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Onward to Part 2: 1800-1929
Despite war, fire and the vagaries of the economy,
Annapolis Royal is blessed with possibly the highest concentration of heritage
buildings in Canada. Lower St. George Street has been designated as a National
Historic District, 135 buildings are Municipal Heritage Properties, and several
buildings are Provincial Heritage Properties or National Historic Sites. Here
is but a small selection.
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La
Maison Acadienne In the Historic Gardens,
St. George Street c. 1671
This replica of a 17th century
Acadian home demonstrates a small infill and post and beam structure with
parged walls and small paned windows containing glass panes or animal hides. It
was built in 1981-82 based on the best information available at the time, but
by 1995, much more specific evidence of appropriate Acadian design techniques
was available, and the home was largely rebuilt in 1996. The walls are mud, and
there is an interior clay chimney with a stone fireplace. The bake oven, also
made of local clay, is on the exterior chimney wall. The thatch on the roof
comes from the Gardens' own stand of Norfolk reed, an excellent, long-wearing
thatching material.
The Acadians grew medicinal herbs
and a variety of vegetables, including beets, carrots, onions, chives,
parsnips, cabbages and turnips, some of which can be seen in the potager. This
evocative kitchen garden has four symmetrical beds in traditional French style,
with hedges and a pole fence to keep out foraging animals. A small orchard
surrounded by a French willow hedge contains early varieties of apples and
pears.
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Photo from 2003
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The
deGannes-Cosby House
477 St. George Street c. 1708
The deGannes house is the oldest
documented wooden structure in Nova Scotia and has been continuously occupied
since its construction in 1708. It was built by Major Louis deGannes de Falaise
- a native of France who was posted to Port Royal in 1696 - on the site of his
previous house, which had been burned in the unsuccessful siege of the town in
1707. Using the cellar foundation and both standing chimneys, he raised a post
and beam frame and filled the walls with wattle and daub. In 1710, Port Royal
changed hands for the final time and was renamed Annapolis Royal in honour of
the reigning Queen. Two years later, the deGannes family returned to France.
Throughout most of the 18th
century, the house was the home of the Cosby family, beginning with Alexander
Cosby, who came to Nova Scotia in 1721 as a major in the 40th Regiment,
commanded by his brother-in-law Richard Phipps, governor of the province.
Alexander married Anne Winniett, the daughter of a prominent merchant in town.
A son, Phillips Cosby, was a lieutenant with Boscowan's fleet at Louisbourg in
1758, and aide-de-camp to General Wolfe at Quebec the following year. In 1809
the Reverend Cyrus Perkins purchased the house from the heirs of Anne Cosby. It
served as the Anglican rectory during his tenure. Through the mid-nineteenth
century, the house was owned by the prosperous Henkel and related Tobias
families. It was during this period that the central dormer, shown in the
photograph, was added. Later additions to the house included a large ell to the
back and dormer windows. It is significant for its construction during the
Acadian period, evident in its wattle and daub walls and the very wide
floorboards visible in the ceiling of the first floor. It features a gambrel
roof and clapboard siding. The deGannes-Cosby house is a provincially and
municipally designated heritage building. It has had 16 owners in nearly three
hundred years and remains a private residence.
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Photo from 1900
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Fort
Anne Powder Magazine
c. 1708
The Powder Magazine at Fort Anne
National Historic Site was designed and built as part of the refortification
efforts at the fort in the early eighteenth century. The building, and the
ramparts themselves, were designed by the French military engineer Lieutenant
Jean de Labat. A student of the famed military engineer Vauban, Labat is
responsible for many of the existing elements of Fort Annes design.
Construction on the Powder Magazine began in 1702 and, due to political delays
in France, the project was not completed until 1708. A mere two years later,
the fort fell to the British.
Despite the useful nature of the
Powder Magazine, reports from the 1720s mention it conveniently holding 200
barrels of gun powder, it has structurally had problems with earth from the
ramparts pressing against its walls throughout its history. Over the years,
attempts had been made by the British and Canadian militaries to secure the
building.
After the active life of the fort
in the late nineteenth century, the Powder Magazine was used as both a storage
facility and as a chicken coop. Today, it stands as a restored and stable
building thanks to the work of Parks Canada.
