. In his last year of life, McQuesten suffered from intestinal cancer which had metastasized to his throat and he died on January 13, 1948. Shortly before dying, he was named Hamilton's Citizen of the Year. After his death, the Hamilton High Level Bridge on
York Boulevard was renamed Thomas B. McQuesten High Level Bridge. The structure was planned and built in the 1920s and '30s in conjunction with the North-Western Entrance to Hamilton program of the Board of Park Management, when he was most active on it. It spans the channel linking
Cootes Paradise and the
Desjardins Canal to
Hamilton Harbour. The elegant bridge was designed by
John M. Lyle. His historic downtown family home was willed to the City of Hamilton after the death of the last of his five unmarried siblings in 1968. After its restoration was complete in 1971,
Whitehern has been open as a civic
museum and has occasionally served as a period film location. It was designated a
National Historic Site of Canada in 1962. The
McQuesten neighbourhood in Hamilton is named after him. It is bounded by
Barton Street East (north),
Queenston Road (south),
Parkdale Avenue North (west) and the
Red Hill Valley Trail. Landmarks in this neighbourhood include the
Red Hill Valley Parkway,
Red Hill Valley Trail and
Hillcrest Park. McQuesten was awarded permanent, honorary membership at
The Guild of Carillonneurs in North America in 1947, shortly before his death. The organization sought to recognize his work in overseeing the construction of the
Rainbow Bridge,
Rainbow Tower, and the tower's 55-bell
carillon. Thomas McQuesten is considered to be the founder of
Royal Botanical Gardens (Ontario). Within RBG's headquarters building, RBG Centre, a large central foyer is named the T. B. McQuesten Theatre. A large plaque in the David Braley and Nancy Gordon Rock Garden also dedicates the garden to the memory of McQuesten. The formal Thomas Baker McQuesten Memorial is an elevated lookout platform along York Boulevard on RBG's Burlington Heights properties. ==References==