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185 Mill Street and 15 Clarence Street MARCH 2014 HERITAGE IMPACT STATEMENT PREPARED FOR: PREPARED BY: Brennan Custom Homes Inc./ Clarence Street Developments Inc. BRAY Heritage With: Jennifer McKendry TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. Introduction ....................................................................................................... 1 1.1 1.2 Property Information ................................................................................................................... 1 Study Scope and Methodology ................................................................................................ 1 2. Property Descriptions ........................................................................................ 5 2.1 2.2 185 Mill Street ............................................................................................................................. 5 15 Clarence Street ...................................................................................................................... 9 3. History of Properties ......................................................................................... 11 4. Heritage Significance of the Properties ............................................................. 13 4.1 Evaluation of Heritage Significance .......................................................................................13 4.1.1 4.1.2 4.2 185 Mill Street ...........................................................................................................13 15 Clarence Street ....................................................................................................13 Heritage Character Statements ..............................................................................................14 4.2.1 4.2.2 185 Mill Street ...........................................................................................................14 15 Clarence Street ....................................................................................................15 5. Current Heritage and Relevant Planning Policies ............................................. 17 5.1 5.2 5.3 Gananoque Lowertown Study .................................................................................................17 Development Permits By-law ...................................................................................................18 Official Plan ................................................................................................................................18 6. Impact of the Proposed Development ............................................................... 19 6.1 6.2 6.3 Conservation Principles .............................................................................................................19 Description of Proposed Development ..................................................................................19 Impact on Cultural Heritage Resources ..................................................................................20 7. Conclusion: Conservation and Development Strategy ...................................... 23 Appendices ............................................................................................................. 25 Appendix A – Chronology of Site Occupation 1. Introduction At the request of Brennan Custom Homes, Bray Heritage has been retained prepare a Heritage Impact Statement (HIS) for a groups of former industrial properties in the Lowertown area of Gananoque, Ontario. The purpose of the HIS is to determine the impact of the proposed development of a residential and commercial complex that involves residential rehabilitation of three former factory buildings and construction of new residential and commercial buildings on adjacent parcels. Since the property is located within the Lowertown Area, and No. 185 Mill Street (stone and brick mill buildings) is designated under Part IV of the Ontario Heritage Act, the Town of Gananoque requires that an HIS be prepared to accompany the proponent’s development application to the municipality. 1.1 Property Information Municipal Address: 185 Mill Street, 15 Clarence Street Legal Description: 15 Clarence Street: Part of Lot 597, Lots 589, 591, 593, 595 (Textron), Plan 86 West, Town of Gananoque, County of Leeds 185 Mill Street: Lots 1017 t0 1021, Plan 86 West, Town of Gananoque, County of Leeds Site Area: 3.24 acres Current Uses: 15 Clarence Street: ground floor commercial (storage and rehearsal space for the 1000 Islands Playhouse); basement (storage); upper floors (vacant); Wire shed (vacant) 185 Mill Street: vacant 1.2 Study Scope and Methodology In the absence of formal requirements from the municipality for the contents of an HIS, this Statement has been prepared in accordance with guidelines for such work found in the City of Kingston. In terms of assessing heritage significance, the analysis follows the process for the inventory and evaluation of cultural heritage properties outlined in the Provincial Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Sport’s “Ontario Heritage Tool Kit” and specified in Ontario Regulation 9/06. The research and conclusions contained herein are based on information gathered from a limited historical review and site inspection. The historical research relies on information from secondary sources, collected within the study scope of work, time and budget limitations. 185 Mill Street and 15 Clarence Street | Heritage Impact Statement Bray Heritage | Page 1 The study scope did not include a condition or structural assessment conducted by a professional structural engineer, or an assessment of archaeological resource potential conducted by a registered archaeologist. The scope of research included: • • • • • • • Research into the historical evolution of the property and its environs, based on available secondary sources (fire insurance plans, directories, local histories, historical photographs) found in the Queen’s University Archives, records of the Gananoque Historical Society, private collections, and in published materials; Site reconnaissance of the property and surrounding area; Review of adopted Town of Gananoque planning policies and urban design guidelines for the subject property and area found in the Lowertown Study; Review of the Lowertown Study and its conservation interpretation and urban design recommendations; Review of other relevant Town planning policies, such as the Development Permits By-law and the Official Plan; Review of the proponent’s proposed design for the rehabilitation of existing structures; and Review of the relationship of the rehabilitation proposals to the overall development proposal. The results of this research inform the study conclusions and recommendations. GANANOQUE INDUSTRIAL TRAIL (2013, GOOGLE) Page 2 | Bray Heritage 185 Mill Street and 15 Clarence Street | Heritage Impact Statement PROPERTY SURVEY 185 Mill Street and 15 Clarence Street | Heritage Impact Statement Bray Heritage | Page 3 2. Property Descriptions 2.1 185 Mill Street STONE MILL, LOOKING EAST FROM MILL STREET Exterior The exterior of the stone and brick buildings were assessed by André Scheinman CAHP in his report for the Town prepared in January, 2006. The following is a summary of his description of the stone portion: • Style: vernacular interpretation of Georgian • Construction: roughly coursed local rubble stone; shallow peaked gables at north and south ends • Details: cut stone elements include voussoired arches over window and door openings, window sills, bush hammered quoins at all corners, parapets which originally included cut stone chimney caps at the peaks, finely moulded corbels in modillion (console) form • Massing: eight bays formed by large, paired multi-paned windows, three bays on end gables • Alterations: raised grade on Mill Street has covered basement window openings, some window and door openings have been filled or modified, cupola and chimney missing, as are original exterior staircases and loading platforms, additions have been removed, elevated walkway to brick building added 185 Mill Street and 15 Clarence Street | Heritage Impact Statement Bray Heritage | Page 5 STONE MILL, LOOKING WEST FROM THE GANANOQUE RIVER BRICK MILL, NORTH SIDE BRICK MILL, SOUTH SIDE; Page 6 | Bray Heritage 185 Mill Street and 15 Clarence Street | Heritage Impact Statement BRICK MILL LOOKING EAST FROM MILL STREET MILL BUILDINGS, LOOKING NE FROM MILL