Maple
Grove 1787 - 1820
This house currently in safe keeping in Upper
Canada Village is an excellent example of Loyalist style. It
is a storey and a half structure with a symmetrical seven bay
plan, created in 1787 by Jeremiah French. The Loyalists assimilated
the Neo-Classical style, added
in the practical changes developed in the 13 colonies as a result
of a harsher climate, and created this the Loyalist style. Timber
frame houses with clapboard exterior finishing, like this one,
were generally all white, or either cane-yellow or stone blue
with white trim. Wattle and daub insulation could probably be
found behind the siding.
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Upper Canada Village
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Maple Grove
The plan of this house follows the basic central
floor plan of a Georgian house. The difference is that the Loyalist
house was a more formal arrangement. In the Georgian house,
the dining room often doubled as a sitting room. In the Loyalist
house, the dining room had a fixed position and had particular
interior moldings, curtains and detailing
to suit it.
The kind of Neo-Classical
enrichment found on this window surround
is often found on fireplace mantels. Fluted
pilasters, a large cornice
and a plain but prominent architrave
were distinct elements of the Loyalist window surround.
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Upper Canada Village
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Maple Grove
MacRae and Adamson point out in The Ancestral
Roof that the double swag and pendants of husk molding found
on the entrance door, here protected fro the winter, are taken
directly from Pompeii, probably through pattern books. This
motif was being used liberally in Vermont architecture of the
same period, particularly around the Windsor area.
The influence of the American colonies is much
easier to see in Nova Scotia where building materials and even
entire buildings were being shipped up from Boston or Pennsylvania.
A house made with timbers numbered in Roman numerals was generally
a house prefabricated and then assembled on site. In the mid-18th
century, the old city of Halifax was constructed largely with
prefabricated houses shipped up from Boston.
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Upper Canada Village
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Maple Grove
This stylized urn design gracing the top of the
balustrade pedestal is an ornament
used in Classical Antiquity and borrowed during the Renaissance
as a decorative element.
This house originally belonged to Jeremiah French,
U.E. The name, Maple Grove, was associated first with the house
and its accompanying mills, then with the small community that
grew up around it. The community was removed to make way for
the St. Lawrence Seaway. The house was rescued and reconstructed
in Upper Canada Village. The plan of the house was created in
1787 by Jeremiah French. The Neo-Classical elements of the façade
were added in 1820 by George Robertson who married French's
daughter and subsequently took possession of the house.
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Upper Canada Village
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The
Poplars
Like the house above, The Poplars, otherwise known
as the Barnum House in Grafton has been lovingly restored and
is now a museum. Here is Ontario's finest application of Classical
detailing, applied with taste, refinement, and a feel for proportions
sadly lacking in many modern attempts.
The building is a two storey center block and
one storey wings all made in wood frame. The overlapping ship-lap
siding of the Maplegrove is found here only on the sides and
the back. The front is carefully fitted flush siding.
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Grafton
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The Poplars, detail
The façade is
composed of 12 over 12 sash windows inserted
under elliptical blind arches, a
motif found in Dundas as well. The pilasters are capped with
simple squared capitals. Under the soffit,
beautifully restored, is a frieze of triglyphs,
plain metopes and guttae.
Decorative windows were often used within gables
to light the attic spaces. This lunette
or semi-circular arch shows the quality
of the glazing.
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Grafton
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The Poplars, detail
As you can see from the Georgian entrances, the
semi-circular arch is the most structurally
sound arch, thus employed liberally
by the Romans. The builder in wood is not restricted by these
considerations since the arches are largely decorative, but
they are still used extensively in Loyalist architecture.
The Poplars was built in 1817 by Eliakim Barnum
a Loyalist from Vermont. This house replaces his original house
that was accidentally burned to the ground when British soldiers
were billeted there while defending York in the War of 1812.
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Grafton
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Fairfield
House
The house is 44' by 36' deep, commanding a magnificent
view of Lake Ontario, just west of Kingston.
