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The
second Ditmars House
Clementsport c. 1800
The second Ditmars house in
Clementsport was built at the foot of the west slope, near the village centre,
by Douwe Isaac Ditmars, son of Isaac and Jane (Vroom) Ditmars and grandson of
the elder Douwe, patriarch of the community. A merchant and leading citizen of
the town himself, the young Douwe licensed his building as an Entertainment
House in 1808-1809. The two doors with their simple transoms were formerly
protected by projecting gable roofs. The central door was a later addition. The
house displays a minimum of decorative trim to its exterior.
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The
Riordan-Francis House
18 St. James Street c. 1800
The house at 18 St. James Street
is a bit of a mystery. The Annapolis Royal municipal heritage citation dates
the origin of the house to circa 1800; however, renovation in 2001 suggested an
earlier date for the original house, possibly mid-eighteenth century. Its
current mid-Victorian style is classic 'carpenter gothic' or 'gothic revival',
architectural characteristics identified by Joann Latremouille in Pride of
Home (Lancelot Press 1986) and Allen Penney in Houses of Nova Scotia
(Formac 1989). These characteristics include a third gable at the front on the
ridge side of the house, with a second story window of unusual shape, a steep
roof pitch and windows with larger individual lights arranged in a two-over-two
pattern. Latremouille attributes emergence of the 'working class' architectural
style in Nova Scotia in the 1850-60s largely to the pattern books of American
Andrew Jackson Downing.
The original house may have
acquired its Victorian renovation when it was moved to an existing foundation
at St James Street to make way for railway line construction to the wharf. That
would account for the change in value of the lot for which Cornelius Riordan, a
tailor, paid Thomas Ritchie 40 pounds in 1864, subsequently conveying it the
following year to his daughter Catherine for $1000. The house remained in the
Riordan family until 1919, when it was sold to the Devany family. In 1950 it
passed to the Norris family. In the 1960s it became the home of Emma Francis,
whose superb cakes and doughnuts were famous in the town, and Foster Stevenson,
whose landmark taxi service operated out of what is now the Sinclair Inn
National Historic Site. Sold again in 2000, it was restored in 2001 and is a
private residence.
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Photo from 2002
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Entertainment House
Granville Ferry c. 1812
The village of Granville Ferry
was, and still is, the only river crossing in the twenty-eight miles between
Digby Gut and Bridgetown. Built as an inn about 1812, Entertainment House was
owned in the early 1830s by the partnership of brothers Harris and Lawrence
Hall, grandsons of a New England Planter of the 1760s. At that time, the Hall
brothers were operators of the ferry between Granville and Annapolis, and their
ferry slip was across the main road on their waterfront lot, just a few steps
from the inn. The elegant two and a half storey house is unadorned but for the
sidelights on either side of the front door and a classical entrance porch with
delicate columns supporting a simple pediment. The taproom of the inn was at
the front of the house to the right of the entrance. The kitchen was behind the
taproom, with their fireplaces back to back, having separate flues. The
cobblestone basement contained a wine cellar.
The Halls were multi-faceted
entrepreneurs. In addition to being farmers, they were wholesale merchants of
wine and spirits, and provided the garrison at Fort Anne with both meat and
drink. With a livery stable and post office on site, Entertainment House became
a stop of the "Pony Express" that carried news from Halifax to
Victoria Beach and the crossing to the telegraph office in Saint John. By the
late 1830s the Hall brothers had acquired property opposite the ferry slip on
the Annapolis shore in the Lower Town. There they built the inn known as
Commercial House, a business that mirrored their enterprise on the Granville
shore. Entertainment House is currently operated as a bed and breakfast.
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The
Runciman House
478 St. George Street c. 1817
The Runciman House was built in
1817 by the Reverend John Millidge, rector of St. Luke's Anglican Church from
that date until his death around 1830. In 1826, it was one of only two houses
in Annapolis Royal singled out for the approval of the Acadian Magazine, the
second being the Grange, home of Judge Thomas Ritchie. The rest were dismissed
as "generally old and decayed"! Named Girvan Bank by Millidge, the
home owes much of its lightness of design to the influence of the Boston
architect Charles Bullfinch, and is unusual for the semicircular bays with
eyebrow windows. The hip roof and wide eaves, in the picturesque fashion of the
day, enhance the low Regency cottage look Millidge wanted. After the death of
the rector, Girvan Bank became the home of the Runciman family, leading
merchants of the town and operators of Glasgow House at Runciman Corner. The
house remained in the Runciman family until 1978 when it was transferred by the
Misses Runciman to the Heritage Canada Foundation. It is now rented as a
private residence.