STREET The following is a summary of his description of the brick portion: • Style: not identified • Construction: two storey common bond brick walls atop stone walls from previous building • Details: rowlock composite arches above windows, cut stone quoins on stone walls, base of brick chimney on southeast corner, wooden 12 pane casement windows • Massing: eleven bays (3 bays on gable ends), shallow gabled parapeted roof, loading bays on street side, two storey, two bay, hipped roof brick addition on Mill Street gable end • Alterations: metal-clad elevated enclosed walkway link to stone building, front addition, infilled or covered window and loading door openings, missing chimney 185 Mill Street and 15 Clarence Street | Heritage Impact Statement Bray Heritage | Page 7 Interior STONE MILL, SECOND FLOOR The Scheinman report did not include an assessment of building interiors. A site visit undertaken as part of this HIS revealed the following for the stone building: • Poured concrete basement floor • Heavy timber structural posts, beams, joists and roof trusses; wooden floors on upper storeys And for the brick building: • Basement floor partially earthen, approximately one quarter poured concrete • Heavy timber structural posts, beams, joists and roof trusses; wooden floors on upper storeys Condition In the stone building, the walls, roof, wooden floors and timber structure appear to be in good condition, while the former mill race beneath the basement floor is filled with rubble. In the brick building, the walls, wooden floors and timber structure appear to be in good-fair condition, the roof is failing, with gaps appearing on the north side, and the basement level is filled with rubble. Some cracking is visible in the northeast corner of the stone wall. Page 8 | Bray Heritage 185 Mill Street and 15 Clarence Street | Heritage Impact Statement BRICK MILL, SECOND FLOOR 2.2 15 Clarence Street VIEW FROM MILL STREET TO SW The former Textron building was assessed as part of the research for this HIS: Exterior • Style: early Modernist • Construction: brick-clad reinforced concrete • Details: 8/4 metal casement triple windows with metal dividers, decorative parapets at first and fourth bays of south end, concrete window headers and sills, lettering painted on south gable end 185 Mill Street and 15 Clarence Street | Heritage Impact Statement Bray Heritage | Page 9 • Massing: 3 storey (plus basement), 10 bay three storey flat roofed main block (4 bays on the gable ends), with single storey additions on the sides • Alterations: metal-clad additions, window openings covered VIEW FROM MILL STREET TO NW Interior • Heavy poured concrete posts and beams, poured concrete floors • Non-structural partition walls (all floors, upper floor partitions have glazing) • Upper floors and basement have exposed, suspended lighting and sprinklers • Main floor has dropped ceilings with enclosed services, partitioned office and storage space Condition • Good: structurally sound, minor spalling on exterior brick TOP FLOOR INTERIOR Page 10 | Bray Heritage 185 Mill Street and 15 Clarence Street | Heritage Impact Statement 3. History of Properties A more comprehensive history of the subject properties in found in Appendix A. As a summary, it is evident that the part of Gananoque on which the subject properties are located has a history of occupation by industry from the mid-19th to the mid-20th century: • Ca. 1791: lands on the west side of the river granted to Col. Joel Stone • 1815: military barracks appear in the vicinity of the subject properties • By 1861, following development of industry on the east side of the river over the previous half century, industries established on the west side, including in the vicinity of the subject properties Stone building (185 Mill Street) • 1871: Abbott builds the Leeds Foundry and Machine Works (stone portion of 185 Mill Street is the machine shop) • By 1915, this operation has merged with the larger Canada Nut and Bolt Company (branch of the Steel Company of Canada), additions to front and north side • By 1947, building partially vacant and used for storage; subsequently abandoned Brick building (185 Mill Street) • 1872: Erastus Cook constructs the St. Lawrence Woolen Mills as a stone building • By 1890: local manufacturer George Gilles buys Abbott’s Leeds Foundry • Ca. 1892: fire destroys this building, woolen mills cease operation at that location • Ca. 1895: a brick structure is built atop the ruined walls of the stone building for the Thousand Islands Carriage Co. Ltd. (incorporated 1894); business fails, factory vacated • 1899: McLaughlin Carriage Co. of Oshawa are temporary tenants in the building while their Oshawa works are rebuilt after a fire (McLaughlin Co. returns to Oshawa in 1900 and later merges with General Motors in 1918) • By 1915: Canada Bolt and Nut Company operating in building (Gilles is now based in Toronto and has several such factories) 185 Mill Street and 15 Clarence Street | Heritage Impact Statement Bray Heritage | Page 11 • 1938: factory taken over by Link, manufacturers of flights simulators; this use continues throughout the war years • By 1947: Link still occupies building, which has had many frame and brick additions by then • 1951: upper level covered passageway built to join the stone and brick buildings • Building subsequently occupied by Cliffe Craft, manufacturers of recreational boats, later abandoned 15 Clarence Street (Textron) Page 12 | Bray Heritage • 1912: large factory built for Parmenter & Bulloch, a local firm producing rivets and wire nails; Wire shed building appears to have been constructed at this time • 1947: company intends to move operations to the US, employees purchase plant from the retiring owner (Bulloch); building has many additions by this time • 1952: company bought by American Townsend which was, in turn, bought by Textron in 1958; building subsequently vacated, now partially used for storage by Thousand Islands Play House. 185 Mill Street and 15 Clarence Street | Heritage Impact Statement 4. Heritage Significance of the Properties 4.1 Evaluation of Heritage Significance 4.1.1 185 Mill Street Design/physical Value • Good surviving examples of mid-late 19th century factory buildings Historical/associative Value • Associations with mid-late 19th century industrial development • Associations with McLaughlin, Link Contextual Value • 4.1.2 Surviving parts of a former industrial complex in Lowertown 15 Clarence Street Design/physical Value • Good example of early Modernist industrial architecture, rare for Eastern Ontario • Good, early example of poured concrete construction Historical/associative Value • Associated with prominent local industrialists (Parmenter & Bulloch) Contextual Value • Surviving part of a former industrial complex in Lowertown Note: the Wire Shed, although associated with 15 Clarence Street, appears to have little heritage value because: • In design terms, it is a common example of a simple frame industrial storage building • In construction terms, its timber framing and metal cladding are common to industrial buildings of that time 185 Mill Street and 15 Clarence Street | Heritage Impact Statement Bray Heritage | Page 13 • It has some associative and contextual value as part of the former industrial complex in Lowertown 4.2 Heritage Character Statements 4.2.1 185 Mill Street Schedule B of By-law 2006-21 of the Town of Gananoque provides the following text, which has been re-organized below into a Statement of Cultural Heritage Value or Interest and a Description of Heritage Attributes, in accordance with the format and terminology of the Ontario Heritage Tool Kit (“Designating Heritage Properties”). Statement of Cultural Heritage Value or Interest • As a good surviving example of industrial architecture and its evolution in the mid-to-late 19th century with the stone building in particular exhibiting unusually fine features for a building of its type suggesting the prominence of its original owner; • As an excellent representative of the industrial heritage of Gananoque (its original raison d’etre) and its development at the confluence of the Gananoque River and the St. Lawrence. The buildings housed many important industries including E. E. Abbott’s pioneering foundry, the nascent Steel Company of Canada and, most importantly, Link Manufacturing. The association with Link and the manufacture of the Link trainers is a theme of international significance. • As a visual landmark, since at least the 1870s, as viewed from the mouth of the Gananoque River, a scene continuously depicted in published engravings and photos from that time to the present. Description of Heritage Attributes Page 14 | Bray Heritage • General multi-bay longitudinally oriented form of both structures under parapeted shallow gable roofs; • The fenestration, i.e. paired multi-paned wooden window sash of both structures; • The stonework on the more northerly structure combining the general rubble coursing with cut stone accent elements including the voussoired arches at door and window openings, the window sills, quoins, parapet caps and console type corbels at the base of the parapets; • The stonework of the foundation of the more northerly structure including the composite rowlock arches; 185 Mill Street and 15 Clarence Street | Heritage Impact Statement • Particular evidence of their early industrial functions such as the loading bay openings and pulley arm extending from the upper door of the stone structure; and • Its setting down [sic] to the Gananoque River and as viewed from the river mouth. 