Here on the second floor of the main house at Moorside, we get a look at the office of a prime minister. King would have work to do even while out of town, and this was the place it was done. It was also a place where his ideas for his home, and his ideas for the country, took shape.
Here we have King's passport- the first Canadian passport, likely a copy of the original. Prior to his government pushing for a distinctly Canadian passport, Canadians just used a British empire passport when travelling abroad.
Newspapers, in French and English, date from the Second World War, the second major crisis King had to steer the country through with his steady hand.
A glance out the window as I started to descend the stairs to the ground floor.
A display case is found here, with some gardening tools, a comic book about King, and one of his hats.
Nearby is a model for one of his follys here on the property.
Also in the display case are a series of documents and photographs- this one taken during the Quebec Conference of August 1943, in which King and the governor general, the Earl of Athlone and his wife, hosted President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill.
Out to the terrace I went. The grounds and the gardens beyond beckoned.
The stone lion we see here is one of the numerous pieces on the property, standing alone. Not all of them got incorporated into follys.
Churchill came to visit a number of times during the war, and by all reports, the two men got along very well. I remember a story from Laurier House- the in-town home King lived in at the time in Ottawa. He had Churchill over to visit, and at the time, the British PM had been going through one of his heart ailments. King offered him the use of the home's elevator, but Churchill wanted to take the stairs with King, even entertaining the notion of a race up the stairs.
Another look at this beautiful home.