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Photo from 1925
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The
Robinson House
712 St. George Street c. 1818
Robinson House was built by James
Fraser, ordnance storekeeper at the fort, for his granddaughter Augusta
Isabella Henkell on or shortly after her marriage in 1818 to Lieutenant George
Robinson of the 60th Regiment. Her father, Dr. George Christian Henkell, the
German staff surgeon to the garrison and a friend of the duke of Kent,
reportedly procured the plans for the standardized married officers' quarters
from the engineer at the fort. The Georgian house is one of the few in town
built of brick, although the wings on either side are of wood-frame
construction and were added at a later date. Lieutenant Robinson retired from
the military at age 28 and developed a plantation farm for a family that
eventually numbered six sons and six daughters. One son, Dr. Augustus Robinson
(1836-1926), served as mayor and practiced medicine in Annapolis Royal for 69
years until his death at the age of ninety.
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The
Ruggles-Munro House
833 St. George Street c. 1818-1833
The Ruggles-Munro house was built
in three stages between 1818 and 1833. It started out as a one-storey dwelling
with a large central fireplace facing the Fort grounds. By 1833 it had been
transformed into a handsome Georgian house with a ballroom on the second storey
and a finished attic. When fashions changed, the house changed with it, and the
Victorian bay windows were added in 1874.
The house is named after Israel
Ruggles, who owned it between 1829 and 1866, and Lawrence Munro, whose family
lived in it for almost sixty years - from 1948 to 2006. The second storey
ballroom, with its original 1820s mantle and window moldings, remained intact
during all that time.
Charlotte Perkins, in her little
book entitled The Romance of Old Annapolis Royal, remembers the house as
one of the prettiest in town, with a beautiful garden and lime trees that
had been imported from England. The Ruggles-Munro House has recently
undergone a year-long historical rehabilitation as a private residence and is
currently for sale.
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St.
Luke's Anglican Church
St. George Street c. 1821
Across St. George Street from Fort
Anne was the so-called White House Field. This parcel of land had been held by
the British government in trust for fortifications since the mid-eighteenth
century. In 1811, the government granted one acre of land at the southwest
corner of "White House Field" and 500 pounds for a new Church of
England. St. Luke's replaced an earlier structure built in Lower Town during
the time of the noted Loyalist, the Reverend Jacob Bailey. The new church was
opened for worship in 1821, and the belfry and spire were added in 1837. A
condition of the grant provided a gallery in St. Luke's for the use of
non-commissioned officers and soldiers with the garrison. Officers in full
regalia sat below in a box pew. The side galleries were removed in 1874, twenty
years after the last soldier left the fort. During this same period of
Victorian "modernization," the box pews were replaced by bench-style
pews. The chancel was added in 1879. In 1910, the bicentenary of the first
Anglican service held in the chapel at Port-Royal was commemorated with a
special service at Fort Anne. The Bishop of London presented a prayer book to
the church, a gift from King George V, which is on view for visitors at St.
Luke's.
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Willett
House
Granville Ferry c. 1833
This two-and-a-half storey New
England colonial wood frame house was built by Walter Willett, a leading
Granville Ferry merchant and son of Loyalist Samuel Willett, cornet in a
cavalry regiment during the American War of Independence. Walter Willett, who
had married Mary Wheelock in the summer of 1832, bought the eastern part of
this lot in 1833 for 175 pounds, and probably built the house shortly
thereafter. Situated on a slope overlooking the Annapolis Basin, it has a
medium pitched end gable roof with return eaves and two chimneys one quarter
inset. The five-bay facade features an enclosed entranceway with sidelights and
fanlight transom. The entranceway is reached by railed steps. Members of the
Willett family owned the house until 1971.
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The
Annapolis Royal Court House
377 St. George Street c. 1837
The first Court of Common Law in
what is now Canada was administered in Annapolis Royal on April 20, 1721.
