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Churchill Presbyterian Church

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     Here's some photos of the Churchill Presbyterian Church - I was in the area the other day following more talk on the news about the small community be virtually destroyed due to the re-routing of the TransCanada Highway (aka Plan B) which travels from Bonshaw, through Churchill out to Strathgartney. 
     The church sits close to the highway - it seems as though it won't be moved or destroyed during the re-routing process, however, it seems the church is no longer used.  I found some information about the parish that the church belongs to - Central Parish Presbyterian Pastoral Charge website ( http://centralparish.com/ )   
     "In 1938 application was made by Canoe Cove, Churchill and Nine Mile Creek to be received into the Presbyterian Church of Canada.  This was granted by the General Assembly and these congregations joined with Clyde River to form Central Parish."
Above: Southwest view.
The classic thistle ironwork atop the Presbyterian steeple.
Below: decorative cut shingles on the tower.
Above: South side. / Below: Southeast corner.
     The doors were locked, so I put my camera lenses flat against the windows and took the following photos of the interior.
 Above / Below: Entry Porch - stairs to balcony.
      Below: when you enter church the altar is to the north/left side of the church.
Below: island sandstone splash pad.
 Below: Window on East Wall.
 Below: Fence around property and cemetery.


Wells/ Clark/ Ashley House, Union (beside Alberton)

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    I had a chance to see through this 1850's house the other evening - located at 33 Dock Road.  The present owners have just listed it for sale - http://33dockroad.ca/home.html
     The house was originally built by William Wells; his daughter married a Clark - they lived here for years until in the 1960's Charles Ashley bought it.  The Ashley's sold the house 3 years ago.
     Below are photos from the above noted website.



     During renovations to this house over the past couple of years the owners found a couple of letters, one dated 1859, and a prayer book.
     The present owner was telling us that the kitchen wing from the house was moved across the road and renovated for the use as "Union (or Dock) School".



PEI Lighthouses Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow - Lecture Augt 19

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     I was to this lecture last winter at Beaconsfield - it was excellent - they had good information and images!

     Join us Monday, August 19 in Montague where Carol Livingstone and Josh Silver will present Lighting the Way: PEI Lighthouses Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow, at the Freight Shed on the Montague Waterfront.

     Lighthouses have a long history on PEI going back to 1845 when the Island received its first light on land donated by the Earl of Selkirk at Point Prim. Its construction was in response to increasing ship traffic and subsequent merchants’ and ship owners’ pleas to the Colony’s House of Assembly. Since then, many more lighthouses and range lights have been constructed and today, over 50 dot the coastline of our beautiful Island.
     To celebrate and encourage preservation of these coastal beacons, the Institute for Architectural Studies and Conservation invites you to join them Monday, August 19th at 7.30 pm for an illustrated talk entitled, Lighting the Way: PEI Lighthouses Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow, at the Freight Shed on the Montague Waterfront. Carol Livingstone, President, PEI Lighthouse Society and Josh Silver, Red Seal Carpenter and Learning Manager, Heritage Retrofit Carpentry Program, Holland College will explore the history of these iconic forms of coastal architecture and identify their function and architectural features.
     Admission is by donation and light refreshments will be served, so please join us and bring a friend for a lovely summer evening on the Montague waterfront. For more information, please visit our website at http://iascpei.wordpress.com/ or call 368-6600.
Above: my photo of the North Rustico Lighthouse
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Above: my photo of Cape Bear Lighthouse.

Acadian National Feast Day - August 15

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Come celebrate August 15 at the Acadian Museum
     On the occasion of Acadian National Feast Day, the Acadian Museum, in Miscouche, invited you to an open house activity on Thursday, August 15, from 1-4pm.
     There will be a guided visit of the wonderful photographic exhibition, "Island Acadian Men' with historian Georges Arsenault, curator.  This exhibition pays tribute to Island Acadian men and boys through a display of beautiful old photographs dating from 1896 to 1960. Most of the exhibition's 65 photos come from family albums from the various Acadian regions of Prince Edward Island.   He will tell stories about several of the photos.  The tour will be in French at 2pm and in English at 3pm.
     Refreshments will be served.  Admission is free.  Information: 902-432-2880.
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Presently on Display - Island Acadian Men: A Journey Through Generations. 
Until Oct. 31, 2013
Five generations of the Poirier family, 1903
     Taken by the photographer W.S. Louson, this famous photo features five generations of Acadians from Tignish, Prince Edward Island, born between 1806 and 1898.  From L-R: Joseph, Francois, Jean, Gilbert and Colas.
Public Archives and Records Office of PEI