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Photo from 2005
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The
Sinclair Inn
232 St. George Street c. 1708-1710
From the exterior, the
Sinclair Inn (or Farmers Hotel, as it was
known at the time of this photograph), appears to be a Loyalist structure. It
is, however, the result of the union of two much earlier structures. The front
third of the building nearest the street was originally a two-storey house
built on the site in 1710 by Jean Baptist Soullard, a silversmith from Quebec
who married an Acadian girl, Louise Comeau, in Port Royal. He evidently did not
stay long after the capture of the town that year, because in November 1746,
one Rebecca Whitechurch was licensed by the council "to retail strong
Drink" from the Soullard House. So began the building's life as a
"public house", an association that would continue, almost without
interruption, for over two hundred years.
Sometime around 1781, an
enterprising innkeeper, Frederic Sinclair, purchased the property, and added to
the back of it what appears to be an even earlier building, in all probability
the Skene House that sat on the next lot up the street. William Skene was in
Annapolis Royal by 1714 as the regimental surgeon for the newly arrived British
forces, and was the owner of the one-storey house before 1720. The Skene house
was built in 1708 by Jacques David dit Pontif to replace his earlier home,
burned in 1707. He was "Chirurgien Major à l'Acadie" and
husband of Jeanne de la Tour, the granddaugher of Charles de St. Etienne de la
Tour (1593-1666), early governor of Acadie, and Jeanne Motin, Madame d'Aulnay.
The Skene House displays the local variant of medieval "wattle and
daub" wall construction, in which a mixture of clay and straw was forced
into the wall cavities as insulation. The only other examples of this form of
wall construction in Nova Scotia occur in three other buildings in the town
that predate 1729.
Tradition holds that in 1738 the
Sinclair Inn was the site of the first Masonic Lodge
meeting in what is now Canada. The claim may have some basis, as Skene was a
member of the Boston Lodge. After the two houses were placed end to end, a
second storey was added to the one-storey building and the whole was finished
with a new roof and clapboard siding. Certainly one of the most significant
buildings in Canada, it may well be the oldest wood-frame structure in the
country. Now owned by the Annapolis Heritage Society, the Sinclair Inn is open
seasonally to visitors as a display of the materials and methods used in three
hundred years of construction.
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Photo from 1930
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The
Adams-Ritchie House
222 St. George Street c. 1713
The Adams-Ritchie House was built
circa 1713 by John Adams, a native of Boston who had a long association of
trading in Acadia. He had joined Sir Charles Hobby's regiment when it was
raised in New England for the attack on Port Royal. After capture of the town
in 1710, he left military life and began a thirty-year association with the
newly renamed Annapolis Royal as merchant, realtor, collector of customs and
councilor. He was one of the few stable civilian influences in the early days
of the new English colony.
The house he built was originally
a single storey of wattle and daub wall construction. On occasion, it was host
to the provincial council in the years before 1749, when the seat of government
was removed to Halifax. Georgian additions to the building in the late
eighteenth century included the balanced wings and a second storey. It was
owned during this period by members of the Ritchie family. John Ritchie, a
Scottish-born merchant, had emigrated to Boston in 1770, but within a few years
was living in Annapolis. He served as a member of the provincial assembly
between 1783 and 1785, and was the first of that distinguished family name in
the town. As seen in this photograph, the house had by 1880 become the premises
for Arthur M. King's Annapolis Clothing Hall. In 1882, a three-story Victorian
façade that extended to the street was added to the building. One
hundred years later, this addition was removed to reveal the earlier structure
inside. The Adams-Ritchie House, minus the wings, is now used as commercial
space.
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Photo from 1880

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Williams
House
167 St. Anthony Street c. 1715
It is in this house that Major
General Sir William Fenwick Williams of Kars is reputed to have been born in
1800. Young William attended the grammar school in Annapolis Royal and
graduated from the Royal Military College in Woolwich, England, in 1821. During
the Crimean War General Williams distinguished himself at the defence of Kars
(Turkey). The men he led held off the Russian army for four months before being
captured. After being held prisoner in Moscow and St. Petersburg during the
winter of 1855-1856, he was hailed as the "Hero of Kars" on his
return to London in the spring of 1856. Among the numerous titles that Major
General Williams acquired during his life were Commander-in-Chief of British
forces in North America (1860-1865), Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia
(1865-1867), and Governor of Gibraltar (1870-1876). William Fenwick Williams
died in London in 1883.
Like many houses in Annapolis
Royal, the Williams House does not currently stand where it was built. This
structure was moved from its original site on the corner of St. George Street
and Victoria Street (the lot currently occupied by the Royal Bank) in 1874. As
with other houses built in the town prior to 1720, the Williams House
originally had walls constructed of wattle and daub.
