Yeo Hall was named in honour of Sir James Lucas Yeo. Yeo Hall Mess Building, also known as Building No. 32, is one of a group of three buildings that sits on the west border of the parade square at Royal Military College. This austere, rectangular building is faced with rusticated limestone. The main façade is defined by a shaped, parapeted, central gable that rises above a two-storey bay. This multifunctional building houses the Cadet Dining Hall and the Cadet Mess. The barber and Canadian Forces Exchange System (CANEX) are located in the basement. A plaque erected by the Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada at the Royal Military College of Canada states "Born in Southampton, England, Yeo entered the British Navy, served throughout the Napoleonic Wars and won rapid promotion by his ability. In 1813, already a Commodore, he came to Canada to command British forces on the Great Lakes. Yeo successfully blockaded the American fleet in Sackett's Harbour for some months and subsequently commanded the naval forces at the capture of Oswego in 1814. Returning to England after the war he was posted to the West African Coast and died at sea while returning from that tour of duty."
Kingston, Ontario
Type
Other
Inscription
Yeo Hall
"Born in Southampton, England, Yeo entered the British Navy, served throughout the Napoleonic Wars and won rapid promotion by his ability. In 1813, already a Commodore, he came to Canada to command British forces on the Great Lakes. Yeo successfully blockaded the American fleet in Sackett's Harbour for some months and subsequently commanded the naval forces at the capture of Oswego in 1814. Returning to England after the war he was posted to the West African Coast and died at sea while returning from that tour of duty."
Location
Yeo Hall
22 Amiens Avenue
Kingston
Ontario
Yeo Hall
22 Amiens Avenue
Kingston
Ontario
GPS Coordinates
Lat. 44.22928
Long. -76.46916
Lat. 44.22928
Long. -76.46916