Digging up the Past - Stanhope Dig

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http://www.theguardian.pe.ca/News/Local/2013-08-15/article-3352209/Digging-up-the-past/1
     Parks Canada senior archaeologist Charles Burke chats with Keen Huie, a California resident who lives on PEI for part of the year, at an excavation site of PEI's first Scottish settlement, located on the National Park's Farmland Trail.  The dig is behind Burke, while a number of artifacts discovered over the past five years are between the two.
=========================================
Published on August 15, 2013
Mitch MacDonald
The Guardian
STANHOPE - Bear tankards, a thimble, and an entire plate are some of the more than 200-year-old items that have been uncovered at an archaeological dig here.
     Parks Canada's efforts to dig up the past at the Farmlands Trail in the National Park this week is winding down.
     Today is the final day for this year.
     The excavation began in 2008 and was designed to give the public an opportunity to participate in discovering the first Scottish house settlement in PEI.
     "That's the working theory we've been going with ever since," said senior archaeologist Charles Burke.
     He said all pieces found in the past five years date back to the period between 1770 to 1810.
     "The artifacts all confirm that date."
     While thousands of pieces have been dug up during the past several years, Burke said much of this year's work relates to a final assessment of the site.
     That includes recording geospatial date, database updating, final photography and onsite plans and maps.
     Burke, who has been at the site all week, has also been discussing the dig with visitors on the trail.
     On Thursday, he saw more than 20 individuals on a guided walk pepper him with questions about the dig.
     Janette Gallant, public outreach education officer for Parks Canada on PEI, said the group is happy to have Burke working on the site.
     She said bringing the guided tour to the site falls in line with Parks Canada's mandate of protecting and presenting the country's natural and cultural heritage.
     "We try to bring people along to understand what kind of work is being done so we can understand the heritage values of the area," she said.
     Gallant said Thursday's group was a mix of individuals interested in archeology, people who wanted to for a walk on the trails, history buffs and descendants of those who had lived in the area.
     A public presentation themed "Archaeological Investigation in Stanhope" also took place earlier this week.
     Artifacts found during the past half-decade weer shown to both those int he walking tour and at the presentation.
     one of the more interesting discoveries was a thimble, which Burke said is a rare find.  He said that's because most archeologists' find more items that belonged to men rather than women. 
     Another interest discovery was an entire plate, which Burke described as "remarkable."
     Full pieces like the plate are often found in old latrines, he said.
     "Because people would loose things in latrines and don't go back for them," said Burke. cracking up the guided tour.
     However, it appears the plate was likely just forgotten in the basement of a home.
    "It's rare that you find a whole thing and when you do it's almost always a case of it was lost it just fell out of people's existence," said Burke "how it got there we don't know but somebody left the plate in the basement of this house.
     More information on the dig can be found by calling 902-672-6350.

Unearthing our past at Orwell Corner

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Archaeology students at the dig site in Orwell Corner.

     There is a very special thing happening at Orwell Corner Historic Village this summer.  
     Birds are singing in a canopy of old trees, citronella incense is billowing in the air and you can hear continuous scraping sounds.
     On their knees, a team of archaeologists are unearthing a two-storey, six-room wooden, 1870s house, trying to piece together the lives of the people who lived in it before it caved into the ground a hundred years ago.
     And they’re opening the site – and its wonderful historical artifacts – to the public as part of the province’s Public Archaeology Project.
Archaeological Dig at Orwell Corner
Highlights from a public archaeology dig at Orwell Corner Historic Village. The dig explored the remains of a 19th century house and was led by Dr. Helen Kristmanson, Director of Aboriginal Affairs and Archaeology for Prince Edward Island. 
 
