undertaken the building of Ross's St Andrew's Cathedral in Inverness. It was messy, and did some reputational damage, but also gained him some fame as a designer.[3]
He was Master of his Lodge in Inverness 1873 to 1876.
He had already a strong reputation for designing church-run schools, and after the Education Act of 1872 he received at least 450 small commissions to create the numerous small parish schools required in the Act. He opened a branch office in Oban in 1880 to cope with the work. This office was run by his new partner David Mackintosh. The partnership was dissolved in 1883 when the school commissions were exhausted. In 1887 he entered a third (and final) partnership with Robert John MacBeth to create Ross & MacBeth.
He had little practical involvement in design beyond around 1910 and retired completely in 1917 aged 83.
He died at home "Riverfield" in Inverness on 19 May 1925 aged 90. The funeral service took place in his own building, St Andrew's Cathedral. He was buried at Tomnahurich with full masonic rites.[4]
Other roles
Grand Master Mason for Inverness 1873 to 1876
Local politician, joining the town council in 1881 and rising to be Provost of Inverness 1889 to 1895
President of the Inverness Architectural Association
Director of the Northern Infirmary, Inverness
Director of the Inverness College
Director of the Caledonian Bank
Director of the Lancashire Assurance Company
Director of Inverness Tweed Mills
Main share-holder of the Rose Street Foundry in Inverness
Founder of the Inverness Scientific Society and Field Club
Founder of the Gaelic Society of Inverness
Noted amateur geologist and antiquarian
Family
In 1864 or 1865, he married Mary Ann Carnaby Finlayson.
Conversion of distillery building to a US Naval Base, Dalmore Distillery (1917)
Conversion of distillery building to a US Naval Base, Glenalbyn Distillery (1917)[6]
References
^ a b"Alexander Ross (1834-1925): A Short Biography". Victorianweb.org. Retrieved 19 March 2019.
^"Inverness Cathedral". Morayepiscopalchurch.scot. Retrieved 19 March 2019.
^"Dictionary of Scottish Architects - DSA Architect Biography Report (March 19, 2019, 6:45 pm)". Scottisharchitects.org.uk. Retrieved 19 March 2019.
^Inverness Citizen (newspaper), 20 May 1925
^"Alexander Ross, Am Baile, EN383". Ambaile.org.uk. Retrieved 19 March 2019.
^"List of buildings designed and built by architectural firm of Alexander Ross, Inverness - Tasglann nan Eilean Siar". Ica-atom.tasglann.org.uk. Retrieved 19 March 2019.