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A guide to the <placeName key="BAARG">
            <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
          </placeName> of <forename>William</forename> and <forename>Robert</forename>
          <forename>Harris</forename> /
</title>
        <author>
          <persName>
            <surname>Tuck</surname>
          </persName>, <forename>Robert</forename> C.,
      <date>1927</date>-
    </author>
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          <orgName>
            <forename>Robertson</forename>
            <persName>
              <surname>Library</surname>
            </persName>, University of Prince <forename>Edward</forename> Island</orgName>
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          <persName>
            <surname>Library</surname>
          </persName>, <orgName>University of PEI</orgName>
        </publisher>
        <date>2009</date>
        <idno>238838</idno>
        <availability>
          <p>
                            Use of this resource is governed by the Canadian
                            Copyright Act. Unless otherwise noted you must contact the rights holder(s) for permission
                            to publish or reproduce this resource.
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            <title type="main">
A guide to the <placeName key="BAARG">
                <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
              </placeName> of <forename>William</forename> and <forename>Robert</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename> /
</title>
            <author>
              <persName>
                <surname>Tuck</surname>
              </persName>, <forename>Robert</forename> C.,
      <date>1927</date>-
    </author>
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[26] p. : ill. ; 21 cm.</extent>
          <publicationStmt>
            <publisher> Books,</publisher>
            <pubPlace>
              <persName>
                <forename>Charlottetown,</forename>
                <forename type="initial">P.E.I.</forename>
              </persName> :</pubPlace>
            <date>
              <date>1997</date>.</date>
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                        This text was created as part of the IslandLives Project. Project description and
                        participants are available at the project website at
                        http://www.islandlives.ca.
                        
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        <p>
                        This electronic text file was created by the <persName>
            <forename>Robertson</forename>
            <surname>Library</surname>
          </persName>, <orgName>University of Prince 
                        Edward Island</orgName>.
                        Typographical distinct text has not been identified.
                        Dates, personal, place and organizational names have been encoded.
                        
</p>
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            <forename>Harris</forename>, <persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <surname>Critchlow</surname>
            </persName>,
      <date>1854-1913</date>.
    
      <forename>Harris</forename>, <forename>Robert</forename>,
      <date>1849-1919</date>.
    </term>
          <term>
      Architects
      
      Biography.
    
      Architects
      
      History.
    