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The
Amberman House (North Hills Museum)
5065 Granville Road c. 1760
There is a great deal of
uncertainty about the date of construction for the Amberman house, now the
North Hills Museum. At first glance, the building appears to be a fairly
standard mid-eighteenth century New England saltbox. Some interior evidence,
including a wattle and daub wall and an inscription of "1702", may
signify an older structure, but this is unclear. The current thinking is that
this house was built sometime after the Acadian deportation in 1755 and before
the arrival of the Loyalists in the 1780s. Most structural evidence shows that
the house dates to the arrival of the New England Planters in the 1760s.
In the 1730s this lot was granted
to Benjamin Rumsey, Clerk of the Cheque to the Board of Ordinance. Mr. Rumsey's
actual dwelling was located in Round Hill. The property next appears in the
deed of a transaction between Peter Ryerson and Paul Amberman in 1784. The
Amberman family, who were of Dutch origin, arrived in Granville as Loyalists
from New York. The house remained in the Amberman family until 1964.
The site was named North Hills
when retired banker and antique collector Robert Patterson purchased it. When
Mr. Patterson died in 1974, the house and its contents were bequeathed to the
Province of Nova Scotia. The house is currently operated as
North Hills Museum through a partnership
between the Nova Scotia Museum and the Annapolis Heritage Society. The museum
contains Mr. Patterson's extensive collections of Sheraton, Hepplewhite and
Chippendale furnishings, English and Chinese-export ceramics, Sheffield plate,
pewter, and English glass.
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Bailey
House
150 St. George Street c. 1770
The house at 150 St. George Street
was built around 1770, probably by John Easson, a master artificer at the fort.
On August 5, 1783, he sold the dwelling, storehouse, and 110 perches of land
for 500 British pounds to Joseph Totten of New York, a Loyalist refugee with a
wife, six children and four slaves in his household. A strong tradition holds
that Edward, the duke of Kent, danced here at a ball during a visit to
Annapolis Royal in the 1790s. Joseph Totten was the maternal grandfather of Sir
William Robert Wolseley Winniett (1793-1850), a native of Annapolis Royal who
became governor of the Cape Coast Colony in Africa and died in Accra (now
Ghana).
In 1819, merchant James Robertson
purchased the property from the estate of Joseph Totten and sold the house in
1837 to Elizabeth Bailey, widow of Thomas Henry Bailey, barrack master at the
fort and son of Loyalist Reverend Jacob Bailey. She and her three daughters
kept it as an aristocratic boarding house. "Marm Bailey,"
immortalized in the writings of T.C. Haliburton, was renowned for the moose
muffle soup she prepared. After passing out of the hands of the Bailey family,
the house, although never substantially altered, was long neglected. This
photograph shows the house much as it is today. Now well preserved, Bailey
House is a private residence and bed and breakfast.
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click on the picture to enlarge
Photo from 1930
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The
Douwe Ditmars House
Clementsport c. 1789
When land was granted to Loyalists
after the American Revolution, the choicest tracts along the shoreline, near
the fisheries and the rich alluvial land of the valley, went to the most
prominent refugees. One of these was Douwe Ditmars, a descendant of one of the
early settlers of New Amsterdam (now New York) and patriarch of the large
extended family he brought to a 495 acre tract of land at Moose River (now
Clementsport) in 1786. The grant required that he build a house within three
years of its issue and the storey-and-a-half home high on the east slope of the
village presumably dates from that period.
One wall of the original house
contains the "wattle and daub" wall insulation of clay and straw that
was used extensively by local Acadians in the early part of the 18th century.
It remains an unexplained feature of the history of the building. The roofline
is unusual in that it flares out over the porch, which was glassed in after
1927, and the large chimneys indicate the open fireplaces within. The two
exterior doors of the original house are so-called "Indian doors",
planked horizontally for extra strength, and carry their original hardware. As
a slave owner, Douwe Ditmars' house likely contained a slave's quarters,
perhaps in the attic space. The house is a private residence.
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The
Parker Farm
Belleisle c. 1791
The oldest brick dwelling in
Annapolis County was begun in 1791 by Obadiah Parker on the 500 acre lot
granted his father Abijah Parker, a New England Planter. Like all of the
Granville lots granted in 1765, it comprised a long narrow rectangle slicing
through marsh, upland and mountain to the Bay of Fundy. Built with local
bricks, possibly made on site, the Parker farmhouse originally faced the great
Belleisle Marsh. When iron stoves gained popularity about 1830, the house lost
its large open fireplaces and massive chimneys. In the last half of the 19th
century, windows and doors were bricked in and replaced with larger windows and
a recessed front door in what had been the rear of the house. Despite the
abundance of suitable clay, brick never became popular as a local building
material. The Parker Farm house is a private residence.