Following the pattern of the laws of Virginia, the governor and council sat as
a general court to try cases, civil and criminal. Throughout much of the 18th
century, court was held in rented rooms in Lower Town. The original wooden
courthouse, built on this site about 1791, burned on April 9, 1836. As a
result, the April session of the Inferior Court of Common Pleas for that year
was held in the academy across the street.
The present courthouse was built
in 1837 by contractor Francis LeCain, Jr. The new building cost 2500 pounds and
was described as "expensive and magnificent" and "probably the
best in the province" shortly after its completion. The first floor, built
of granite blocks two-and-a-half feet thick, houses the jail and the vaults.
The stuccoed second storey, accessed via two flights of stairs meeting at the
central entrance door, contains offices and the Supreme Court's oak-paneled
courtroom. Four columns frame the front door and the hipped roof is topped with
a cupola added during renovations in 1922, when the courthouse was renovated
and enlarged. Designated as a National Historic Site, the Annapolis Royal
Courthouse is the oldest courthouse in Canada still in continuous use.
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Photo from 1890
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Weatherspoon House
Granville Beach c. 1848
In his will dated 1841, bachelor
Francis Mills, a Justice of the Peace, left farm lots numbers 32 and 33 in
Granville to his widowed niece Elizabeth (Mills) Weatherspoon. Her husband,
David Weatherspoon had died in 1825 leaving his 24 year old wife with three
young children. Presumably Francis Mills was attempting to guarantee a legacy
for these three grandchildren of his brother. It is probable that the house was
built by William Mills Weatherspoon, the only son of David and Elizabeth,
sometime around his marriage to Elizabeth Troop in 1848. The
one-and-a-half-storey wood frame house is of a modified vernacular style with a
medium pitched end gable roof with return eaves. The two chimneys of the main
roof are one quarter inset. The three-bay facade features an Adams-style
central entrance bordered with sidelights and a fanlight placed over a paneled
transom. The unusual three-light "attic" windows over hooded
six-over-six windows add to the classical air of the facade. A one-storey
addition to the back of the house has an end chimney and a side entrance also
with sidelights. The house remained in the Weatherspoon family until 1910. This
house is currently a private residence.
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Hillsdale House
Upper St. George Street c. 1860
Hillsdale House was built in about
1860 by Susan Forbes Foster of Clifton House, on land that had been the
exercising ground for the garrison. She operated Hillsdale as a first-rate inn.
The property included a large barn with glassed-in henhouse, a piggery, an
icehouse and a large orchard. In 1872, Miss Foster married widower Edwin
Ryerson in the double parlour of the house. Evidently, she was a thorough
businesswoman; before the wedding, Ryerson was required to sign an elaborate
pre-nuptial agreement in which Foster retained complete control over her
property. The photograph depicts the tiered "wedding cake" garden
that was the dominant feature of the front yard. At Susan Ryerson's death in
1895, the Hillsdale House passed into the hands of the Perkins family, who had
operated the Queen Hotel.
Among many illustrious guests who
have stayed at Hillsdale over the years were Prince George of Wales in 1884
(later King George V), governors-general Lord Lansdowne in 1880 and Lord
Tweedsmuir in 1937, and the Right Honourable W.L. MacKenzie King, prime
minister of Canada. Hillsdale House remains today a prominent inn.
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Photo from 1880
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The
O'Dell House
136 St. George Street c. 1869
This colourful building located on
Lower St. George Street was an active part of the waterfront economy that
developed in Annapolis Royal in the 1860s. The O'Dell House was built as a
stagecoach inn and tavern by Corey O'Dell (1827-1887) and his wife Mary
(Harris) O'Dell in 1869. Corey, a native of Saint John, New Brunswick, arrived
in Annapolis Royal in 1849 as a rider on the short-lived Nova Scotia Pony
Express. In 1856, he began work as the manager of Commercial House, an inn
located on the lot directly east of the O'Dell House. Contemporary documents
generally refer to Corey as an inn-keeper. In 1868, he purchased land and began
construction of a 14-room inn. Located strategically at the terminus of the
local ferry system, the inn was able to take advantage of Annapolis Royal's
busy waterfront. The building stayed in the O'Dell family until the death of
Sadie O'Dell in 1957. It operated as a boarding house for a few years until it
was purchased in 1965 by Ralph and Marguerite Wagner for Historic Restoration
Enterprises (now the Annapolis Heritage Society).