4.2.2 15 Clarence Street Statement of Cultural Heritage Value or Interest Although not listed or designated as a cultural heritage resource, this building is significant because it is an early and intact example of a type of 20th century industrial architecture that was promoted in Germany before WWI and spread elsewhere later. Its design and construction are representative of that architectural trend. Description of Heritage Attributes • Metal casement windows • Massing and fenestration • Poured concrete structure, with brick cladding • Poured concrete headers and sills • Parapets with surviving painted lettering • Exposed interior poured concrete structural posts and beams 185 Mill Street and 15 Clarence Street | Heritage Impact Statement Bray Heritage | Page 15 5. Current Heritage and Relevant Planning Policies 5.1 Gananoque Lowertown Study In many ways, the current development is a direct response to the recommendations of the Lowertown Study. Completed in December, 2005 by a consulting team of landscape architects retained by the Town, the study assesses the development constraints and opportunities presented by the current setting in this large part of the downtown and waterfront. The subject properties are one of the key sites identified in the study as having significant redevelopment potential. The following study recommendations address the subject properties: • “Vision: create a vibrant, year-round, mixed-use Lowertown neighbourhood on an active waterfront where people live, work and play…encourage new medium-density residential uses”(1.3); • Waterfront trail and Mill Street identified as key parts of future circulation network; Clarence Street as important view corridor (Figure 3); • All three subject buildings are identified as redevelopment opportunities in the recommended master plan (Figure 7); • Mill Street is proposed to be a “cultural heritage spine”: a major pedestrian walkway with an industrial heritage theme carried into streetscape design and interpretation, including the former canal (Figure 13); • Riverfront is proposed as a “promenade”: a public walkway for access, sightseeing and fishing (Figure 17); • 185 Mill Street is proposed as the site of interpretive messaging (Figure 19) and an “industrial heritage park”, with pedestrian links, outdoor interpretive displays, docking and boat launch (Figure 22); • Urban design guidelines include (general) height limit of 2-3 storeys (2.6); • Improvements to Mill Street are a high priority, and mixed use development is a medium-term priority (3.2); • Streetscape improvements to be led by the Town, co-ordinated and co-funded with private development (Figure 26); • Potential development projects include mixed use development, potentially in joint venture with the Town (Figure 27); and 185 Mill Street and 15 Clarence Street | Heritage Impact Statement Bray Heritage | Page 17 • Former Textron building identified as a potential development site for public uses, developed by the Town (Figure 28; illustration p. 54). In summary, the proposed development meets the majority of the recommendations made in the Lowertown Study. The waterfront walkway and public park are reflections of recommendations in the study. The study clearly anticipates public infrastructure improvements coinciding with mixed use development. The subject properties are not identified for residential development, but they are shown as having redevelopment potential. No direct mention is made of heritage conservation, although the adaptive re-use of vacant former industrial properties and surface parking lots is encouraged. Adjacent development, such as that proposed for the lands just north of 185 Mill Street, also addresses the study’s recommendations, and views along Clarence Street identified in the Study are retained. 5.2 Development Permits By-law The overall development control framework in Gananoque is based on a development permits system. There are special provisions for the Lowertown area. In Section 4.0 of the Development Permits By-law, the stated intent of Council is to encourage mixed-use development and to address the area’s “rich cultural heritage”. Also, “it is the intention of this by-law to provide for an increased level of exterior design and to enhance both private and public realms within the Lowertown designation (p. 49). Permitted land uses include all of those proposed in the current development submission. Design guidelines found in the By-law generally reflect the more detailed ones found in the Lowertown Study and would be compatible with the proposed development. 5.3 Official Plan The current Official Plan (2009) includes goals and objectives supportive of the proposed development. They are similar to those found in the Lowertown Study and go further in having as objectives both medium and high density development and the rehabilitation/conversion of vacant industrial buildings. 185 Mill Street is shown as a Heritage Site (Schedule F). Heritage conservation policies (5.10.3) reflect Provincial heritage policies found in the PPS and OHA and would be supportive of the proposed development. No view policies are provided; presumably, the recommendations for views found in the Lowertown Study would be followed. Page 18 | Bray Heritage 185 Mill Street and 15 Clarence Street | Heritage Impact Statement 6. Impact of the Proposed Development 6.1 Conservation Principles Approaches to conservation principles or “interventions” as applied to buildings and settings that have potential or confirmed heritage value are covered by Provincial and federal guidelines. For the purposes of this report, the federal Standards and Guidelines for the Conservation of Historic Places in Canada (2010 edition) will be used as the benchmark (Provincial guidelines in the Ontario Heritage Tool Kit are harmonized with the federal guidelines). The federal guidelines provide three basic types of “intervention”: • Preservation: essentially keeps the existing structure or setting as is, repairing any damage and preventing further deterioration; • Rehabilitation: may involve the adaptive re-use of an existing building or site to allow a continuing or compatible contemporary use; and • Restoration: reveals or reconstructs earlier elements that are of heritage value. Other types of interventions involving greater alteration to the heritage resource include moving (to a different location, in whole or in part) and, in cases where the resource itself cannot be retained, recording and salvage prior to demolition. The more drastic the intervention, the greater emphasis there is on mitigating negative effects. 6.2 Description of Proposed Development The proposed development involves the three subject buildings as well as other properties in the vicinity. The designs are preliminary and are intended to show buildout of a project that will be phased. The first phase involves rehabilitation of the stone building at 185 Mill Street into townhouse units (see elevations). Rehabilitation of the other two former industrial buildings, as well as new construction, will follow in subsequent phases. Development proposed in these later phases is indicated on the site plan. North of the stone building at 185 Mill Street is shown a new 5-6 storey residential building as well as a public park, walkway and private docks along the riverbank. The 185 Mill Street buildings are to be rehabilitated into residential units, with private outdoor space on the river side (stone building) and on both flanks (brick building). 