Dr. Helen Kristmanson shows some artifacts to an aspiring archaeologist.
To date, thousands of artifacts have been excavated from this half-acre parcel of land behind the main building. Everything from fragments of window glass, floor and ceiling planks and hardware to personal items like buttons, boots, jewellery, hat pins, hair combs and smoking pipes, to everyday household items  like bottles, spoons, china and ceramics have been unearthed.
     Summer staff are on site with photos, historical information and dowels to hand to curious passersby interested in joining in.
     Children are encouraged to get their hands in the dirt and see what piece of history they can dig up.
     “Archaeology connects us to our history, to the lives of the people who lived before us, and helps build pride in our Island heritage,” said Archaeological Intern Meghan Ferris.
     One of the most significant finds on this site was the old coal stove, which fell through the floorboards and dragged many well preserved artifacts with it.
     Provincial archaeologist Dr. Helen Kristmanson feels the project helps visitors understand archaeology and connect with the Island’s rich history and human heritage.
     You feel a very personal connection, when you unearth someone’s comb, which has been buried for 150 years, she said.
     Site manager Tom LeClair, said the open dig is really helping visitors feel a part of the unique “going back in time” experience that Orwell Corner offers.
     “We’re getting a lot of good feedback, people are really enjoying it,” he said.
     The team found a looking glass, its warped glass surface crusted with red clay. It has since been catalogued using national codes that identify such remnants of the past and stored in a container showcasing the dig’s greatest hits. 
     Imagine if the person whose eyes peered through that looking glass almost 200 years ago could have spied the painstaking work being done on the spot they once lived, the careful and meticulous reconstruction of their once-loved possessions to help retell the story of their lives.
     For more information, follow the public archaeology program on Twitter (@ArchaeologyPEI) and read more atwww.archaeointern.wordpress.com and www.gov.pe.ca/aboriginalaffairs/archaeology
     If you think you’d like to try your hand at archaeology, visit the site or contact Tracy Power (tlpower@gov.pe.ca) to volunteer.

Old Barn, Meadowbank

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    I was out by this way yesterday and photographed these old barns.  They're located on the south side of Route 19 in Meadowbank overlooking the West River - a short distance before you cross over the West River Bridge towards New Dominion.

      I photographed these barn three years ago when the vegetation around the barns was well groomed.  The following photos were taken on September 2, 2010.
Note the "For Sale" Signs on the end of the large barn.

Conway Sandhill Restoration - buildings removed

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This is from the Guardian newspaper's website...
http://www.theguardian.pe.ca/News/Local/2013-08-26/article-3364650/Volunteers-help-restore-Conway-Sandhills-to-the-way-nature-made-them/1