Today the building is operated as
the O'Dell House Museum. Half of the ground floor is
kept in the style of a late Victorian, upper-middle-class inn. The other half
is the home of the Annapolis Heritage Society Genealogy Centre. The second
floor of the museum houses exhibits on the history and culture of the Annapolis
Royal region. The O'Dell House Museum is also home to the offices of the
Annapolis Heritage Society.
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Photo from 2003
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The
William Ritchie House
494 St. George Street c. 1875
This imposing landmark was built
around 1875 as a private residence for William Ritchie and Fanny Foster.
Fanny's sister, Susan Foster, had built the Hillsdale House just across the
street. In the Victorian style of the day, the Ritchie house featured
everything on a grand scale: the ceilings were tall, the staircase large, the
mouldings heavy. William and Fanny had only one child, Norman, and they
operated the home as a boarding house for a number of years. After all three
passed on, it had several owners until it fell vacant in the late 19th century.
The only occupant at this time was a stuffed moose that Norman had shot. In
1897, the house was opened as St. Andrew's school and operated as such for a
decade. Throughout most of the 20th century, the property has been run as a
hotel, first as the Queen Hotel and now as the Queen Anne Inn. The house
appears today almost exactly as it did in this photograph.
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Photo from 1910
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The
Cunningham House
82 Victoria Street c. 1876
Following the removal of the
garrison from Annapolis Royal in 1854, the unused land of the White House Field
was sold and subdivided, creating Victoria Street and Albert Road. In 1876,
Annapolis druggist A.B. Cunningham built this home on one such lot at 82
Victoria Street. Constructed of locally produced brick by builder Andrew Riley,
it was described in the paper of the day as an "elegant bijou French
cottage." Maintained as a private home for a number of years after it was
built, the Cunningham house was used as an apartment building for much of the
twentieth century. Restored to its former grandeur, it is now the popular
Victorian Inn, Bread and Roses. The fine wood of its interior has been
preserved
Mr. Cunningham used mahogany, black walnut, ash, black cherry,
oak and tiger maple to grace his mansion. Also of note are the beautifully
detailed hardware fixtures on the doors, the coloured etched glass in several
windows and the decorative tile around the main floor fireplaces. Bread and
Roses Inn was designated as a Provincial Heritage Property in 1993.
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Photo from 1900
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The
George Mills House
Granville Ferry c. 1887
The area's "Golden Age"
reached its peak in the 1880s, when the citizens of every village surrounding
the Annapolis Basin were engaged in shipbuilding and foreign trade. Increasing
prosperity and the close connection with New England were reflected in the
highly decorative buildings of the time. The Mills House, one of several Mills
residences in Granville Ferry, was built by George Mills on land inherited from
his father John in 1887. Basically a typical Nova Scotia frame house of the
mid-19th century, it differs in that it was built with a two and a half storey
sharply gabled ell and oriel windows rather than a central doorway. The ell
contains a graceful hanging staircase. The exterior was finished with the crisp
Victorian gothic trim that is so prevalent on a number of houses still standing
in Granville Ferry. The George Mills House is a private residence and is
currently being restored.
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The
Troop Octagonal Barn
Granville Centre c. 1888
In 1849, a New York City
phrenologist named Orson Squire Fowler wrote a book called A Home for All;
or the Gravel Wall and Octagon Mode of Building. The principles described
in this book were the inspiration for the octagonal barn built by William B.
Troop in 1888 in Granville Centre. This type of construction was relatively
rare in Nova Scotia; it was more commonly found in New York state and Ontario.
Although eight sided, the barn served the same purpose as the more universal
four-sided model - housing livestock and storing hay.
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The Post
Office Corner of
St. George and Church streets c. 1890
The most imposing building in
Lower Town is the old post office. It was built in about 1890 at the corner of
St. George and Church streets, following the 1888 fire. It also housed the
customs office. A survivor of the fire of 1920, the building remained as the
post office until 1967, when a modern post office was built on Victoria Street.
Most recently used as a restaurant, the empty building has recently been sold
and is being restored as retail space.