The central supporting posts are of white pine
extending the full 2 1/2 stories of the house. The sawn clapboard
and wood trim are made of white pine as are the floors and trim
on the interior (see below) The attic floors are constructed
of wood planks up to 18 inches across. The floor planks get
progressively thinner on the second floor and thinner than that
on the first floor. A thin floor plank was a sign of affluence;
more labour was needed to produce the planks.
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Amherstview
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Fairfield House
The Fairfield House, like those above, has been
carefully maintained as a museum since 1984. The Fairfield family
built the home in 1793 and lived in it continuously until Dr.
William Fairfield and his daughter Elizabeth donated it to the
province. Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip visited the house
in 1984 as part of the Bicentennial of the arrival of the Loyalists.
Thanks to the efforts of Don Priest and many local volunteers,
the house and its magnificent gardens are a vital part of the
community.
The house has the same design as Crooks house
in Dundas.
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Amherstview
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Fairfield House
A patterned or stenciled floor was also a sign
of affluence. The stenciled floor here is new, but is an exact
replica of the original floor. The television show "Antique
Style" by Summerhill Productions featured an excellent
segment on the history and production of such flooring.
The plan of the house is a symmetrical four rooms
over four rooms with a central hall. Each room opening onto
the hall had a door that could be closed in winter to preserve
the heat from the fireplace or later wood stove within. Heating
pipes, here taken out, connected the rooms so that heat could
be vented from one area to another.
The Loyalist front door generally had a transom
and side lights. The walls were plastered and then white-washed
with lime.
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Amherstview
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Fairfield House
The cellar of the Fairfield house was dug by hand
into the solid limestone bedrock. The vertical members or pillars
shown here, have been replaced for structural reasons, the originals
had worn out, but the horizontal members still show the marks
of the ax. This limestone was added to the quarried limestone
used to level the foundation walls and to build the stone chimneys
and fireplaces.
The frame for the house is hand-hewn white oak.
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Amherstview
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Fairfield House
Brick fired on the property in an outdoor oven
was used in the interior of the building to separate rooms.
The frame was filled with a combination of straw
and clay known as wattle-and -daub that afforded some insulation
in the winter and a more solid structure against the strong
winter winds from across the Lake. This "daub" also
contains horse hair as is often the case.
The house is surrounded by fruit trees, nut trees,
barns and storage areas attesting to the self sufficiency of
the family. This place was definitely "off the grid".
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Amherstview
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Fairview House
While the insulation and heating materials are
rudimentary, the crafts-manship of this house is a testament
to the sorry quality of workmanship found in many modern houses.
Each major structural element was attached by a mortise and
tenon joint as shown on the right, and the roof and ceiling
rafters were connected with half-dovetail and collar ties. This
house was not constructed in the 120 days quoted by modern builders.
The chair rails and interior wood paneling are
a further testament to skill without fanfare. The detailing
is thoughtful, elegant and understated.
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Amherstview
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Bay
of Quinte and Prince Edward County
Barely connected to the
mainland, Prince Edward County was a prime spot for settlement
by the United Empire Loyalists. Roads were only just passable
but the Bay of Quinte provided a sheltered water route that
made access to farms and outposts relatively easy. The lands
on the other side of the bay were equally fertile and provided
excellent land for crops and cattle.
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The Homesteaders were used to the
harsh realities of life in the wilderness and made good
use of their land.
Not far from the major trade routes, these homesteads prospered
from the late 1770s well into the 1880s.
The region now also has a very respectable wine industry,
the produce being available only locally.
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Conger
Meeting House Picton 1809
The two great enemies of architecture are fire
and affluence. Scholars differ on what causes the most damage.
Not many wooden Methodist meeting houses survive. Those that
weren't flooded by the St. Lawrence Seaway were used as sheep
folds and barns when bigger stone buildings were produced. If
they weren't destroyed by fire, they were destroyed by progress.
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Picton
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Conger Meeting House Picton 1809
Most early settlers were Puritans by nature and
not generally drawn to much decoration in their church or civic
architecture. This is a square building along the general lines
of a New England meeting house.