185 Mill Street and 15 Clarence Street | Heritage Impact Statement Bray Heritage | Page 19 15 Clarence is shown with its metal-clad additions removed and replaced by landscaped outdoor space and parking. New townhouses are shown flanking Clarence Street, replacing additions to 15 Clarence and the Wire Shed. Mill Street is shown as a landscaped boulevard with surface parking as well as access to parking beneath the new medium-density building and the brick building at 185 Mill Street. 6.3 Impact on Cultural Heritage Resources The primary intent of the proposed development appears to be the realization of an opportunity to use the heritage character and surviving structure of the three former industrial buildings to create value for a new residential complex. In doing so, the conservation of the heritage attributes of these buildings appears to be secured. Adaptive re-use of former industrial buildings is made easier by their simple and robust structure, both on the exterior and in the interior. Conversion for residential uses is, generally speaking, an approach that is compatible with industrial interiors in that the structural framework is large, evenly spaced and capable of being incorporated within many different layouts. Although no floor plans have been reviewed, the treatment of the building exteriors appears to conserve and repair the stone and brickwork. New buildings proposed in the overall development do not appear to be attached to the existing structures so there would be no negative impact on the heritage fabric of the built heritage resources. In the first phase, the proposed rehabilitation of the stone building into townhouse units will have minimal impact on the heritage fabric since it retains the exterior envelope. The large, open span of the interior structure lends itself to subdivision and the existing floors are sturdy and able to be altered to accommodate new servicing and structure. Window openings remain or are re-instated, and new or refurbished window units will be able to replicate or restore the existing units. Exterior additions in the form of decks and stairs will have minimal impact on the exterior fabric and are reversible interventions. The existing elevated two storey metal-clad walkway joining the brick and stone buildings will be removed. Page 20 | Bray Heritage 185 Mill Street and 15 Clarence Street | Heritage Impact Statement SITE PLAN STONE MILL FROM THE GANANOQUE RIVER STONE MILL FROM MILL STREET Page 22 | Bray Heritage 185 Mill Street and 15 Clarence Street | Heritage Impact Statement 7. Conclusion: Conservation and Development Strategy The proposed development, at this preliminary stage, appears to have no negative impact on the significant heritage resources of the three subject buildings. The adaptive re-use of these redundant and, in several cases, abandoned buildings, is an essential step in the long-term survival of these important heritage resources. The three buildings are large, simple structures with austere detailing. This character suggests a design response that is not fussy but rather highlights an industrial aesthetic. Detailing of the residential conversions, and the exterior landscape treatment, can use the industrial character to make this development distinct and add value. With this in mind, the conservation and development strategy proposed for these buildings is recommended to have the following components: • As part of the detailed design of the rehabilitation of these buildings, a conservation plan should be prepared that provides a work plan, schedule and outline specifications for repair and alteration work on the heritage fabric, prepared by a heritage professional. • For the stone building, consideration should be given to restoration of missing elements of the original building, such as the cupola and chimney, based on historic photographic and print evidence. Proposed new openings will have to be carefully considered in terms of the location and rhythm of the existing openings: existing openings should be re-used whenever possible. The design vocabulary for new openings and entrances should be taken from the simple Georgian design elements that would be typical of the early 19th century and are evident in this building. • For all of 185 Mill Street, consideration should be given to interpreting former elements of the industrial landscape, particularly the former service canal, mill race and rail spur, based on the urban design guidelines in the Lowertown Study. • For 15 Clarence, the conservation plan should include salvage and re-use of any suitable, surviving industrial components of the interior, such as loading doors, light fixtures, and hoists, and including the casement windows (e.g. retrofitted to have interior storms). On the exterior, efforts should be made to conserve the painted lettering on the south gable end. As has been done with 185 Mill Street, the proponent and the Town should consider designating this building under Part IV of the Ontario Heritage Act. 185 Mill Street and 15 Clarence Street | Heritage Impact Statement Bray Heritage | Page 23 • For the former Wire Shed, should it be intended for removal, the interior and exterior should be recorded (for deposition in the Town archives) and all re-usable building materials salvaged. • For interpretation, the history of the properties’ development should be told within the buildings and in external interpretive displays, as suggested in the Lowertown Study, and based on the historical research prepared for this HIS. For the stone building, repair and (partial) restoration of elements of the former mill race beneath the basement floor, made visible through an opening, may be possible and thus could add interest to that building. Excavation and opening of existing windows and loading doors now obscured by the raised level of Mill Street could also add interest as well as have functional benefits. • For branding and marketing purposes, consideration should be given to the following names for each building, based on their history: o 185 Mill Street (stone): Leeds Foundry; (brick) St. Lawrence Woollen Mill or Thousand Islands Carriage Company o 15 Clarence: Parmenter Bulloch VIEW DOWN MILL STREET TO ST. LAWRENCE RIVER, WITH STONE MILL IN FOREGROUND AND BRICK MILL BEHIND Page 24 | Bray Heritage 185 Mill Street and 15 Clarence Street | Heritage Impact Statement Appendices A. Chronology of Site Occupation Appendix A – Chronology of Site Occupation CHRONOLOGY of GANANOQUE emphasizing the Mill St Industries by Jennifer McKendry, PhD Photographs by J. McKendry unless otherwise identified 1 March 2014 Note the industrial buildings left of centre. Chronology Gananoque DATE Pre Loyalist settlement Jennifer McKendry 2014 EVENT SOURCE The area along the shores near and at the mouth of the Gananoque River is very likely used by First Nations, taking advantage of the travel route along the Gananoque River connecting the St Lawrence River with inland lakes. “Indian Burial Ground” and “Indian Point” appear on various maps Indian Point is marked on the 1861 Walling map on the east side of the river at the end of Stone St. The site of the Study Area is marked by a circle. c1791 Freeman Britton, Gananoque & the Thousand Islands [1901] The future site of the town east of the river is a part of very large tract of land granted to Sir John Johnson as a Loyalist (son of William Johnson who lived with Molly Brant). He lives elsewhere. On the west side, land (including the Study Area) is 1787 Leeds County, Library & Archives Canada (hereafter, LAC) granted to Col. Joel Stone, U.E. (1749-1833). 2 1787 Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 c1791 con’t AO1532 1795 map recording Capt. Stone’s mills and Sir John Johnson’s mills – industry on the Gananoque River near the junction with the St Lawrence River is of great importance to the district from a very early period. (Ontario Archives) Mrs Simcoe’s painting of a mill on the river in Gananoque 1790s. 3 Chronology Gananoque 1812 1814 Jennifer McKendry 2014 The area is fortified during the War of 1812 1815, there is a large, U-shaped, “Marine & Seaman’s temporary barr[acks]” (H17), privately owned but used by the military in the general vicinity of the Study Area. It was occupied lately by General Hill (or Hall?) (map LAC). 1817, a building also show in the general area on this map (LAC). 