A HISTORY of #62 SPARKS
STREET
After being vacant for nearly two decades Ian
Kimmerly has brought commercial life back to a building and
a location that has a long and important history.
A JEWELLERY STORE (1869-1900)
John Leslie (1828-1895) was the first to occupy the site as a
jeweller (1869-1900). Born and raised in Aberdeen, Scotland Leslie
immigrated to Canada in 1841 and settled in Bytown in1845. The
village was struggling and had few inhabitants. After much thought
Leslie opened a small store, advertising that he did silver repairs
and sold silverware, watches, clocks and jewellery. In 1869 Leslie
relocated from lower town to #25 Sparks in the now developing
upper town of Ottawa (as Bytown was renamed 1st January, 1855.)
This was the original number of #62 because it was originally
lot 25 of the farm estate of Nicholas Sparks.

Leslie Advertisement from 1885 City Directory.
This impressive advertisement from the City Directory of 1885
illustrates an artist’s conception of #62, the earliest
known. The text lists what could be purchased from the man who
was now one of the premier jewellers in Canada. Shortly after
Leslie’s death in 1895 Henry Birks and Sons acquired the
firm and stock, retaining two of his long time employees. Birks
continued to conduct business from #62 until 1900 when they moved
to the north side of Sparks. In 1850 John Leslie purchased land
from Andrew Main in an area known as Sandy Hill as it is today.
It was not until 1878 that Leslie started construction of a house
designed by James Mather in the Second Empire Style. The family
moved into their new home at 335 Theodore Street in the Spring
of 1879 and named it “Kininvie,” after the Leslie
ancestral home in Scotland. This is the house where Leslie passed
away peacefully in his sleep at age 82 years and seven months
and in which he was waked, as was the practice of the time. Leslie’s
wife Eliza died the next year and the property was sold to the
Liberal Party of Canada for their leader and newly elected prime
minister, Wilfred Laurier. There was no official prime minister’s
residence at the time. After the death of Laurier’s wife
in 1921, the residence was willed to Laurier’s successor
as leader of the Party, William Lyon Mackenzie King. Today it
is known as Laurier House, a National Historic Site at 335 Laurier
Ave. East, and is opened to visitors.
A BANK (1900-1982) and FINANCIAL
INSTITUTION (1986-1992)
The Imperial Bank of Canada was incorporated in 1873. It was not
until 11 July 1900 that it opened a Branch in Ottawa after making
appropriate alterations to #62. Construction on the present building
began in 1936. The architect is unknown but the design is considered
to be Barott inspired. The late Temple-style bank building with
Art Deco ornamentation was completed the next year.

Interior of 62 Sparks St. when opened as the Imperial Bank of
Canada, c. 1938.
(Photo courtesy
CIBC Archives.)
It is one-storey with a narrow frontage and a flat roof. The base
is sheeted with polished black granite, the façade with
ochre-coloured sandstone. The windows and door frames are polished
metal. There are pilasters on both sides of the recessed central
entrance. Decorating the top is a carved stone panel featuring
three lion heads and branches of maple leaves. It is fortunate,
that apart from the aluminum entrance which replaced brass doors,
the present building has a well-preserved original exterior. The
impressively high ceilings, the original marble decorative wainscotting,
several vaults, and the Manager's Office remain from the original
interior.

Interior of Front Door at 62 Sparks.
(Photo courtesy CIBC Archives.)
#62 was the Imperial’s main, and only Branch,
until 1956 when it opened several more offices throughout the
city. The Imperial Bank of Canada and the Canadian Bank of Commerce
merged in June 1961 to form the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce
(today commonly referred to as the CIBC.) The amalgamated Bank
used the former main branch of the Canadian Bank of Commerce built
in 1922 at #119 Sparks Street as its main branch, as it continues
to do. #62 was made a branch and operated until it was closed
in 1982. For obvious reasons the CIBC did not wish to rent the
building to another banking establishment. It remained vacant
until a nonpublic financial institution, The Civil Service Co-operative
Credit Society Ltd. (CS Co-op) rented and occupied it from 1986
until 1992.
-Excerpted from an article by C. R. McGuire