This window detail shows the typical sash window.
In this case it wa made with a 12 over 8 configuration. The
window surround i very plain with only a squared frame and a
tiny cornice.
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From
Quinte to Niagara on Lake Ontario
West of the Bay of Quinte around Lake Ontario
provided excellent land for settlement, particularly in
the small bays and inlets such as that in the Hamilton area
by Dundas.
The Dundas region came under the control of
the British in 1759 after the fall of Quebec. Shortly
thereafter, Loyalists started to arrive and colonize the
area as "authorized squatters". They were encouraged
to develop parcels of the unsurveyed land with the understanding
that they would receive grants for the land when the surveys
were completed.
The first settler was the Widow Morden who began
a homestead on a creek leading into Lake Ontario which is
now known as Cootes Paradise. Many homesteads were built
in Dundas, Hamilton and, later, Toronto on similar creeks
as land access was much more difficult than water access.
The original travel routes for the early settlers, not surprisingly,
were mapped out along the Indian portage routes.
Lieutenant-Governor Simcoe arrived in Upper
Canada in 1792 with ambitious plans for organizing
the new province into a strong British colony that would
provide a lawful and prosperous society in contrast to the
rebellious Americans. The Dundas Valley was placed in the
Home District, one of many district created in Ontario,
as an important link in the planned inland defense system
to be created by connecting Lake Simcoe, London, Kingston
and York (Toronto). The proposed settlements were designed
to maintain the ordered society of England with a strong
aristocracy and a prevalent Anglican Church. The early architecture
reflects this attitude. Simcoe's town plan, a rigid rectilinear
grid ignoring both the escarpment and Spencer Creek, was
disregarded by the settlers who instead made use of the
water power and the protection of the "mountain."
The first main road on the survey, however, was built according
to plan linking Burlington Bay and London. It was called
Dundas Street, but was more popularly known as the Governor's
Road. A small stone building located on
Dundas Street at Main Street survives from this era.
Settlers were attracted to the ready power source
provided by Spencer Creek and the excellent soil. There
were many applications for land and by 1799 most
available plots were spoken for if not officially granted.
By 1805, a cart track later known as Brock Road was
opened up linking Dundas with Guelph. These two original
roads are still in use today.
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James Morden built the first grist and saw mill in 1799
at the crossing of Spencer Creek and the Dundas Road. In
1800 the mill was purchased by Richard Hatt who renamed
it the Dundas Mill. Wheat was the major crop of the agricultural
settlers in the area, and mills in both Dundas and Ancaster
prospered.
In 1813 James Crooks located his
homestead and business above the escarpment at Crooks Hollow.
He first started a store and grist mill, then a saw-mill,
general store, blacksmith's shop and other businesses to
service the growing agricultural community along the escarpment.
Many beautiful stone residences remain on top of the Dundas
hill dating from this period. Springdale and the Kerby House
are two good examples.
Occasionally in history you come across an individual
who is solely responsible for the development - or ruin
- of an entire area. Such a person was James Crooks, a Scottish
immigrant who moved to Spencer Creek in 1813.
"He then created one of the greatest industrial
complexes of his time, starting with the purchase of a store
and grist mill. In five years he added a saw mill, a general
store, a cooperage, a blacksmith's shop, an ox-shoing stall
and a carding mill. By 1822 Crooks owned the greatest manufacturing
center in the Western Province." (Blyth, p.120)
Crooks' most influential project was the paper
mill that supplied the new province's paper needs.
The Crooks' house was demolished in 1884, and
most of the frame buildings erected during the time have
also disappeared. The early architecture of Crook's Hollow
is generally stone, and often either Georgian or Neo-Classical
in nature.
The history of Crooks' Hollow and West Flamborough
is beautifully presented in from West
Flamborough's storied past.