      Painters
      
      Biography.
    </term>
          <term>
            <placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName> (<placeName key="BAEXR">
              <region type="Province">P.E.I.</region>
            </placeName>)
      History.
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^collection</p>
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^c^^/</p>
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*&amp;%?&amp;</p>
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lLiDS:V^      - -;^&apos;&quot;&apos;:&apos;</p>
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            <persName>
              <surname>COLLECTION</surname>
            </persName>
            <persName>
              <surname>LIBRARY</surname>
            </persName> OF U.P.E.I.</p>
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ikJt</p>
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            <orgName>University of
Prince Edward Island</orgName>
          </p>
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          <p n="d1e149">
A Gift to the <persName>
              <forename>Robertson</forename>
              <surname>Library</surname>
            </persName>
From    ^-d^C</p>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div n="3" type="page">
        <pb n="3"></pb>
        <div n="d1e164" rend="860,2070,936,2098">
          <p n="d1e170"></p>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div n="4" type="page">
        <pb n="4"></pb>
        <div n="d1e179" rend="674,166,1026,232">
          <p n="d1e185">
A Guide to</p>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e193" rend="268,332,384,396">
          <p n="d1e199">
the</p>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e207" rend="396,282,1280,400">
          <p n="d1e213">
            <placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName>
          </p>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e221" rend="1294,334,1386,400">
          <p n="d1e227">
of</p>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e235" rend="276,458,1390,546">
          <p n="d1e241">
            <forename>William</forename> and <forename>Robert</forename>
            <forename>Harris</forename>
          </p>
        </div>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e250" rend="188,634,700,1464">
            <graphic n="d1e252" rend="188,634,700,1464"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e255" rend="854,650,1480,1230">
            <graphic n="d1e257" rend="854,650,1480,1230"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e260" rend="184,1278,1476,1948">
          <p n="d1e267">
            <forename>Robert</forename>
            <forename>Harris</forename>, <date>1849 -
1919</date>, left, and his brother,
<persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <forename type="initial">C.</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName>, jr.,
<date>1854 - 1913</date>, above, came
to <placeName key="BAEXR">
              <region type="Province">Prince Edward Island</region>
            </placeName> as small children in an Anglo-
Welsh immigrant family in <date>1856</date>. <date>Today</date>
            <placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName>
has important collections of <forename>Robert</forename>&apos;s paintings of people
and landscapes, and is rich in churches, private homes,
public buildings and business blocks designed by <forename>William</forename>.
This little book will tell you what there is to see, and
where to find it</p>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e316" rend="594,2016,1026,2076">
          <p n="d1e322">
by <persName>
              <forename>Robert</forename>
              <forename type="initial">C.</forename>
              <surname>Tuck</surname>
            </persName>
          </p>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div n="5" type="page">
        <pb n="5"></pb>
      </div>
      <div n="6" type="page">
        <pb n="6"></pb>
        <div n="d1e337" rend="604,98,958,164">
          <p n="d1e343">
A <persName>
              <surname>Guide</surname>
            </persName> to</p>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e351" rend="202,216,1314,334">
          <p n="d1e357">
the <placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName> of</p>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e365" rend="210,390,1330,480">
          <p n="d1e371">
            <forename>William</forename> and <forename>Robert</forename>
            <forename>Harris</forename>
          </p>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e379" rend="404,582,1134,760">
          <p n="d1e385">
P.E.I. COLLECTION
<persName>
              <surname>LIBRARY</surname>
            </persName> OF <persName>
              <forename type="initial">U.P.E.I.</forename>
            </persName>
          </p>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e397" rend="604,878,962,1034">
          <p n="d1e403">
by
<persName>
              <forename>Robert</forename>
              <forename>C</forename>
              <surname>Tuck</surname>
            </persName>
          </p>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e416" rend="448,1428,1176,1528">
          <p n="d1e422">
            <persName>
              <surname>LIBRARY</surname>
            </persName> USE ONLY</p>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e430" rend="1236,1590,1386,1894">
          <p n="d1e436"></p>
          <p n="d1e442">
NA</p>
          <p n="d1e448">
749</p>
          <p n="d1e454">
.H37</p>
          <p n="d1e460">
T84</p>
          <p n="d1e467">
            <date>1997</date>
          </p>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e475" rend="522,2020,960,2086">
          <p n="d1e481">
 Books</p>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div n="7" type="page">
        <pb n="7"></pb>
        <div n="d1e492" rend="144,58,1442,290">
          <p n="d1e498"></p>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e504" rend="540,480,696,502">
          <p n="d1e510"></p>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e516" rend="610,864,958,1018">
          <p n="d1e522"></p>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e528" rend="112,1188,1276,2040">
          <p n="d1e534">
A <persName>
              <surname>Guide</surname>
            </persName> to the <placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName> of <forename>William</forename> and <forename>Robert</forename>
            <forename>Harris</forename>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e540">
by <persName>
              <forename>Robert</forename>
              <forename type="initial">C.</forename>
              <surname>Tuck</surname>
            </persName>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e546">
 Books, ,
<placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName>, <placeName key="BAEXR">
              <region type="Province">Prince Edward Island</region>
            </placeName>,
 CIA 2X6
Email rtuck@isn.net
902-628-1955</p>
          <p n="d1e568">
Copyright <date>1997</date> by <persName>         
     <forename>Robert</forename>
              <forename>C</forename>
              <surname>Tuck</surname>
            </persName>
All rights reserved.
Published <date>July 1997</date>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e582">
Design, Production &amp; Printing:  Books
Binding: <persName>
              <forename>Irwin</forename>
              <surname>Print</surname>
            </persName>, <placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName>.</p>
          <p n="d1e593">
ISBN 0-9682492-1-3</p>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div n="8" type="page">
        <pb n="8"></pb>
        <div n="d1e604" rend="134,262,1210,326">
          <p n="d1e610">
The <placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName> of <forename>Robert</forename> and <forename>William</forename>
            <forename>Harris</forename>
          </p>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e618" rend="58,408,1340,2066">
          <p n="d1e624">
Introduction</p>
          <p n="d1e630">
Quite often I am asked to give a talk on <persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName>, or take a
group on a walk about <placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName> to see the buildings he designed.
This little book is the outcome of these invitations. It is brief enough to
be read in an hour, and small enough to fit in your pocket as you
explore the old town.</p>
          <p n="d1e652">
You will notice that the subject of this book is the <placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName>
not only of architect <persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName>, but also of his brother, portrait
painter and landscape artist <persName>
              <forename>Robert</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName>. <forename>Robert</forename>&apos;s <placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName> is
not as obvious as <forename>William</forename>&apos;s, but it is there nevertheless, not only in the
paintings in <date>All Souls&apos;</date> Chapel and in the <orgName>Confederation Centre</orgName>
            <persName>
              <forename>Art</forename>
              <surname>
Gallery</surname>
            </persName> and Museum Permanent <persName>
              <surname>Collection</surname>
            </persName>, but also in Province
<orgName>House</orgName> and <orgName>Fanning Bank</orgName>, the <persName>
              <addName type="honorific">Lieutenant</addName>
              <addName type="honorific">Governor</addName>
            </persName>&apos;s mansion. There
are always <forename>Robert</forename>
            <forename>Harris</forename> paintings from the Permanent <persName>
              <surname>Collection</surname>
            </persName> in
these government buildings; and there are others in private collections
in <placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName> and elsewhere in <placeName key="BAEXR">
              <region type="Province">Prince Edward Island</region>
            </placeName>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e695">
Also part of <forename>Robert</forename> and <forename>William</forename>
            <forename>Harris</forename>&apos;s <placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName> are the
houses in which they lived as children, growing up in an immigrant
family in <date>the 1850s</date> and <date>1860</date>s. Their parents, <persName>
              <forename type="initial">W.</forename>
              <surname>Critchlow</surname>
            </persName> and <persName>
              <forename>Sarah</forename>
              <surname>
Stretch</surname>   
         </persName>

