Albert Lothian

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Image:St-claire's.jpg Albert James Lothian (1895-1952) was an architect, first half of the 20th Century. He was born in Edinburgh, Scotland in 1895 and died in Cuernavaca, Mexico on December 14, 1952.

He served during World War I as a motorcycle dispatch rider for the Canadian Army.

After the war, he spent about 14 years in Windsor, Ontario, Canada, as a practicing architect. His architectural style has left a mark on Windsor, with most of its prominent art deco building having been desinged by Lothian. He designed St. Bernard's School in the Ford City section of Windsor, St. Claire's R.C. Church (now St. Peter's Maronite Church), The Gothic Revival School Building on the Campus of the University of Windsor, as well as dozens of homes and apartment buildings throughout the city of Windsor, Ontario, and Grosse Pointe, Michigan, USA.

During the Great Depression he set sail with his family on his yacht, and took up residence in Nassau, Bahamas. In Nassau he continued his architectural practice and there he designed several churches.

In his later years, he was spliting his time as an architect working in both Nassau, Bahamas and Cuernavaca, Mexico. According to his obituary, he was in the middle of two large development projects in Cuernavaca, Mexico at the time of his passing in 1952.