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Nelles
Manor
The Nelles Manor in Grimsby is a private home,
the owners are meticulously restoring each room to its original
glory and doing a great job of it. The façade
is a typical five bay Georgian
with three dormers on the roof. The
Neo-Classical porch was added later. The door and window
surrounds are quite plain, the door has a simple rectangular
transom and the windows have shutters
on twelve-over-twelve sash windows.
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Grimsby
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The Manor
The detailing of the Manor is very similar to
that of The Poplars. The triglyphs
on the frieze are very similar, as
are the soffit vents. This lovely porch
has a central barrel vault supported
by slim Hellenistic columns, Doric
with bases. The porch was originally
on the other façade, and then
transferred to this side to take advantage of the garden.
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Grimsby
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The Manor
The magic in all of these buildings is in the
details. Under the eaves there is a gay band of triglyphs
and lozenges capped with a scallop.
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Grimsby
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The Manor
The interiors of Loyalist houses were beautifully
constructed. This house has three foot thick stone walls. The
inside is plastered, and the interior walls were all made of
plaster as well. The window casements are fitted by an expert
joiner and decorated with fitted panels.
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Grimsby
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Morden
House, Rock Chapel Road 1810
The Morden family arrived in Flamborough from
Pennsylvania after fighting in the American Revolution. Like
other Loyalist houses, this one commands a spectacular view,
in this case a look over what was to become Dundas from the
very edge of the Niagara Escarpment. While it looks like a modern
house, the door transom and proportions are definitely Loyalist.
The interior of the house has a stone walk-in fireplace with
the original metal pot crane hinges.
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Flamborough
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Stonegate
The subsequent owners of the Van Every house on
Highway 8 in Flamborough have had both the grace and the luck
to preserve over time the house and its spectacular setting.
As the city of Hamilton imposes new taxes and thus new incentives
to "change your yard into a cul de sac", this gem
provides instant time travel back to the years before cars,
seven eleven and CD ROM.
No amount of chem-lawn can provide the settled
beauty of this spectacular site.
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Flamborough
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Stonegate
The front of the house, restored in the 1940s,
is completely hidden from the road by trees while the back,
shown here, overlooks a wide, gently terraced lawn descending
down to a brook.
In the rear gable is
a Roman arch enclosing a Venetian
arch window carefully crafted in wood. Two heavy
pillars support a second floor balcony.
The windows are encased in heavy stone quoins,
but have no other adornment. The owners have provided six
over six storm windows to maintain the look of the original
ones. Two dormers with segmental
arches allow light into the upper floors.
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Flamborough
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Stonegate
The Van Every family came from the Poughkeepsie
area of the Mohawk Valley in New York and fought in the American
Revolution as well as being part of Butler's Rangers during
the War of 1812. For their efforts they received 800 acres is
East and West Flamborough upon which they built a frame house
in the first decade of the nineteenth century. This house was
enlarged and veneered in stone in the 1620s or 1830s. Three
sets of triple chimneys show the amount and size of the fireplaces
within.
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Flamborough
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Stonegate
The façade is
composed of five bays, the central bay contains the Neo-Classical
front door. The door itself is a regular six panel construction
often called a Christian door because the connecting panels
on the top four panels create a cross.
The fanlight over the
door is deeply recessed showing that the glazing is authentic,
muntins radiating from a solid block
hold six individual peices of glass. Sham fanlights with metal
or wooden muntins placed over a large peice of glass first started
appearing during the revivals of the late nineteenth century.
The muntins are less and less authentic looking in vinyl replacement
windows of the 21st.
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Flamborough
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Stonegate
Fireplaces on the main floor of Loyalist homes
were generally ornate. This one on the loyer level of the house
is less ornate and still has the original slate lining.
For those who appreciate older architecture, it
is difficult to say whether fire or renovation does more damage
to these homes.
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Flamborough
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Crook's
Mill
James
Crook purchased four hundred acres of land on top of the Dundas
escarpment in 1811. Within ten years he had eclipsed the growing
town of Dundas by creating this mill plus a number of other
mills including the province's first paper mill which began
operations in 1826.