Volunteers help restore Conway Sandhills to the way nature made them

Published August 26, 2013
Eric McCarthy
The Journal Pioneer
MILLIGAN’S WHARF -- Diane Griffin admits she’s been captivated by the Conway Sandhills since her days as a university student. Even then, she said, she made visits to the sandhills to help conserve the property.
            She would later work for the Nature Conservancy of Canada in helping to obtain sections of the sandhills for conservation.
            The NCC now has the ownership of nearly one-half of the shifting sand dunes that form a protective barrier for Prince Edward’s Island’s north shore from Cascumpec Bay to Malpeque Bay.
            Although she is no longer an employee of the NCC, Griffin, like 27 other interested people, showed up Monday for an NCC-organized cleanup of a section of the protected sand dunes.
            “This is special,” said Griffin. “Prince Edward Island doesn’t have wilderness anymore. This is wilderness.” She was helping fellow volunteers restore it to its wilderness state by removing what was left of an abandoned and fallen down shack.
The shack had likely been used as a temporary shelter for duck and goose hunters suggested fellow volunteer Kelvin Morrison. Among the debris were the rusted metal frames of a couple of single cots.
            This particular shack was located in a low spot, likely for shelter.
            The NCC was hoping for 20 volunteers and was pleased to have more, because they had four such shacks to remove. Asphalt shingles and other debris harmful to the environment were bagged up and hauled back to the Prince Edward Island mainland. The wood was piled on the beach and burned.
            Among the volunteers who signed up for the cleanup were Diana and Peter Carver of Summerside. It was how they chose to celebrate their seventh wedding anniversary. Diana had been involved in a similar cleanup on Governor’s Island last year. Although she had seen that Island all her life, the 2012 cleanup was her first opportunity to visit the place.
            She shared the same excitement about visiting the sandhills for the first time.
“It’s more like the history of it. And you get to see P.E.I. from a different perspective, because we are all inland now,” Carver commented.
            “I think it’s just a new perspective,” Carver said, adding that she wanted to help the NCC turn the property into a sanctuary.
            Roland Millar, who was at Milligan’s Wharf to see the volunteers off Monday morning, reminisced about having spent several springs over on the sandhills. He had hauled a house there in 1946 and lived in it each spring during lobster fishing. “I just hauled it over. I didn’t ask for permission or anything,” he said. A team of horses brought the house there over the ice. His wife also lived on the sandhills for one spring while working at a lobster cannery there.
            After Milligan’s Wharf was built, around 1960, most of the houses and shacks that had been on the sandhills were hauled back home. Several of them are located at Milligan’s wharf. Millar has his old house at his home place and still uses it as an outbuilding.
            Guy Lewis still has a shack on the sandhills. It is outside the protected area. He dropped by Monday morning just to make sure the working bee wasn’t going near his structure. It wasn’t.
            Lewis said the structure has been in the Lewis family for about 40 years and is used for camping and shelter during hunting season. “They don’t realize, if someone gets stranded over there and there’s no shacks what’s going to happen,” he said, but was satisfied the ones being removed from the NCC property had deteriorated to the point that they wouldn’t provide shelter anyway.
            Until recent years Millar used to visit the sandhills every summer. “It’s a nice peaceful place to spend an evening. I just enjoyed being over there,” he said.
Millar said the sandhills look very much the same as they did in the 1940s. “It’s shifting sand. It changes a little bit,” he stressed.
Indeed, the plotter on the boat used to ferry volunteers to the sandhills suggested the boat was right on the sand dunes when it was actually safely between the red and green channel markers.
            The NCC still permits people to visit the property said Brittany Clifford, the coordinator of Monday’s cleanup. People are allowed to go there for picnics and walks on the beaches but she asked that they leave the property in the condition they find it and that they not disturb rare plants and animals.
            Griffin added her own advice: “Make sure the area is as tidy as you found it, or maybe even pick up any garbage that washed in.”
Below images cf. article - by Eric McCarthy/Journal Pioneer
Gertie Morrison lugs a section of an abandoned Conway Sandhills shack to the beach for further dismantling and disposal. Eric mcCarthy/Journal Pioneer
Volunteers Diane Griffin and Kelvin Morrison sort through what's left of an old shack on the Conway Sandhills Monday. Twenty-eight people answered the Nature Conservancy of Canada's call for volunteers to help in restoring its protected property to its natural state. Eric McCarthy/Journal Pioneer
Those buildings at Milligan's Wharf used to be on the Conway Sandhills. They were hauled back home after the wharf was built around 1960. The Nature Conservancy of Canada organized a working bee on Monday to dismantle some abandoned shacks from the section of sandhills now in its ownership. Eric McCarthy/Journal Pioneer
Barb Trainor, left, and Diane Griffin display some of the debris they helped gather up from an abandoned shack on the Conway Sandhills. Groups of volunteers cleared away the remnants of four shacks Monday from a portion of the sandhills now protected by the Nature Conservancy of Canada. Eric McCarthy/Journal Pioneer

Tignish House

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     Here's a little house at the corner of Church Street and Park Lane in Tignish.  I photographed the house first in the spring then later in summer.
     I don't know the history of the house.  The house has Victorian (around 1900) detailing, however, I suspect the house is older as there are details from an earlier period.  More exploration is required to make more conclusions.
Below are some photos of the interior.
 
     Meacham's 1880 Atlas of Prince Edward Island show this corner lot belonging to  E. Hackett with a Store and warehouse.  
Below: zoomed in view.

Residents opposed to restoring Murray River train station

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cf. http://www.theguardian.pe.ca/News/Local/2013-08-28/article-3367777/Residents-opposed-to-restoring-Murray-River-train-station/1
Resident Wayne Burke says the Murray River train station, hidden behind trees and falling down, isn’t worth saving.Guardian photo by Steve Sharratt
Resident Wayne Burke says the Murray River train station, hidden behind trees and falling down, isn’t worth saving.
Published on August 28, 2013
Steve Sharratt  RSS Feed