            <forename>Harris</forename>, lived in no fewer than 14 different houses following
their arrival in <placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName> from Liverpool on the barque <forename>Isabel</forename> on
<date>October 10, 1856</date>. Several of these houses are still standing, and you
will find pictures of them in an appendix.</p>
          <p n="d1e726">
If you would like to know more about <forename>Robert</forename> and <forename>William</forename>
            <forename>Harris</forename>,
and their family, there are a number of books available - although
several are out of print and can be found only in libraries and second¬
hand book shops. I list them in a bibliography at the back.</p>
          <p n="d1e745">
            <persName>
              <forename>Robert</forename>
              <forename type="initial">C.</forename>
              <surname>Tuck</surname>
            </persName>,
<placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName>,
<date>July 1, 1997</date>
          </p>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div n="9" type="page">
        <pb n="9"></pb>
        <div n="d1e764" rend="160,198,386,266">
          <p n="d1e770"></p>
        </div>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e776" rend="100,326,1386,2498">
            <graphic n="d1e778" rend="100,326,1386,2498"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div n="10" type="page">
        <pb n="10"></pb>
        <div n="d1e784" rend="10,244,1290,1398">
          <p n="d1e797">
/. The Provincial Building.</p>
          <p n="d1e803">
            <persName>
              <forename>Robert</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName> financed his first formal art studies in Boston,
<placeName>
              <region>Massachusetts</region>
            </placeName>, in <date>the early 1870s</date> by painting portraits of prominent</p>
          <p n="d1e813">
citizens and politicians at
home in <placeName key="BAEXR">
              <region type="Province">Prince Edward
Island</region>