4 Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 1824 Part of the large land grant is transferred from Sir John Johnson to his sister, Mrs Bowes, a widow. Britton, Gananoque & the Thousand Islands 1825 Bowes sells her property to resident businessman John McDonald of the firm C. & J. MacDonald (founded 1817). McDonald surveys a village plot east of Gananoque River with streets, alleys, blocks and building lots, which are 60 x 120 feet and the alleys 20 feet wide. Stone Street is named after the village’s founder Col. Joel Stone. (Charles McDonald married Stone’s only daughter, Mary, in 1811.) Britton, Gananoque ; H.W. Hawke’s notes on Joel Stone of Gananoque 1749-1833, unpublished manuscript, 1966, copy in the Gananoque Library; H.W. Hawke, Historic Gananoque (Belleville: Mika, 1974): 15-16; Ina Scott, Yesterday’s News Today’s History (Gananoque: 1000 Islands Publishers, 1982): 49 (Study Area marked with a red circle) 1826 The McDonald firm builds canals and a large mill east of the river (see also the entry for 1839). 1830 The rewards for captains of industry include fine houses, such as the McDonald House (now the Town Hall), a sophisticated Classical design for Henrietta and John McDonald. 5 Jennifer McKendry, With Our Past before Us: NineteenthCentury Architecture in the Kingston Area (University of Toronto, 1995), 21-2 Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 1832 The opening of the Rideau Canal hinders the village’s hopes to become a great trans-shipping port. Industry, however, flourishes here because of the water power provided by the Gananoque River. 1836 The Wesleyan Methodist Church is built on Stone St (across the river from the Study Area) increasing the street’s importance; over time, more churches are built on this north-south street, which also has the Market Square near the village’s main east-west street. 1838 Teacher and heroine Elizabeth Barnett (1815-1906, she married Warren Fairman), on a visit home to the United States in February 1838, overhears a plot by rebels -- under General Van Rensselaer who is assisted by Bill Johnston -- preparing to invade Upper Canada via Gananoque (William Lyon Mackenzie is initially involved but backs out). Barnett hurries back to Gananoque to warn Dr Potter who alerts John McDonald. Militia units are called out and throw up defensive works in the village. The rebels, who have been gathering on Hickery Island, get wind of this and slip away without attacking. Britton, Gananoque Scott Yesterday’s News, p. 79 1839 F.H. Ainslie 1839 water colour, LAC1955128-5 Gananoque Mill on the east side of the river; note the blockhouse on the extreme right and the bridge on the left. 1849 There are 465 men, women and children living on the east side of Gananoque River with another 303 on the west side. 6 Britton, Gananoque Chronology Gananoque 1861-62 Jennifer McKendry 2014 Walling’s map of the village is published. Detail below. Note: no county atlas is published for Leeds & Grenville Counties until a modern compilation by Mika; it includes this map. The site of the Study Area (circled in red) contains no buildings. Outlined in red on the 1861 map are established industrial areas, which will expand in time. They are concentrated along the shoreline of the rivers. “The Birmingham of Eastern Ontario” 7 Comment by T. Leavitt in his 1879 History of Leeds and Grenville, p. 174 Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 1861-62 con’t Canadian Illustrated News, 6 Sept. 1879 Industrial buildings lining the river in 1879. 1920 aerial by McCarthy LAC MIKAN no. 3261445 Jumping ahead to 1920, industrial building still define the shoreline (the Study Area is on the left) 1863 Gananoque is incorporated as a village with a population of 1700. 8 Britton, Gananoque Chronology Gananoque 1871 Jennifer McKendry 2014 LEEDS FOUNDRY AND MACHINE WORKS. E. E. ABBOTT, PROPRIETOR. Mr. E[lijah].E. Abbott was born [in 1827] in the State of Connecticut, and at an early age turned his attention to mechanical pursuits, acquiring a thorough knowledge of mechanics, not only theoretical, but also practical. In 1855, he removed to Canada, and was engaged as Superintendent of iron works at Kingston. Having examined the special advantages of Gananoque as a manufacturing centre, he removed to that place in 1858, and opened a shop in a part of the old Globe Works [McDonald’s mill on the east side of the river]. His business extending, he, in 1871, built the "Leeds Foundry and Machine Works," shown in the accompanying illustration. The establishment is situated on the west side of the Gananoque River, and is convenient to the St. Lawrence, by which machinery can be shipped with facility. Thad Leavitt, History of Leeds and Grenville, (Brockville: Recorder Press,1879; rpt, Belleville ON: Mika, 1975), 175 Birth date – 1861 census Globe Works - 1861 Walling map Detail – overall below The machine shop is a stone building, three stories in height, with fire-proof roof, and having an area of 42 x 98 feet. The foundry is 40 x 68, and the smith's shop 55 feet in length, the buildings forming three sides of a parallelogram. The entire factory is fitted up with the most complete labor-saving machinery, and the work turned out is second to none in Canada. It includes steamboat fittings, agricultural implements, iron and wood working machines, planers, presses, etc. - in fact every variety of castings, and labor-saving utensils. Mr. Abbott's business relations extend to every portion of the Dominion, thus demonstrating the superiority of the articles manufactured by him. 9 The present stone building is 98’4” long. Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 1871 con’t In the upper left corner is an inset of Abbott’s house (here cropped out for less confusion about the overall setting of the industrial buildings). A handsome cupola (not extant) is located in the centre of the roof. It has four gables, each sheltering a fashionable Gothic Revival, pointed-arch window with arched glazing bars. Crowning the junction of the gables is a tall, decorated, iron finial. To each end of the roof is a parapet from which a chimney rises. The fourth bay is a loading door with a hoist in the top floor and a loading platform attached to the middle storey. Both doors disrupt the horizontal regularity of the window openings, as well as creating an off-centre effect. Industrial buildings often demonstrate a tolerance for such irregularity to gain functional advantage. 10 Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 1871 con’t 1873-74 Kingston directory, p. 120 Note the parapet end walls, one surviving chimney, window openings (although some have been stoned-in), loading door with hoist, wide lower door and, in the end wall, a doorway. 11 Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 1871 con’t Paired double-hung windows under a single set of voussoirs. Each has 9 panes over 9. Note the quoining and corbel. This end is missing its chimney and the doorway has been altered. This side fronts the river. 12 Chronology Gananoque 1871 con’t Jennifer McKendry 2014 In 1890, George Gillies buys Abbott’s Leeds Factory, which is then known as the Economy and Machine Company Gananoque. Two years later, he is assessed for two-sixth of an acre composed of lots 1018 and 1019 (the factory straddles both), as well as lots 1017 and the north half of lot 1016 to the north. Gillies, born in 1851 in Ontario, has been involved in manufacturing in town since at least 1879, when he is running the Agricultural Implements Works. He becomes involved with Toronto factories by 1896, which is likely what leads to the merging into the Steel Company of Canada in the early 20th century. In 1901, for example, he is in West York, Toronto, manufacturing bolts and carriage hardware. 1910 Hardware and Metal Canada In 1915, W. Donald described, in The Canadian Iron and Steel Industry, the Canada Bolt and Nut Company, a plant of the Steel Company of Canada: The Canada Bolt and Nut Company, established in 1910, was a consolidation of companies owning plants in Toronto, Brantford, Belleville, and Gananoque. All the plants of the steel Company of Canada are modern, well equipped, and situated at strategic transportation points. The output consists of pig iron, open-hearth steel, bar iron and steel, shapes, forgings, locomotive and car wheels, bolts, nuts, rivets, horseshoes, wrought-iron pipe and fittings, wire and cut nails, tacks and screws, wire, etc. With exceedingly efficient management not only of the general enterprise, but also of the various branches, the future of the company seems assured. 