MURRAY RIVER — To some people it’s a diamond in the rough that should be restored; but for others it’s an eyesore in the dust and should be torn down.
But any hopes to save the old Murray River train station may be falling off the rails as some residents insist any government funding to restore the station would be a complete waste of taxpayer’s dollars.
“Not one person I have spoken with has expressed a desire or interest in seeing tax payer’s dollars wasted on that old station,” contends resident Wayne Burke who lives next door. “Tear it down is what they’ve all said.”
A retired RCMP officer, Burke penned that sentiment in a letter to The Guardian and others in effort to bring public attention to the attempts by the village council, and chairman Garnet Buell, to save the building.
“The village wants to restore it and make it a tourist attraction,” Buell told the media. “There’s not too many of these stations left.”
The P.E.I. Transportation Department was going to tear down the 100 plus year old station as part of a plan to widen the Main Street here. However, council got a reprieve and the station was removed from the tender block which included tearing down three other buildings, including the former IGA store in the heart of the community.
However, Burke insists the train station, buried in trees, caving in, and home to rats, will cost inestimable dollars both for the village residents and Island taxpayers. Buell said he hoped to move the station to a nearby site this month but there has been no change. The station can’t be seen from the main road, but is tucked away behind the abandoned IGA store.
“I’m afraid Mr. Buell wants to save it because he used to work there in the 1950s, but it’s too far gone and it’s filled with rats,” he said. “I doubt you could even move it without it all falling down.”
Many Island communities have attempted to save former train stations and many have simply built replicas because of the condition and costs of restoration. The last train to run on P.E.I. was 30 years ago.
Burke, representing residents who support the demolition, has now requested the station be bulldozed as planned in a letter to the Premier, Minister of Transportation and other officials. The removal of all four buildings is expected to be underway at any time.
Exterminators have attempted to eliminate the rat problem associated with the cluster of abandoned buildings, but Burke says the effort simply drove them to his barn which is home to piles of rat feces. He also points out the tender for building removal includes the reclamation of an industrial septic system adjoining the building sites.
“I’ve discussed this topic with in excess of 100 residents here in the village over the past few months, and they don’t see the value and say it’s a huge eye sore in one of the prettiest communities there is,” said Burke.
The Guardian attempted to discuss the merits of the train station heritage with the head of the Museum and Heritage Foundation, but Dr. David Keenlyside was unavailable.

Little Sands United Church

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     I was up to eastern Prince Edward Island on Friday morning.  I stopped at this church on Route 18 in Little Sands to take a bunch of photos.  It's closed now and its' future is uncertain.    
     I was here once before about 10 years ago when a local group hosted an art show here.

Historical information cf.
http://www.historicplaces.ca/en/rep-reg/place-lieu.aspx?id=5255

HERITAGE VALUE

This whimsical building is a rare example of a local church style in PEI, combining elements of the Neoclassical and Carpenter Gothic. The Little Sands United Church is valued for its unique architectural style and for its contribution to the local community. Built in 1898 under the guidance of D.J. MacLean, the congregation was originally Presbyterian. Before its construction, the Scottish settlers of the area worshipped with those of nearby Wood Islands in a crude 24' by 30' building at Wood Islands. Beginning in 1843, clergy from the Free Church of Scotland led the worship services. After the union of various branches of the Presbyterian Church in Canada in 1875, a new church was built at Little Sands. This was eventually replaced by the current structure in 1898. At the opening service, preachers from various denominations took part and sermons were rendered in both English and Gaelic. In 1925, the church became affiliated with the United Church of Canada.
The architectural style of the building is unique in PEI. The main body of the building exhibits Carpenter Gothic elements such as pointed arch windows, a gable roof with eave returns, and a circular window on the front elevation representing a "double Trinity". The side tower with its square windows and pedimented gables as well as the columns and pedestals under the tri-gabled verandah are Neoclassical. Other interesting features include the contrasting vertical and horizontal cladding which is wooden clapboard.
The building is well preserved and original except for the additions of a metal roof and a metal cone over the side tower. With its long history and pastoral location, the church contributes to Little Sands as a landmark in the community.
Source: PEI Heritage Advisory Committee Files
Front/south view.
Below: wonderful detailing of board 'n batten.

I took photos of the interior by putting my camera square against the glass windows.
Below: window sash, note the wood peg.
Below: east side of the church.
Note the house across the road.
Island Sandstone downspout splash pads.
     Like most Island churches - this church was built bascially on the ground with no basements.  First they laid the perimeter stones, as you can see here, then the floor was framed with a narrow crawl space.
Below: West side of church.