            </placeName>. Each commision
paid him $25 to $30 -
when he was able to collect
it. Today several of these
portraits hang in the
Legislative Chamber of the
Provincial Building in
<placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName>            (left),</p>
          <p n="d1e856">
including that of <persName>
              <forename>Cornelius</forename>
              <surname></surname>
              <forename>Howatt</forename>
            </persName> (below right), notable as an opponent of <placeName key="BAEXR">
              <region type="Province">Prince Edward
Island</region>
            </placeName>&apos;s entry into Confederation, and <persName>
              <forename>Edward</forename>
              <surname>Whelan</surname>
            </persName>, a fearless
journalist and opponent of the land ownership system that hobbled the
development of the Island in Colonial days. Other <persName>
              <forename>Robert</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName>
paintings, as for example Comrades (below left), presently hanging in
the <addName type="honorific">Speaker</addName>&apos;s suite, are on loan to Province <orgName>House</orgName> from the Permanent
<persName>
              <surname>Collection</surname>
            </persName> at the <orgName>Confederation Centre</orgName> of the Arts <orgName>Gallery</orgName> and
Museum.</p>
        </div>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e897" rend="60,508,718,958">
            <graphic n="d1e899" rend="60,508,718,958"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e902" rend="1362,468,1434,508">
          <p n="d1e908"></p>
        </div>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e914" rend="86,1428,1270,2170">
            <graphic n="d1e916" rend="86,1428,1270,2170"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div n="11" type="page">
        <pb n="11"></pb>
        <div n="d1e923" rend="60,222,1352,1004">
          <p n="d1e930">
2. <orgName>Confederation Centre</orgName> of the Arts Gallery &amp; Museum</p>
          <p n="d1e936">
Next door to Province <orgName>House</orgName> the <orgName>Confederation Centre</orgName> of the Arts
<orgName>Gallery</orgName> and Museum includes thousands of works of art by <persName>
              <forename>Robert</forename>
              <surname></surname>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName> in its permanent collection, from small drawings in <date>60</date>
sketchbooks to large landscape and portrait paintings. Some part of</p>
          <p n="d1e954">
this collection is
always on show,
together with a
selection of
architectural
drawings from the
folios of <persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <surname></surname>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName>. The <orgName>Gallery</orgName>
is open daily in the
summer.</p>
        </div>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e999" rend="86,500,908,1098">
            <graphic n="d1e1001" rend="86,500,908,1098"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e1004" rend="54,1110,1304,1236">
          <p n="d1e1010">
Portraits by <persName>
              <forename>Robert</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName> of two of his sisters, <persName>
              <forename>Margaret</forename>
              <forename>Ellin</forename>
            </persName> (left) and <forename>Sarah</forename> (right).
Both of these paintings form part of the Permanent <persName>
              <surname>Collection</surname>
            </persName> of the <orgName>Confederation
Centre</orgName> of the Arts <orgName>Gallery</orgName> and Museum.</p>
        </div>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e1026" rend="66,1274,1330,1956">
            <graphic n="d1e1028" rend="66,1274,1330,1956"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e1031" rend="50,1994,1248,2122">
          <p n="d1e1037">
            <persName>
              <forename>Robert</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName>&apos;s studies for his famous painting, The Fathers of Confederation,
include the above colour sketch. His large portrait of <persName>
              <addName type="honorific">Sir</addName>
              <forename>John</forename>
              <forename type="initial">A.</forename>
              <surname>Macdonald</surname>
            </persName>,
made shortly before the statesman&apos;s death in <date>1891</date>, may also be seen in the <orgName>Gallery</orgName>.</p>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div n="12" type="page">
        <pb n="12"></pb>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e1056" rend="176,712,752,888">
            <graphic n="d1e1058" rend="176,712,752,888"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e1061" rend="70,242,1366,2020">
          <p n="d1e1071">
3. <placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName> through <persName>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
              <surname>Eyes</surname>
            </persName>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e1077">
Some of the best visual recordings of early <placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName> come
from the hand of <persName>
              <forename>Robert</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName>. The watercolour sketch of the city
(below) dates from about <date>1869</date>, and shows the timber spires of St.</p>
          <p n="d1e1091">
            <forename>Dunstan</forename>&apos;s     Cathedral,     .
<forename>Paul</forename>&apos;s <orgName>Parish Church</orgName>, and the
Kirk of . <forename>James</forename> (all three
have since been replaced by
stone    buildings).     As     a
teenager <persName>
              <forename>Robert</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName> was
employed by surveyor <persName>
              <forename>Henry</forename>
              <surname>
Cundall</surname>

            </persName>,    and   a   carefully
drawn map of the city dates
from this period. These and other pencil and watercolour drawings of
<placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName>, as well as later oil paintings of the city   by <forename>Robert</forename>,
form part of the Permanent <persName>
              <surname>Collection</surname>
            </persName> at the <orgName>Confederation Centre</orgName>
            <persName>
              <forename>Art</forename>
              <surname>
Gallery</surname>
            </persName> and Museum, and are often on show in the <orgName>Gallery</orgName>. In <date>the
1880s</date> and <date>1890</date>s <persName>
              <forename>Ned</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>