13 Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 1871 con’t left 1910 Hardware and Metal Canada right By 1947 (fire insurance plan, Queen’s U.), it used for various purposes and has one-storey wings (not extant) attached. For excerpts from a catalogue of items manufactured by Gilles in Gananoque, see the entry for 1894. In the 1927 directory, the company is described as the Steel Company of Canada. INTERIOR VIEWS Bottom floor 14 Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 1871 con’t Bottom floor towards staircase Bottom floor looking down into the mill race 15 Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 1871 con’t Middle floor Top floor 16 Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 1871 con’t Top floor, casement windows Top floor Boarded-over opening in the roof for the cupola 17 Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 1871 con’t Top floor showing enclosed staircase Note For the passageway between the two factories, see the entry for 1951. 1872 THE ST LAWRENCE WOOLEN MILL & THE THOUSAND ISLANDS CARRIAGE FACTORY This view of the Mouth of the Gananoque River was published in T. Leavitt’s 1879 History of Leeds and Grenville. (opp. p. 126). 18 Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 1872 con’t Picked out in red is the upper end view of Abbott’s stone building (see the entry for 1871), while the building closest to the viewer is outlined in yellow. Cropped out of a view of Abbott’s neighbouring stone building (see entry for 1871) is a detail (right) of the upper front corner of the building shown in Mouth of the Gananoque River. The sign is suggestive of St. L[awrence], which is a company described in the Leavitt book. Furthermore, St Lawrence Street runs towards the front of the building. In 1879, Leavitt lists the “St Lawrence Woolen Mills, E. Cook, proprietor” among the 24 industries in Gananoque. Founded in 1872, it is Cook & McIntyre by 1887 in a very large, three-storey stone building, 80 x 200 ft, according to Industries of Canada, p. 132. The present three-storey has brick on the upper two storeys and stone in the first storey and is almost 51 x 151 ft. There is a strong similarity between the 1879 drawing and today’s buildings but there are also subtle differences, for example, the artist does not distinguish between the stone and brick levels and the windows are narrow. In the late 1880s, we have confirmation that Erastus Cook is the owner of lot 1020 (voters list 1886-7, this is the location of today’s building, which once had extra buildings to 19 Chronology Gananoque the south on lot 1021). In 1891, Malcolm McIntyre is the owner of lots 1020 and 1021 (voters list). Ominously, in the town assessments for 1892 and 1894, McIntyre is assessed for only $750 for the north half of lot 1020 on Mill St and it is described as vacant (no buildings). A large successful mill should be assessed more like $3000 to $7000. This is following a fire (see ruins in photo below) resulting in such damage to the stone building that the upper storeys are rebuilt in brick with the overall length and width made smaller but with wider window openings. Erastus Cook carries on with a wool mill but in a different location. Thriving before the fire (as described in Industries of Canada in 1887), the St Lawrence Mill employed 40 hands in a threeset mill arrangement, which produced an excellent line of tweeds, blankets and flannels through the use of water power. The trade extended from Hamilton to Quebec. Both Cook and McIntyre were born in Ontario in 1834 and 1831, respectively. The latter was Reeve of the town for number of years. below Undated photo showing the existing stone factory (Leeds Foundry, see 1871 entry) and, at right angles, the jagged profile of the ruined St Lawrence Mill. Gananoque Historical Society Newsletter Sept. 2013 p1639 1872 con’t Jennifer McKendry 2014 above The swing bridge is under construction. The photo may date from c1888. In comparison (right) is a detail from an early 20th century postcard showing the new factory. 20 Chronology Gananoque 1872 con’t Jennifer McKendry 2014 The new factory, built c1895 from the ruins of the St Lawrence woollen mill, is the Thousand Islands Carriage Co. Ltd., with Dr George H. Bowen as the president and manager, George Bennett as the superintendent and John O. Bedard as the secretary-treasurer (voters list for 1895 and Lovell’s Business & Professional Directory, 1896-7). The main building (extant) is on lot 1020, but there are extra structures (not extant) on lot 1021. Despite turning out “a large number of handsome vehicles” (J. Haddock, Souvenir of the Thousand Islands, 1895, p315), the factory is not a success and is conveniently unoccupied at the very moment the McLaughlin Carriage Company suffers a devastating fire on 7 December 1899 at their plant in Oshawa. Towns jostle to lure the company to their location. Two days after the fire, the Gananoque town council offers McLaughlin “a commodious factory conveniently situated, fully equipped for carriage manufacture, and that can be run by water, steam or electric power (Gananoque Reporter, 16 Dec. 1899).” It is in the hands of a liquidator and practically owned by the bank. The monthly rent is $100. The inducement, sent by telegraph, is the town putting up $800 towards six months’ rent and moving expenses to Gananoque. James (more likely, it is his brother Robert Samuel) McLaughlin, son of the firm’s owner, comes to town by train on 14 December to inspect the facility. Liking what he sees, by 23 December, the company has possession of the building. The Gananoque Reporter reluctantly notes that Oshawa is offering a far greater bid to have the company return (and this is what happens) and thus it is likely that the company’s occupation will only benefit KINDNESS APPRECIATED Gananoque for six months. By 30 ________ December, Lewis Eveley, the company superintendent, is at work with 30 men To the Editor of the Reporter. putting the factory and machines in order. Dear Sir - Through the columns of Soon they are joined by 175 others and your valued paper, we wish to thank production of buggies starts running day the citizens of Gananoque most and night. Temporary lodgings for and cordially for the very hearty manner in expenditures by this large workforce is which they tendered us the free use of an economic boon to the town. Already the premises of the late Thousand the company is asking for supplies of Islands Carriage Co., during the time first quality basswood – “Cash for our new factory at Oshawa was being Lumber on premises late Thousand built. Islands Carriage Co.” It is a sad time for Our employees also wish to thank the town when the McLaughlin company those citizens who so generously returns to Oshawa, but the town has opened up their home to gained the gratitude of the company for accommodate them during their stay. enabling them to survive during such a Yours truly, distressful time. The McLaughlin Carriage Co. 27 Jan.1900 Robert Samuel McLaughlin recalled the 21 Chronology Gananoque 1872 con’t Jennifer McKendry 2014 Gananoque experience and his find of: … an empty two-storey factory that we could rent, and grabbed it. I suppose the next six months were the most hectic of my life. Remember, we were going back into the carriage business with nothing except what we had in our heads [because of the Oshawa fire]. While machinery was being hastily installed in the Gananoque factory - anything we could lay hands on that would make carriage parts - I set about re-creating the designs we needed to make the prototype models. By the time the new century had dawned, we were ready to get into production again. Of course, we couldn’t hope to produce, in that makeshift factory, all the scores of models we had been making. But we could produce enough to keep the McLaughlin Carriage Company a going concern. I took as many of our Oshawa workmen as I could use along at Gananoque, and we found billets in boarding houses and private homes. The town took quite an interest in our “invasion” - old timers of Gananoque still tell me they remember vividly “the time McLaughlins moved in.” By keeping that doubledecked plant running two shifts every 24 hours we really rolled those carriages out, and they were every bit as good as the ones we had been making at a more leisurely pace in Oshawa; the Governor wouldn’t have permitted anything else. By the middle of July 1900 - starting from scratch without a design or a pattern or a tool - we turned out 3,000 carriages. That was enough to supply our most urgent orders, and more important, to establish beyond any doubt that the McLaughlins were still in business. The Gananoque operation confirmed my belief that the willing conscientious worker is the backbone of any business. We all returned to Oshawa in mid-summer after winding up the Gananoque business, and pitched in to help finish the new plant [completed by Nov. 1900] ... and we were making carriages in Oshawa again before the roof was on. (posted on www.gm.ca ) In 1918, General Motors takes over the McLaughlin company in Oshawa. (Thanks to John Nalon for drawing attention to the McLaughlin connection.) 