Construction
of the paper mill was encouraged by the imposition of a tax
on paper from the United States imposed by the British Government
in 1826. Crooks Hollow was the largest industrial center in
Ontario in the 1820s.
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Springdale
1810
This house was built in or before 1810 by Hector
McKay. It was bought by Joseph Webster in 1819 and remained
in his family until the twentieth century.
The front of the house is composed of dressed
stone while the back is rubble. Like the others in this area,
it has six over six sash windows, a wooden door with side lights
and a square transome. The door surround is simple but elegant.
There are large stone lintels and well preserved shutters on
the windows . The austere lines of the house earned it the designation
of Wilderness Georgian.
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Greensville
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Retail
Building 1800-1812
This stone structure was built near the crossroads
of the first town of Dundas by the Dundas Mill.
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Three
Gables Moxley's Store 1812 - 1820
These two lovely stone
buildings have been used as commercial buildings for almost
200 years. The large gabled building was a retail outlet - general
store, snack bar or Antique shop. The three gabled building
was a hotel. Local stories maintain the William Lyon MacKenzie,
when living in Dundas, was a frequent visitor to the hotel.
The front of the building, like many in the area,
is cut stone. The back is rubble.
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Retail
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Niagara
and Area
The modern architecture section is still in
the development stage.
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Locust
Hall 1824
This house was built for the Woodruff family in
1824, and stayed in the family for six generations. Like most
Georgian style homes, it has five
bays and a gable roof. This is different
in that it is brick with large stone quoins
where most are clapboard. The Neo-Classical
doorway and large second floor window
have intricate wooden moldings fulll
of egg and dart and classical motifs.
The gable ends are adorned with fan ornaments,
and there are cornice returns. The
house has two chimneys and services a variety of fireplaces
inside.
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St. Davids
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Locust Hall 1824
The large central doorway of the house has a fan
transom, sidelights, and engaged fluted pilasters. Rumour
has it that the woodwork on this and many other buildings of
the time was made by shipwrights during the winter or off-season
months.
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St. Davids
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48
Queenston Rd. 1820
This clapboard house is one of the original houses
in Queenston. William Lyon MacKenzie lived in a house just up
the street.
This place has been wonderfully maintained. The
clapboard looks original, and the colour is authentic for the
period. The window surrounds are very plain, but the door frame
is quite ornate with four engaged pilasters and an architrave
with a cornice. Notice how the door frame and engaged pilasters
have the same proportions and design as Locust Hall above. The
houses are less than ten miles apart.
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Queenston
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Niagara Area 1837
This fanlight is about 15 years later than those
identified above. The detailing has been beautifully restored
both on the fanlight and on the colonnettes. The building has
exaggerated quoins on the windows and door, the façade
is composed of local stone and the fanlight
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Queenston
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Niagara Area 1837
This detail illustrates the quality of craftsmanship
that was rare in the 1830s, but even more rare today. The window
has radiating mullions. The window is recessed under a large,
panelled soffit, and the window is finished with a beautiful
egg and dart band.
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Queenston
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Woodruff
House 1815
When Anne MacRae wrote about the Woodruff's house
in St. Davids in her timeless book The Ancestral Roof,
she captioned Page Tole's picture as "The valiant beauty
of a dying house." Clearly this house has found some worthy
owners who have revived the beauty of the original design and
polished it until it sparkles.
The craftsmanship on this house is superior to
that of their later house, Locust Hall. The design is the same,
five bays with a gable roof and fan
ornaments in the gable ends.
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St. Davids
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1717 York Road - 1820
Many of the buildings of this time have a one
room deep main building with an ell on the back for a kitchen.
This storey-and-a-half house reflects the Georgian
design again with five bays, a central door and two large chimneys.
Door and window surrounds are
quite plain, in keeping with the Georgian tradition. The corners
of the building show fine craftsmanship on the quality of the
quoins. The builder was sea captain William Davis and the property
was purchased from the Secord family.