St. Charles Borromeo, Summerside

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    I came across the following information about the Catholic congregation in Summerside.
     "By the 1840's  a few Catholic families lived here and in 1853 they moved the vacated Indian River church to Summerside, placing it under the patronage of St. Charles Borromeo."  cf.  A Faith Walk: Diocese of Charlottetown by Revd. Art O'Shea. Page 91.

    Also the following information comes from pages 109-110 of Down at the Shore: A History of Summerside, Prince Edward Island (1751-1945) by Robert Alan Rankin
     ""The first church building erected in the village was St. Charles Roman Catholic church, brought from Indian River during the summer of 1853 and raised on the west side of Summer just above First Street.  It had been the original parish church at Indian River.  The priest there, Reverend James MacDonald, frequently passed through Greens Shore on the way to missions at Grand River and Seven Mile Bay, and he saw the prospects of yet another Catholic community.  Actually moving the church was "a great undertaking for the time," requiring a large crew of workmen to pull it down, haul it, then put it in good repair again.
     St. Charles church was dedicated on October 19,1853, by Bishop MacDonald.  Services took place once every four weeks in the beginning; however, by 1865 the parish had grown remarkably and plans were made to built a large brick church on Central Street.  It was commenced in 1869 and after serveral delays finally dedicated as St. Pauls in 1877...A convent was also built, in 1868, on the Northeast corner of the new church lot, and a parochial house moved to Summerside from Fifteen Point (Mont Carmel) on the ice in the winter of 1871.  The old St. Charles mission church was purchased by a local shoemaker and the original parochial house , put up alongside about 1860, became part of the R.T. Holman's residence.""

    The following information comes from Historic Places website about the R.T. Holman house... http://www.historicplaces.ca/en/rep-reg/place-lieu.aspx?id=16273
R.T. Holman House - front.  Photo by Carter Jeffery.
     The house is valued for its well preserved architectural elements; its historical association with the history of the Roman Catholic Church in Summerside; the history of the family of R.T. Holman; and for its contribution to the streetscape.
     Robert Tinson Holman (1833-1906) acquired the land as three separate parcels. The first one purchased was the lot and house sold to him in 1870 by Rev. James MacDonald, a Roman Catholic priest. The Lake Map of 1863 clearly shows a Roman Catholic Parsonage on the lot and historians believe that this building became the home of the Holman family.

     The second parcel of land purchased by R.T. Holman was also obtained from Rev. James MacDonald. Acquired in 1875, it was the adjacent lot running 50 feet along Fitzroy and 116 feet along Summer Street and was the former site of the Roman Catholic chapel, which had been brought to Summerside from Indian River in 1853. The chapel faced Summer Street and was used as a place of worship until 1874.
     The third parcel that makes up the property of the Holman Homestead was acquired by Mr. Holman from Daniel H. MacDonald of Bedeque in 1885. It was located on the west side of the house and measured 45 feet along Fitzroy Street and 100 feet in depth. The 1878 Ruger's Map shows the Holman house with the large ell attached, but with a one storey wing on the east side. Conjecture is that this wing was enlarged sometime after 1880.
R.T. Holman House - rear.  Photo by Carter Jeffery.

Summerside Orphanage, 1961 ?

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     Here are two photos sent to me for confirmation that this is the Summerside Orphanage taken in 1961.  I can't find any information about the Orphanage.  
 Above: the large farmhouse - note the nun on the verandah.
Below: I'm not sure if the view is in the Summerside area.

Cape Bear Lighthouse - close to going over cliff!

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     I was out to Cape Bear in eastern Prince Edward Island last Friday morning.  I took the following photos of the historic Cape Bear Lighthouse.  It's still there and not yet moved to a safer location.
     I prepared site development drawings 11 years ago to relocate the lighthouse to another site and again in 2009, however, for a variety of reasons the lighthouse was never moved.  The problem now is the lighthouse is so close to the cliff that construction moving equipment can't safely get in to prepare the move.  I suggested possible using a wind turbine crane, if possible, to save the lighthouse from its impending demise.
     Will the lighthouse go over the cliff in the spring of 2014?
See post earlier in this blog...
 

