Philip Ruh

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Philip Roux or Philip Ruh
Born6 Aug 1883
St. Boniface, Manitoba, Canada
NationalityCanadian
Alma materBelgian Oblate (Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate)
OccupationArchitect
Practicechurch architect
Buildings40 Byzantine Rite churches and several grottos

Philip Ruh,

Ukrainian Canadian community building over forty Byzantine Rite churches and several grottos in a unique architectural style that mixed Byzantine, Latin, and modern Canadian influences.[1] The style is often called prairie cathedral,[1]
which is a common nickname for several of his churches, even though only two of them are properly cathedrals.

The Ukrainian Catholic Church of the Immaculate Conception in the Rural Municipality of Springfield, Manitoba was designated a National Historic Site of Canada in 1996 as being one of Ruh's most accomplished works.[2]

Priesthood

Ruh was born in

Alsace-Lorraine [then part of the German Empire], to poor parents.[1] When he wasn't at school, he worked in the fields.[1] In his autobiography written two years before his death, he wrote, "There was no time for play except on Sundays after Mass."[1] After leaving school, he worked in the fields until deciding to become a priest.[1] He joined the priesthood in the Oblates order in 1898 and he moved to the Netherlands for training.[1] After completing his novitiate, he studied for another six years in Germany.[1] Then he was sent to be the Oblate missionary to the Ukrainian Catholic immigrants in Canada.[1] Ruh knew nothing about Ukrainians except that they were a Slavic nation.[1] He received additional training in the Ukrainian language and the Eastern Rite.[1] Ruh had his first experience in architecture when he received an assignment to design a path up a hill and a play field for schoolchildren.[1]

Ruh received two more years of training before he was sent to Canada; he arrived in April 1913.

St. Boniface, Manitoba
, aged 79.

Works

  • Mountain Road Church of St. Mary's Manitoba 1920s the largest wooden church in Western Canada (burnt 1966);
  • Church of the Blessed Mary Virgin, Portage la Prairie (built 1929 and demolished 1983);
  • Holy Ascension Winnipeg (1929);
  • St Basil the Great Regina, Saskatchewan (1928).
  • Church of the Immaculate Conception, Cook's Creek, Manitoba 1930s.
  • Blessed Virgin Mary, Grimsby, Ontario 1940s.
  • St. Cyril & Methodius, St. Catharine's, Ontario 1940s.

References

External