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The GAVAZA Family of
Annapolis Royal
by Lois Jenkins - Genealogy Centre of the
Annapolis Heritage Society
Antonio Gavaza's tombstone in the
Garrison Graveyard at Fort Anne reads "a native of Chava, Italy",
although the name could originally be Portuguese or Spanish. He was designated
a "trader" of Annapolis Royal when he bought the Sinclair Inn
property in 1818. Later that year he married Anne Starratt, a local girl nearly
thirty years his junior; they had four children, all baptized at St. Luke's
Anglican Church. In 1842 the Sinclair Inn property (then known as the
Provincial Hotel) was put up for sale at public auction as a result of an
action brought against Antonio by Thomas Ritchie, Esq. for non-payment of a
mortgage which he held on the property. Antonio's son Thomas Antonio Gavaza,
then of St. John, New Brunswick, was the highest bidder for the site. Antonio
and his wife both died in 1848, Antonio at age 74, Anne at age 46.
Thomas Antonio Gavaza married
Eliza Marshall in 1848. In 1851 he bought the property where the Sinclair Mews
parking lot is today (he may have built the house that stood there). Thomas and
Eliza had five children, Norman A., Thomas Millidge, James V., John M., and Ida
C. By the 1860s, Thomas A. was a prominent businessman in the town. He had sold
the Sinclair Inn property in 1858, and now had a general store and wharf on
lower St. George Street where the playground is located. He dealt in the buying
and selling of land, and was the town postmaster (from 1868 until his death).
When his sons came of age they joined him in the business which became known as
T. A. Gavaza & Sons. His daughter Ida was the first wife of George
Hawksworth, a former mayor of Annapolis Royal. She owned the Clifton House at
the turn of the century.
The family business appeared to
have a solid foundation: their store was located in a prime location, just east
of the railway wharf; it was the "Golden Age" of Annapolis Royal, the
terminus of the railway from Halifax and the port of a thriving shipping trade.
Business prospects couldn't be brighter. But the family's foundation was soon
to crumble.
The family firm decided to expand
its business, and in 1875 built a "handsome" 2 ½ storey dry
goods store on their property below the wharf. An item in the local paper of
the day describes "the splendid plate glass windows", the counter and
shelves of walnut, the five chandeliers containing over two dozen lamps. In
July of that year the family offered an inducement to the town: they would
erect a turret atop the building to house a town clock if the citizens would
raise the money for the clock. The store opened for business at the end of
December 1875. On July 25, 1876, Thomas A. Gavaza died at the age of 54. On
March 4, 1877, a fire, which began in the rear of the Gavaza general store,
destroyed it, the post office to one side and the Pickels & Mills store on
the other. The "handsome" new store, although damaged, survived the
ordeal; the intense heat cracked the "splendid plate glass windows".
Insurance covered some of the losses, but in October of 1877 the firm declared
bankruptcy.
The brothers turned to other
pursuits. Norman, the eldest, who never married, was listed as a
"commercial agent" in the 1881 census. He died ten years later, at
age 42. James, who married Emma Stevens, had left the firm in 1877, and moved
some time later with his family to the Boston area. John, who married Ella
Bonnett, was listed as a Deputy Sheriff in Annapolis in 1881. He was involved
in the construction of the "missing link" of the railway between
Annapolis Royal and Digby from 1889 to 1891, after which he and his family,
too, moved to Boston where he worked for the Boston Street Railway Company.
Thomas Millidge Gavaza, who also never married, managed the Clifton House for
his sister for a short while, then worked for Charles Dargie & Son for some
twenty years prior to his death in 1922. He was the last of the Gavaza family
in the area, his sister Ida having died ten years previously.
The "handsome" new
building below the wharf that had been the pride of T. A. Gavaza & Sons
went through a number of renters and owners; it housed at various times the
Salvation Army, a printing business, and a laundry. In 1911 Frank Pickels
bought the building and had it moved to the location of the present Scotiabank,
where it underwent alterations before housing the Bank of Nova Scotia which was
moved there from Church Street. On March 16, 1920, it burned to the ground,
with only the brick vault left intact.
In the late 1970s, the once
elaborate Victorian-style Gavaza residence that stood above the Sinclair Inn
was torn down to make space for a parking lot. Today their tombstones in the
Garrison Graveyard at Fort Anne and in Woodlawn Cemetery are the only remaining
tangible evidence of the Gavanza family's presence in Annapolis Royal.
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