Seaview Barn

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    I photographed this old barn(s) in Seaview on March 2, 2003 - I can't recall exactly where it was in Seaview.   I suspect it's gone now as it's been 10 years since I was there.

Fredericton Train Station

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     I took these photos of Fredericton Train Station back in late May.  It's located on Route 264, just off Route 2 highway beside the Confederation Trail.

 











Reg Simpson's Barn, Cavendish

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     This old barn was huge - I took these photographs sometime in the early 1990s after Parks Canada took over the property.  The barn was in poor condition and beginning to give way so Parks Canada braced it at key points - note the bracing on the front/south side of the barn.
    I was here the day they held the estate auction a few months following the death of Mr. Simpson - his wife had passed away years earlier.  I was there with a friend who knew the Simpsons well.  It was drizzling light rain, and all the Simpson's belongings were spread out on the lawn, literally, on tables, old blankets and afghan.  After awhile, my friend said "lets get out of here, I find this too sad and distressing to see their early belongings get wet and ruined."
Below images and information comes from...
http://www.historicplaces.ca/en/rep-reg/place-lieu.aspx?id=10400
     The main house on the Simpson Farm was built in 1921 by a local farmer, Arthur Simpson (1835-1922), as a farmhouse and tourist home.  The designer is unknown.  During its ownership by the Simpson family, the house was altered by the addition of an enclosed porch to the rear, the installation of electricity and a main-floor bathroom, and the modernization of the kitchen and bathroom.  The house was acquired from the Simpson family by the Province of Prince Edward Island in 1992 and subsequently transferred to the federal government.  since then, the front porch and all the windows have been replaced, the roof has been re-shingled, the interior has been refinished, a floor has been added to the basement, parts of the foundation have been replaced, and new plumbing and an alarm system have been installed.  The house is presently leased to a private individual for uses as an office ( http://www.canadianhomechildren.ca/index.php ).  Parks Canada is the custodian.
    The house was used for a time by the Home Children Foundation, however, since they stopped using the old house its' been pretty much abandoned.  I'd say like so many houses that Parks Canada have taken over in the National Park over the years, it will become derelict and demolished.  You use to be able to see the house from Route 6, the main road through Cavendish, however, today the trees have grown up around it - you wouldn't know it was there - it use to be a prominent home in the area.

CONSTRUCTION DATE(S)  

1921/01/01

LISTED ON THE CANADIAN REGISTER: 2008/10/28

 STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE

DESCRIPTION OF HISTORIC PLACE

The Main House of the Simpson Farm is prominently located on a rural landscape in Cavendish. It is a two-and-a-half storey wood frame house clad in clapboard and crowned with a low, hipped roof with centrally placed attic dormers. Designed in the Classical Revival style, the house features a balanced façade with modest, wooden decorative elements, such as the colonnettes of the entrance porch, the framing of the windows, and the stepped clapboarding above the ground-floor bay windows. The designation is confined to the footprint of the building.

HERITAGE VALUE

The Main House is a Recognized Federal Heritage Building because of its historical associations, and its architectural and environmental value.
Historical Value
The Main House is associated with the early development of the tourist industry in the Cavendish area of Prince Edward Island. Summer visitors began to frequent the area in the early 20th century, attracted, in part, by the popularity of local resident, the novelist Lucy Maud Montgomery. The Main House was the first known residence in the area, deliberately built to accommodate summer visitors as well as the farm family. In addition, the Main House illustrates the continuing viability of the family farm in Prince Edward Island into the 20th century. Known for its association with the prominent Simpson family, well known in Cavendish society, it was the third house built on a property farmed by the Simpsons from 1790 until 1996. It was built by Arthur Simpson (1835-1922), whose ancestor, William, founded Cavendish in 1789, and whose son Jeremiah (1875-1961) was also well known locally.
Architectural Value
The Main House represents an attractive, vernacular interpretation of the Classical Revival style popular throughout urban and rural Canada during the early 20th century. The exterior is quite elaborate for a Prince Edward Island farmhouse, due to its seasonal role as a tourist home. The interior design of the house, and the high quality of materials used in its construction, also reflect this special role. In the context of Prince Edward Island’s rural domestic architecture, the Main House exhibits a high level of craftsmanship and materials.
Environmental Value
The Main House reinforces the rural character of its farm setting. It retains its dominant relationship with the other extant farm buildings, which form an irregularly shaped farmyard to the rear of the house. The Main House is prominently located on the brow of a hill, overlooking a provincial highway and is a familiar building within the area.
Sources: Dana Johnson, The Simpson Farm, Cavendish, Prince Edward Island, Federal Heritage Buildings Review Office, Building Report, 98-075; Main House, The Simpson Farm, Cavendish, Prince Edward Island, Heritage Character Statement, 98-075.