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St. Davids
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Laura
Secord Homestead 1803
What survey of Loyalist architecture would be
completed without the homestead of Laura Secord. In this house
in 1813 she overheard American soldiers planning an attack.
She traversed 19 miles (30 kilometers) through swamps and forests
to warn the British and became a Canadian heroine.
The house itself, restored to its 1803 glory by
the Laura Secord Company and local enthusiasts, illustrates,
again, an unadorned Georgian storey-and-a-half with two large
chimneys, small side lights and plain window frames.
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Queenston
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Laura Secord
This original fireplace has also been restored
to its former colour. This simple design has a mantel shelf
that breaks forward over the side pilasters and in the middle.
The ornaments are paterae. Variations on this design can be
found in Niagara-on-the-Lake and as far up the St. Lawrence
as Maitland.
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Queenston
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1755 York Road 1820
This is a Georgian home with five bays and two
chimneys, but the door is much more ornate than in the other
examples. The fanlight is large and elliptical, under an elliptical
stone arch complete with keystone. The
The house was probably built by David Secord,
son of Peter Secord, who received 300 acres of land below the
escarpment.
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Queenston
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The
Harrison House
The Rogers Blake Harrison
house of 1817 is a brilliant example of Neo-Classical detailing
added to a basically Georgian design. It is part of the Loyalist
Style, but has been noted in some texts as NeoClassical when
the Loyalist style is not defined. It is currently a bed and
breakfast, which is fortunate for the architecture enthusiast
in that the mantel is one of the best examples of Loyalist fireplace
detailing. The legend is that when the Yankees fired on Newark
(now Niagara-on-the-Lake) in 1813, an old woman pried the mantel
from the wall and dragged it to safety. After the fire, four
hundred women and children were left homeless, but the mantel
survived.
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Niagara-on-the-Lake
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The
Priest's House
Though it later became
known as the Priest's House, this old brick and rubblestone
was originally the home of the local tax collector Isaac Swayze.
Property tax had not yet been imposed. Taxes were collected
on shops, inns, taverns and stills, the precursors to the current
Niagara wine industry. Once again it is an example of a basically
Georgian building with a Neo-Classical façade.
The stone first floor is said to have been constructed
in the late 1700s. The upper storey and a half were added in
1816, the original being burned, along with almost everything
else, during the War of 1812.
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Niagara-on-the-Lake
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The Priest's House
This detail illustrates
the traditional use of quoins. Squared stone or bricks were
used to provide squared edges on building for corners, sills,
lintels, and door openings. Once the corners were constructed
and in place, the walls were filled in using, in this case,
local limestone from the fields and riverside, held together
with lime mortar. The stones were collected in such abundance
that they made walls 26 inches thick.
Brick was an unusual building material during
the time. It is likely that the bricks were fired on the property
in an outdoor oven.
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Niagara-on-the-Lake
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Loyalist
Architecture in Nova Scotia
Those who left the east coast of the United
States generally went north to Nova Scotia or New Brunswich.
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Acacia
Cottage
A great many Loyalists moved to Nova Scotia after
the war, but not many stayed in Halifax, they went to new Brunswick
or Shelburne N.S.
Acacia Cottage, built by John Howe, father of
Joseph Howe and a Loyalist, was originally on the Northwest
Arm of Halifax and later moved to South St.
The chimney is missing showing that the central
fireplace has been removed. The addition on the back giving
it a "saltbox" shape is probably added later as well.
Acacia Cottage received the 1999 Home Award for
renovation.
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Halifax, Nova Scotia
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Acacia Cottage
Not many Loyalist houses remain in Halifax due
to the frequent devastating fires. This one is notable for the
large Doric columns holding up the
front portico. The columns
are larger in the center than in the two ends, a technique called
entasis, used in the Parthenon and other large Greek
buildings to counteract the optical elusion that diminishes
such columns when seen from from a distance.
The windows have been replaced, but the other
detailing has been well preserved. Note the cornice
line on the gable extending the
line of the end of the roof.