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Christchurch Anglican Church
Karsdale c. 1791
The influx of Loyalist settlers to
Lower Granville after the American Revolution led to the building of
Christchurch Anglican Church in 1791. It was built according to the wishes of
Charles Inglis, Nova Scotia's first Anglican Bishop, who specified the
dimensions of the building (46'x30'), and consecrated the church as St. Paul's
on September 1, 1793. Christchurch is a plain structure, clad in clapboard,
featuring long, slim gothic windows with clear, antique glass panes. The only
exterior detail is the simple decorative mouldings outlining the window arches.
The square steeple has unadorned rectangular belfry openings and a pointed,
belcast roof adding to the air of simplicity. The weathervane mounted on the
steeple bears the date "1791". Interior decoration includes high
wainscoting along the walls and fitted louvered shutters over the windows. The
original rounded pulpit is still in use, although its pedestal has been
shortened. The village and church both underwent name changes in the late 19th
century. In 1882, the church officially assumed the name Christchurch, and the
village surrounding it was named Karsdale in honour of General Sir William
Fenwick Williams of Kars, a native son who distinguished himself during the
Crimean War
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Old St.
Edwards Church
Clementsport c. 1795
Consecrated September 17, 1797
Old St. Edward's Church, at
Clementsport, is one of the oldest surviving churches in Nova Scotia. Its
proportions and method of construction are examples of a New England
meetinghouse style melded with overtones of classical detail. Prior to the
completion of St Edward's Church in 1795, religious services in the Clements
area would have been held in the homes and barns of local settlers. This began
to change in 1790 when fifty families of the Clements area petitioned Bishop
Charles Inglis, the first Bishop of Nova Scotia, for the construction of a
church at Clementsport. Local tradition holds that the land that the church was
built on was purchased from Douwe Ditmars for the cost of one peppercorn. The
deed dated February 27, 1797, shows that the price was later amended to five
shillings. Timber used in the construction was apparently taken from the land
cleared to build the church.
Both the Rev. Jacob Bailey, the
Rector of the Annapolis parish, and Roger Viets, the Rector of the Digby
parish, would have ministered to the people of Clements. These men worked as
missionaries for the Church of England's Society for the Propagation of the
Bible in Foreign Parts. St. Edward's did not obtain its own Rector until
1841.
In 1894, a new church was built
closer to the water in Clementsport to replace St. Edward's. By this time the
original church had fallen into a state of disrepair. Since this new church was
also given the name St Edward's, the original building took on the honourary
title of Old St. Edward's. While consent was given to demolish the old church,
this never took place. Under the leadership of Rector A.W.L. Smith and
parishioner L.V. Shaw, the community of Clementsport began to restore the old
church in 1916. The church is still consecrated and a service is held annually
on the third Sunday of August. Old St. Edward's currently operates as a museum
during the summer months.
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The
Field Officers' Quarters, Fort Anne
St. George Street c. 1797
This building is one of the most
enduring symbols of Annapolis Royal - its image has been incorporated into the
logo of the town's National Historic District. The field officers' quarters
were constructed in 1797 on the order of Prince Edward, commander-in-chief of
British forces in Nova Scotia and later duke of Kent. Initially built to house
two field officers, the quarters' use changed over time. During the first half
of the nineteenth century, various people occupied it, including the hospital
assistant, officers, non-commissioned officers, soldiers, and their families.
The picket fence presumably provided a little privacy from the cattle roaming
the fort grounds. The officers' quarters became a museum and park office in
1918.
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Easson
House
Lequille c. 1799
Scotsman John Easson was
commissioned a Master Artificer in 1737 by the Board of Ordnance in London and
stationed at Fort Anne. He was granted the lands at Lequille of the French
miller Gautier after 1745 on condition he maintain the mill. This Easson house
of 1799 was built on the Easson lands by another John Easson, grandson of the
first John, and was subsequently occupied by the descendants of his brother
Alexander Easson until 1958. With a central entrance and chimney, the house has
the marked plainness of detail characteristic of earlier Planter houses. The
classical pediment and fanlight provide a suggestion of the elegance introduced
by the Loyalists after 1783. The house is a private residence.
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>>> Onward to Part 2: 1800-1929
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