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Photo from 1900
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The
Annapolis Royal Train Station
151 Victoria Street c. 1914
The Annapolis Royal Train Station
was constructed over the winter of 1913-1914 to replace an earlier wooden
station that had burned. Designed in the Arts and Crafts style by the CPR's
chief railway architect in Montreal, it was built of brick with a slate roof
and was considered a "fancy station"
.part of the DAR's
marketing plan to lure tourists to the "wilds" of Nova Scotia.
Built to be beautiful, the station was in regular use until the final VIA Rail
train went by in 1990, after which it fell into disrepair. Purchased in 2005 by
a private citizen of Annapolis Royal, the station was restored to its former
glory and is now the home of the Clean Annapolis River Project, a non-profit
environmental agency.
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Photo from 2005
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The
Pickels-How House
613 St. George Street c. 1920
This Arts and Crafts residence was
built about 1920 by Edward Collins, who used house plans from Miami to
construct a new residence for Frank and Lena Pickels. Frank Pickels was a
prosperous shipbuilder. The Pickels vacationed in Florida in the winter and
grew to admire the bungalow architecture they found there. The overhanging
roofline, an off-centre turret, covered verandah and faceted windows of their
new home were admired. The house also features a two-car garage, uncommon at
that time, a gazebo and a fountain.
The house was later sold to a Mr.
Daniels and remained in his hands. It was purchased by John B. How as a
retirement residence for his siblings, Tom, Kathleen and Mary. The house was
owned and lived in by members of the How family until 2006. It retains its
period structure and details, including the servants' bells, which ring for
each of the four exterior doors.
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Photo from 2005
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The
Foster-Nicholson House
485 St. George Street c. 1929
This small, white, Colonial
Revival home was built in 1929 by C.B. (Bern) Foster, a builder by trade who
also served for a time as mayor of Annapolis Royal. He constructed it on the
granite foundation of the George Barnjum house, which had burned earlier in the
year in a fire so ferocious that, according to the Annapolis Spectator, the
Town fire department concentrated on saving the house next door - the much
older and historically significant deGannes-Cosby house.
Colonial Revival was the most
popular building style between the two World Wars
an everyman's return to
classical architecture. The Foster-Nicholson house features the typical centre
hall floor plan, multi-pane double hung windows with shutters, a small entrance
porch with columns, and a symmetrical façade with a side sunporch. It
differs from Colonial Revival in one aspect - it has a Dutch Colonial roofline.
In an Annapolis Spectator column of August 22, 1929, it was noted as being
"the first new house erected in Annapolis Royal in a number of
years." The house is a private residence and has been owned by the same
family for the last sixty years.
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Photo from 2003
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Port
Royal Habitation
Port Royal, c. 1605 (original building)
c. 1939 (reconstruction)
In 1605 the French expedition led
by Pierre de Gua, Sieur de Monts, and his cartographer Samuel de Champlain,
arrived on the shores of what is today known as the Annapolis Basin. The
expedition had explored the area the previous year, but decided instead to
establish a settlement on Isle Ste Croix, on the opposite side of the Bay of
Fundy. That winter was disastrous, so in the spring, Port Royal became the
permanent base for the Habitation.
The Habitation was used by the
French from 1605 until its destruction and burning by Virginia privateer Samuel
Argall in 1613. It was here that the Order of Good Cheer was founded and Marc
Lecsarbot's Theatre of Neptune was first performed. This early
settlement and the close interaction with the region's native population
allowed the friendship between the French and Mi'kmaq to develop.
The original Habitation was
constructed of wood, with many of the framing elements coming with the
explorers from France. They built it in the shape of a four-sided fort around a
central well. This design provided more protection from both harsh winter
weather and potential attackers. One of the key decorative elements of the
Habitation is the coat of arms over the entry that bears the Fleur-de-lys and
the arms of Sieur de Monts and Sieur Poutrincort. This coat of arms would have
first been raised in 1606.
The reconstruction of the Port
Royal Habitation could not have taken place without the efforts of Harriett
Taber Richardson of Cambridge, Massachusetts. Ms. Richardson formed the New
England-based Associates of Port Royal to raise money for a reconstruction.
Eventually the Canadian federal government took control of the project and the
Port Royal Habitation opened to the public in 1940.
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