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Halifax, Nova Scotia
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Acacia Cottage
The large portico on the back of the house opens
up onto the ravine.
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Halifax, Nova Scotia
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Acacia Cottage
The Scottish dormer
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Halifax, Nova Scotia
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Shelburne
The town of Shelburne was established in 1783
to receive the people leaving the newly independant American
colonies, and for a short time it was the largest town in British
North America. By 1785 the town had 10,00 people and 1500 buildings.
There was no economy to support the colony, so
this boom was shortlived, but there are a wide variety of buildings
that are slowly being restored.
This, the
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Shelburne, Nova Scotia
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Shelburne
This garrison was rebuilt for a movie.
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Shelburne, Nova Scotia
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Shelburne
The town of Shelburne was established in 1783
to receive the people leaving the newly independant American
colonies, and for a short time it was the largest town in British
North America. By 1785 the town had 10,00 people and 1500 buildings.
There was no economy to support the colony, so
this boom was shortlived, but there are a wide variety of buildings
that are slowly being restored.
This, the
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Halifax, Nova Scotia
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Wolfville Nova Scotia
Built in 1779, this is one of the oldest houses
still standing in Wolfville. It is a starkly modest Georgian
symmetrical design constructed of ship lap lumber with austere
window frames.
The house was originally the home of Judge Elisha
DeWolf and is called Kent Lodge because DeWolf entertained Edward
Duke of Kent here in 1794.
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Kent Lodge, Wolfville, Nova Scotia
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Jordan
This building was constructed by the original
Henry of Pelham in 1842. Henry's father, Nicholas Smith, was
a bugle boy in the Butler's Rangers, on the side of the United
Empire Loyalists in the American Revolutionary War. After the
war, Smith moved to the Niagara area and was awarded Crown lands
for his loyalty to the British - 40 hectares (100 acres) for
himself, 40 for his wife and 40 for each of their 14 children.
Nicholas and Henry planted some of the first vineyards in Niagara
and while commercial wine production was not in their game plan,
anecdotal evidence suggests the family did make wine for their
own table. Currently, Henry of Pelham winery makes some of the
best wine in the world.
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Jordan
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Homewood Museum
Many United Empire Loyalists settled in the St.
Lawrence valley after the American Revolution. Dr. Solomon Jones
(1756-1822) and his three brothers arrived in Augusta Township
in 1784 to take up lands granted to them by the government.
Jones commissioned Louis Brière, a Montreal mason and
contractor, to build a "gentleman's residence" in
stone overlooking the river in 1799. Although Homewood was constructed
in the late Georgian style, the simplicity of some of its details,
especially the shutters and metalwork, show a French-Canadian
influence
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Maitland
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Maitland
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Maitland
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McMartin House Perth 1830
This is one of the few houses built by Loyalist
offspring in the American Federal style,common in the eastern
United States between 1780 and 1820. It was built for Daniel
McMartin (1798-1869), one of the first lawyers in Perth.
The house is constructed of red brick with marble
trim, the marble being an extravagant material imported from........
round and semi-elliptical. arches are layered across the symmetrical
façade that is decorated with quoins.
" Interior details, such as the window trim
and moldings, were inspired by the published architectural renderings
of Asher Benjamin, an influential designer in the Greek Revival
style. The classical moldings of the gate and the corners of
the picket fence can also be traced to this source.
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Perth
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St Andrews United Church Williamstown 1813
Originally built by the Church of Scotland Presbyterians
to replace the log church of 1786, the records show that this
is where John Strachan married Anne Wood McGill. (John Strachan
was the most influencial churchman of his day. He helped to
found McGill University, the King's College, later the University
of Toronto, and Trinity University. He was responsible for the
early organization of grammar schools. In addition to being
one of the founding members of the Family Compact, he spent
55 years working as priest, arch deacon and finally bishop for
the Church of England.)
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Williamstown / Cornwall
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Conger Meeting House Picton 1809
Most early settlers were Puritans by nature and
not generally drawn to much decoration in their church or civic
architecture. This is a square building along the general lines
of a New England meeting house.