CHARACTER-DEFINING ELEMENTS

The following character-defining elements of the Main House should be respected.
Its good aesthetic design, good functional design and very good craftsmanship and materials, for example:
- the Classical Revival design of the house, as evidenced by its solid, rectangular shape, balanced front façade and classical detailing;
- the symmetry of the front façade that is achieved through the central placement of a two-storey front porch, flanked on either side by bays with generously scaled windows, and centrally-placed attic dormers;
- the classical detailing, including colonettes on the front porch, framing around the windows, and the use of stepped clapboarding above the ground-floor windows;
- the formal centre-hall plan with generously scaled entry and main floor rooms, a pass-through cupboard between the dining room and pantry, and wood flooring and trim on the upper level as well as the main level of the house.
The manner in which the Main House reinforces the rural character of its farm setting and is a familiar building in the area, as evidenced by;
- its overall scale, design and materials, which harmonize with the rural surroundings;
- its familiarity within the area, due to its prominent location on the brow of a hill and overlooking a provincial highway.

Murray River Train Station - CBC Radio Island Morning

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     A derelict old train station in Eastern PEI may be getting a new lease on life. Monday morning, we'll hear from a community group in Murray River that says the building IS worth saving, and its plans for it. 96.1 FM.
     From Facebook this evening...

Richmond Train Station - 1933

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     I took the following photos of the Richmond Train station on April 2, 2003.  It had been used as a storage building at this business for 40 years.
     The building was demolished in the late 2000's.
     Below is an image from Page 95 of the book A Photo History of the Prince Edward Island Railway by Allan Graham.  Published in 2000.
     The third Richmond station being moved from its site after it was sold in 1964.  The ramp to the freight shed has been removed.  The only other station of this design was the third Belle River station.  (Mary McQuaid coll.)

75-year-old Summerside Home moving to Darnley

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     When I was in Summerside the other day I noticed this house was sitting up on moving beams ready for its move.   Here's a news story from the Journal-Pioneer website: 
Published on September 10, 2013
by Mike Carson / mcarson@journalpioneer.com
SUMMERSIDE – A 75-year-old Summerside home is taking to the road and will soon find a new spot in Darnley.

     Stewart Green and David Palmer purchased the building and are in the process of relocating it from its present address at 615 Water St. to the waterfront in Darnley.
     Green said the home is in excellent condition and the men purchased it with the intent to move it down east.
     Green said it would be difficult, if not impossible to build a home of this quality for the price they are paying to move it.
     “It’s just like an old country cottage,” he said.
     Palmer said they don’t plan to make many changes to the building other than adding a sliding glass door on the side facing the water and re-shingling the roof.
     Palmer said the gable-style building has approximately 1,200 square feet of space and hardwood floors throughout. On one side of the building are stained glass windows.
      Both men said they didn’t realize the work involved in moving a structure.
     The roof will have to be removed to give the building clearance for telephone and power lines on its trip to Darnley.
      The weather could pose a problem with the move because the roof will have to be removed and trucked to the new site on a flatbed vehicle.
     Palmer said they may have to wait until the weather clears and the threat of rain is lifted before the move can begin.

     I didn't have my camera with me, however, you are able to see the house on Google Streetview, I took a photograph of the house on the computer screen - its fuzzy but it gives you an impression of the house:
https://maps.google.ca/maps?f=q&source=s_q&hl=en&geocode=&q=Water+Street+East,+Summerside,+PE&aq=4&oq=water+&sll=46.657026,-63.116394&sspn=2.544899,5.817261&vpsrc=0&t=h&ie=UTF8&hq=&hnear=Water+St+E,+Summerside,+Prince+Edward+Island&ll=46.393862,-63.769069&spn=0.009057,0.045447&z=15&layer=c&cbll=46.39386,-63.769085&panoid=Up1ZHyEMVBcZfenANcuJ4w&cbp=11,301.19,,1,0

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