22 Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 1872 con’t above Photo by Brennan Customs Homes Inc. left View from the upper floor of the Parmenter Bulloch building Note For the passageway between the two factories, see the entry for 1951. 23 Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 1872 con’t The end wall on the left faces the river. The stonework is reused – some in situ and some reworked - from the original mill. Paired windows under a single set of voussoirs with a stone sill; 9 over 9 double-hung sash; parapet end wall with corbeling, Early 20th-century postcard showing the brick factory on the right horizon (Toronto Public Library) 24 Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 1872 con’t Looking south from the clock tower, postcard cancelled in 1906 and showing the brick factory on the left (coll. J. McKendry). The factory is eventually taken over by other owners and tenants for other purposes – the most memorable being the Link Manufacturing Company c1939, shown here on the 1947 fire insurance plan (Queen’s University). pink = brick, yellow = frame, blue = stone 25 Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 1872 con’t The development of the Link Trainer is described in an article on the website www.canadianflight.org of the Canadian Museum of Flight, Langley BC: In the safety of a building the pilot could be trained to fly a specific route at a specified altitude, then at the appropriate position start a descent to break out of cloud above the airport. The Link Trainer could be used in all weather conditions and at all times of the night and day making it a cost effective trainer. In the late 1920s, Edwin Link learned to fly while working for his father who manufactured organs and pianos. Because of the economic depression at that time, flying lessons became too costly for him. Link got the idea to shorten the expensive flying lessons by learning rudimentary piloting skills using a ground aviation trainer. Drawing from his expertise in air-driven pianos and pipe organs, Link used organ parts and compressed air to build the first flight simulator. In 1928, Link left his father’s organ building business to begin work on a ‘pilot trainer.’ He designed the trainer using suction through fabric bellows to cause motion. Organ bellows and a motor provided the means for the trainer, mounted on a pedestal, to pitch, roll, dive and climb as the student ‘flew’ it. In 1931, he received a patent on his ‘pilot maker’ training device. Most of his first sales were to amusement parks. In the beginning there was very little interest by the flying community in Link’s trainer. Initially the Trainer was meant for instruction of visual flight, but in 1934, after a series of tragic accidents while flying the airmail, the Army Air Corps bought six Link Trainers to assist in training pilots to fly at night and in bad weather, relying on instruments. The need for pilots with instrument training in World War 2 resulted, by the end of the war, in Link delivering 6,271 Link Trainers to the Army and 1,045 to the Navy. Thirty-five foreign countries also used the Link Trainer. Although aviation cadets flew various trainer aircraft, virtually all took initial blind-flying instruction in the Link. The Link Trainer holds a significant place in aviation history. It was the first true flight simulator, and provided safe training to hundreds of thousands of student pilots during the 1930s and 40s. The Canadian Connection Before and during WW2, Britain had restrictions on buying war 26 Chronology Gananoque 1872 con’t Jennifer McKendry 2014 goods from non-Commonwealth countries. Link realized that business would only increase if he had a plant in Canada. He owned an island east of Gananoque and frequently flew from Binghamton, NY, in his amphibious plane to his cottage. As he always checked in with Customs and Immigration at Gananoque, he got to know the collector of Customs, Ken Mullins. One day he asked Mullins if he knew of a location where he could manufacture Link Trainers, and whom he could recommend as its manager. Mullins suggested Keith Taylor and in 1938, the first Link Trainer was built in what became known as the ‘Link Plant,’ later known as the ‘Cliffe Craft Boat Buildings’ and is now vacant. Over 5,000 Link Trainers were built in Gananoque and with over 200 employees it was one of the town’s most-important businesses. The Link Trainer Note For the passageway between the two factories, see the entry for 1951. INTERIOR VIEWS Bottom floor towards the Gananoque River end wall, the lower part of which is likely the stone foundation for the old St Lawrence Woollen Mill 27 Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 1872 con’t Middle floor Top floor 1883 right detail, 1914 Gananoque [no author] A custom house is built in the general vicinity of the Study Area. Today it functions as part of the town’s tourist industry. 28 Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 1883 1885 map of the Grand Trunk Railway and Great Western of Canada (detail) The Thousand Island Railway brings travellers to and from the town to the main line of the Grand Trunk Railway, located 3 miles outside the town. The GTR connects with transportation routes to many places in Canada and the United States. Britton, Gananoque 1889 A steel swing bridge is built by the Thousand Island Railway Co. at the mouth of the river to connect with a single track from the Wharf Station, along Water Street, to the carriage works factory (now the Gananoque Inn – see entry for 1898) on the east side of the river. Study Area on the left 29 Chronology Gananoque 1890 Jennifer McKendry 2014 Gananoque is incorporated as a town with a population of 3500. It is an important summer resort area with visitors arriving by rail, horse and steamer. Britton, Gananoque The magnificent stone church, St John the Evangelist (Roman Catholic), is designed on the east side of the river by Toronto architect Joseph Connolly. It is across the river from the Study Area. [no author] Gananoque (Study Area on the left) 1914 30 Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 1894 This is a catalogue of products made in the stone factory by George Gillies. See also entry for 1871. 31 Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 1896 The Gananoque Inn on the river’s east side is a successful conversion of a factory building, the Gananoque Carriage Co. The Inn has seen a number of reincarnations after fires. As a factory John Nalon, Gananoque Historical Society Newsletter (Feb. 1997) #27 p.595 & 597 As a hotel c1898 1903 The town clock tower is built on the east side of the river to the design of architect Frank Lent. 32 left Undated postcard coll. J .McKendry Chronology Gananoque 1912 Jennifer McKendry 2014 THE PARMENTER & BULLOCH FACTORY This large, rambling factory is built on the west side of Mill St between Clarence and St Lawrence Streets for Parmenter & Bulloch.* After 1958, it becomes the Textron building. 1914 Gananoque [no author] This view shows the newly built factory. * Building date - The Canadian Manufacturers' Assoc., Industry '67 Centennial Perspective, May 1967 33 Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 1912 con’t Detail of aerials of 1920 by McCarthy(left) and 1919 by Bishop Barker (right) LAC MIKAN 3261445 & 3259987 The metal-clad structures in front of and at the side of the tall brick portion, are added after 1947 (see fire insurance plan discussed below). Mill St is on the right. The painted sign on the parapet no doubt reads Parmenter & Bulloch. The brick wall has been painted later. 