The two great enemies of architecture are fire
and affluence. Scholars differ on what causes the most damage.
Not many wooden Methodist meeting houses survive. Those that
weren't flooded by the St. Lawrence Seaway were used as sheep
folds and barns when bigger stone buildings were produced. If
they weren't destroyed by fire, they were destroyed by progress.
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Grafton
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Loyalist
Reading and Viewing Library
Books
Angu, Margaret.The
Old Stones of Kingston. Toronto: University
of Toronto Press, 1966.
Ashenburg, Katherine.
Going
to Town: Architectural Walking Tours in Southern Ontario.
Toronto: Macfarlane, Walter and Ross, 1996.
Atkinson, Dan. ed.
A Decade
of Sundays, Quinte Walking Tours.
Belleville: volume 1, Architectural Conservancy
of Ontario, 1994.
Blake, Verschoyle,
and Ralph Greenhill. Rural
Ontario. Toronto: University of Toronto
Press,1969.
Blyth, J.A.,
"The Development of the
Paper Industry in Old Ontario, 1824 - 1867",
Ontario History, Toronto: Ontario Historical
Society; 1970 (June)
Bruce, R.M., The The
Loyalist Trail, Kingston, Ont. : s.n., 1965
Chapple,
Nina, A Heritage of Stone,Toronto,
James Lorimer and Company, Ltd., 2006
Cruikshank, Brig 'General
E.A.,The Settlement of the United
Empire Loyalists on the Upper St. Lawrence and Bay
of Quinte in 1784, Toronto, Published by the
Ontario Historical Society,1934
Cruickshank,
Tom, and John de Visser. Old
Ontario Houses. Toronto: Firefly Books,
2000.
Cruickshank, Tom, and
John de Visser. Port
Hope: A Treasury of Early Homes. Port
Hope: Bluestone House, 1987.
Cruickshank, Tom, Peter
John Stokes and John de Visser.
The Settler's Dream: A Pictorial
History of the Older Buildings of Prince Edward County.
Picton: County of Prince Edward, 1984.
Fox, William Sherwood.
The
Bruce Beckons: The Story of Lake Huron's Great Peninsula.
Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1952.
Green,
Patricia and Maurice H., Wray, Sylvia and Robert,
from West Flamborough's storied
past , The Waterdown East-Flamborough Heritage
Society, 2003
Hilchey, Doris, Refuge,
the Loyalists come to Nova Scotia, [Tantallon,
N.S.] : Four East Publications, 1985
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Books
MacRae,
Marion, and Anthony Adamson.
The
Ancestral Roof: Domestic Architecture of Upper Canada.
Toronto: Clarke, Irwin, 1963.
Marshall, John E.
Fifty Years of Rural Life in
Dufferin County. printed by Maurice
Cline, 1977.
Mika, Nick and Helma , The
Settlement of Prince Edward County, Bellevile,
Mika Publishing Co., 1984
Moore, Christopher , The
Loyalists,
Revolution, Exile, Settlement, Toronto,
Macmillan Canada, 1984
McBurney, Margaret,
and Mary Byers. Homesteads:
Early Buildings and Families from Kingston to Toronto.
Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1979.
McIlwraith, Thomas
F. Looking
for Old Ontario. Toronto: University
of Toronto Press, 1997.
Otto, Stephen A., and
Richard M. Dumbrille. Maitland:
A Very Neat Village Indeed. Erin: Boston
Mills Press, 1985.
Rempel, John I. Building
with Wood. Toronto, University of Toronto
Press, 1967
Stokes, Peter. Old
Niagara-on-the-Lake, Toronto: University
of Toronto Press, 1971.
Stokes, Peter, Tom
Cruickshank and Robert Heaslip. Rogue's
Hollow: The Story of the Village of Newburgh. Ontario,
Through Its Buildings. Toronto: Architectural
Conservancy of Ontario, 1983.
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