34 Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 1912 con’t View from Clarence St. View from Mill St. above Photo by Carl Bray Photos by Brennan Custom Homes Inc 1914 35 Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 1912 con’t The severe, box-like form – with the exception of the decorative front parapet – flat roof, and repetitive almost strip-like windows create a clean modern appearance in the main three-storey building. The austere aspect is more than the functional quality intrinsic to a factory – it is part of the late 19th and early 20th centuries reaction against historicism. This was particularly advocated by German architects allied with the Deutscher Werkbund (founded 1907) such as Peter Behrens and Hermann Muthesius. The window headers, sills and vertical strip between windows seem to be concrete – a material promoted by the modernists. The structural material is modern reinforced concrete Even though brick is a traditional building material, its use as a veneer was part of the modern movement. The window dividers are metal (as opposed to traditional wood). The firm itself, Parmenter & Bulloch, has had a long history in Gananoque, and this is the latest of their buildings after recoveries from fires plus the need to expand and update. Charles Parmenter, born in 1845 in Gananoque, formed a partnership in 36 Chronology Gananoque 1912 con’t Jennifer McKendry 2014 1869 with William Bulloch and built a new factory to manufacture rivets of iron and copper, tubular rivets, patent tubular rivets, shoe-lacing studs and other hardware. They were forced to rebuild after a devastating fire in 1873, as described by Thad. Leavitt in his 1879 History of Leeds and Grenville. In 1896, they owned lots 1015 and part of 1016 on the east side of Mill St north of Gillies stone factory (see entry for 1871). In addition, Bulloch owned lot 595 at the corner of Clarence on the west side of Mill St. Detail of undated postcard c1960s‘70s (coll. J. McKendry) 2013, Mill St is on the right Outlined in red is the tallest portion. Detail of a recent photo by John McQuarrie 37 Chronology Gananoque 1912 con’t Jennifer McKendry 2014 left (2013) RED = tallest section, also on the 1947 fire insurance plan (and forming the original main building of 1912) YELLOW = lower areas, also on 1947 plan BLUE = currently attached to the building but not on the 1947 plan 1946-47 are momentous years for the plant. It is a widespread, news-worthy story when, in the face of the company looking potentially to move operations to the United States, their employees manage to purchase it for $525,000 from retiring owner, W. Bulloch. Ironically, in 1952, the company becomes part of the American Townsend Company which, six years later, is bought out by the Textron Corporation and thus Parmenter & Bulloch becomes a division of Textron Canada Ltd. Also, in 1947, a new office building is constructed (possibly the square red part on this plan).* 1947 fire insurance plan (coll. Queen’s University) *history from theThe Canadian Manufacturers' Assoc., Industry '67 Centennial Perspective, May 1967 and the Tucson Daily Citizen, 27 Nov. 1947. 38 Chronology Gananoque 1912 con’t Jennifer McKendry 2014 The need for a new, large, main building in 1912 is an indirect result of Parmenter & Bulloch introducing in Canada, seven years earlier, rivet setting machines suited to the ever-increasing assembly-line production systems. RIVETS AND STEEL PRODUCTS. THE PARMENTER BULLOCH CO., Ltd. GANANOQUE, ONT. Iron and Copper Rivets, Iron and Copper Burrs, Bifurcated and Tubular Rivets, Wire Nails, Copper and Steel Boat and Canoe Nails, Escutcheons Pins, Leather Shoe and Overshoe Buckles, Felloe Plates. 1910 advertisements in the Hardware and Metal Canada magazine Detail of a promotional blotter 39 Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 1912 con’t 1901 ad in Freeman Britton’s Souvenir of Gananoque This is ten years before the present building is built. Effective transportation systems are essential to a prosperous factory. A boat is shown on the river (green arrow) in the 1914 view. Running along Mill Street are railway tracks to move products, an engine (dark red) is seen approaching St Lawrence Street and further away is a line of box cars (red). Horses and carts (orange) are hauling supplies on St Lawrence Street into front of the factory, while pulling up at the front entrance is an automobile (blue). 40 Chronology Gananoque 1912 con’t Jennifer McKendry 2014 INTERIOR VIEWS of the Parmenter & Bulloch Factory Bottom floor Moulded concrete ceiling of main level (original entrance level) towards the south 41 Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 1871 con’t Middle level of working factory area above and left top floor, note tracks in concrete floor 42 Chronology Gananoque c1912 Jennifer McKendry 2014 WIRE SHED BUILDING Likely built around the same time as the main Parmenter & Bulloch factory of 1912, this metal-covered frame structure, 40 x 80 ft, is in use as a factory warehouse by 1947. The loading doors on both storeys in the end wall are conveniently close to the railway line. It appears in aerial views of 1919 and 1920. 1947 fire insurance plan (grey around yellow = metal-clad wood) Interior photo by Brennan Custom Homes Inc. 43 Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 19191920 1919 Bishop Barker aerial LAC a030481 MIKAN no. 3259987 detail 1920 aerial by McCarthy LAC MIKAN no.3261445 44 Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 19191920 con’t 1920 detail aerial McCarthy Gananoque LAC MIKAN no.3261445 detail The railway tracks can be seen running down Mill St and curving in the left foreground. 1927 Might’s directory for Kingston, etc., p.333 Note – the stone Abbott-Gillies factory with its cupola shows on the left horizon. 45 See entry for 1871 Chronology Gananoque 1927 con’t Jennifer McKendry 2014 “Gananoque, Canadian gateway to the Thousand Islands” Pushing the tourist ticket. upper at the opening of the east gate on 1 August 1927 Undated postcards, coll. J. McKendry Illus. in John Nalon’s 1985 history of Gananoque (Gananoque Museum Board) The ferry (on the right) runs from Market St to Clayton, NY. Note the trains on the left. The site of the foreground buildings is now home to tourist boat activities and a new heritage village and centre (see 1994-95 entry). Detail of a modern aerial on the town’s website The Study Area is in the upper left. 46 Chronology Gananoque 1937 Jennifer McKendry 2014 The Thousand Islands Bridge facilitates traffic between Canada and the United States. 1947 A number of now demolished auxiliary buildings dot the area in the 1947 fire insurance plan (coll. Queen’s U.) The canal once serving the mills and factories is being filled in as electricity now provides power and railway cars (note the tracks) move goods along Mill St. It is still a thriving industrial area no doubt having benefitted from the need for machines and parts during the recent war. Compare with the 1861 Walling map (left) showing the canal on the west side of Mill St and few buildings on the lower west shore of the river. 47 Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 1940s See 1872 entry for the Link Trainer and factory. 1951 This is likely when the covered passageway is built between the Leeds Foundry (see 1871) and the Thousand Islands Carriage Co. (see 1872) for the Link Manufacturing Co. by Drever & Smith, architects, of Kingston. Library & Archives Canada, Power Coll., R5824-572X-E, Mikan # 3994777. It is not on the 1947 fire insurance plan. Middle photo by Carl Bray 48 Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 1994-95 The Historic Thousands Islands Village and Arthur Child Heritage Centre are built on the waterfront in the general vicinity of the Study Area. The site was once occupied by a train station (see entry for 1927). The architect is Alexander Wilson of Kingston. below Arrows point (left to right) to the Village, tour boats and the Study Area. John McQuarrie (detail) 49 Bottom photo from John McQuarrie with Ian Coristine, Doug Grant, Jennifer McKendry, John Nalon and Don Ross, The 1000 Islands Then & Now (Ottawa: Magic Light, 2012), 179. Chronology Gananoque 2013 Jennifer McKendry 2014 Survey by G.R. Bennett Surveying Ltd, Brockville, with the three key buildings tinted in brown and the streets in grey. The canal reserve is noted (see 1861 and 1947 entries) on the east side of Mill Street. left Leeds Foundry 1871 & right St Lawrence Mill 1872/ Thousand Islands Carriage Factory c1895 50 Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 2013 con’t left St Lawrence Mill 1872/ Thousand Islands Carriage Factory c1895 & right Leeds Foundry 1871 Parmenter & Bulloch 1912 51 Chronology Gananoque Jennifer McKendry 2014 Brennan Custom Houses Inc. proposal 2014 52