            </persName>, the younger brother of <forename>Robert</forename> and
<forename>William</forename>, who was born in <placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName> in <date>1861</date>, took photographs of
<placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName>. The picture (right) of the children of <forename>Tom</forename> and
<forename>Henrietta</forename>                                               \                                    4</p>
          <p n="d1e1163">
(<forename>Haszard</forename>) <forename>Harris</forename>,
and <persName>
              <forename>Margaret</forename>
              <surname></surname>
              <forename>Ellin</forename>
            </persName> (<forename>Harris</forename>) and
<persName>
              <forename>Will</forename>
              <surname>Cotton</surname>
            </persName>,</p>
          <p n="d1e1181">
playing with some
friends in the
front yard of
 <forename>Villa</forename>
(see page 18), is
reproduced from
an old print made on blue paper from <forename>Ned</forename>&apos;s camera. In the background
is the steeple of the Kirk of . <forename>James</forename> (left), and on the right the roof of
<placeName key="BAETQ">
              <settlement type="UnincorporatedArea">St. Peter</settlement>
            </placeName>&apos;s Cathedral.</p>
        </div>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e1222" rend="472,1372,1344,1836">
            <graphic n="d1e1224" rend="472,1372,1344,1836"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div n="13" type="page">
        <pb n="13"></pb>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e1230" rend="776,216,1354,724">
            <graphic n="d1e1232" rend="776,216,1354,724"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e1235" rend="132,210,1428,2104">
          <p n="d1e1244">
4. </p>
          <p n="d1e1250">
In <date>February, 1884</date>, fire
destroyed the <placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName>
post office on Queen&apos;s Square,
and a row of wooden shops
across from it on . At this time <persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <surname></surname>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName> was in Winnipeg,
but he returned immediately
to <placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName> at the
prospect of work.  was rebuilt in brick. Two of the
new buildings were designed by <forename>Harris</forename>: the <forename>Cameron</forename> block (above),
and the Newson <persName>
              <surname>Block</surname>
            </persName> (below). The <forename>Cameron</forename> block is unique among
<forename>Harris</forename>&apos;s designs in that its front elevation is symmetrical.</p>
          <p n="d1e1306">
A neo-classical storefront has
replaced the original <forename>Harris</forename>-
designed front on the Newson
block. As the old photograph
shows, it used to be like that on
the <forename>Cameron</forename> building. The
change was made by a bank that
bought the building in <date>1908</date>.
<forename>Harris</forename>&apos;s favourite dog-tooth trim
gave way to Ionic ornament.</p>
          <p n="d1e1349">
Terrible fires that wiped out
timber-built town cores in the
Maritime Provinces were common
before the First World War - Digby, <forename>Windsor</forename>,  and
<placeName key="BADSZ">
              <settlement type="City">Summerside</settlement>
            </placeName> were all devastated. Before the ruins had cooled, the
towns were descended upon by architects looking for work. Some fine
buildings of brick ensued, none better anywhere than those in
&quot;&quot;.</p>
          <p n="d1e1384">
Two of <forename>Harris</forename>&apos;s most impressive buildings - the federal Cabot
Building (or post office) and the Market <forename>Hall</forename> - once stood across from
 where the <orgName>Confederation Centre</orgName> complex now stands.
They too were destroyed by fire.</p>
        </div>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e1404" rend="152,1006,734,1600">
            <graphic n="d1e1406" rend="152,1006,734,1600"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div n="14" type="page">
        <pb n="14"></pb>
        <div n="d1e1412" rend="68,240,1368,2080">
          <p n="d1e1420">
5. <forename>Charlotte</forename> Parish Church</p>
          <p n="d1e1426">
Charlottetown was laid out in the 18th century to serve as a colonial
capital. At its centre was Queen&apos;s Square, where - as <persName>
              <forename>Sarah</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName>
noted in one of her letters - Westminster was created in miniature. At
its eastern end was the <orgName>Parish Church</orgName>, dedicated in honour of . <forename>Paul</forename>.
In <date>1888</date> the parish built a handsome stone rectory on the Square to
plans by <persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName>, and in <date>1894</date> it commissioned him to design a
new church to replace its old wooden building. Because it is the first of
the churches of his mature period, and incorporates all the features
that made him successful as an ecclesiastical architect, . <forename>Paul</forename>&apos;s is the
most important of all <persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <surname></surname>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName>&apos;s buildings.</p>
          <p n="d1e1473">
His earlier church designs
reflect English Gothic
precedents, but at . <forename>Paul</forename>&apos;s he
adopted elements of French
Gothic Style out of acoustical
and liturgical considerations.
He made the chancel the same
height and width as the nave,
with an apse rather than a
square end. The ceiling is
groined, the better to distribute
sound waves throughout the interior. The cells in the chancel walls are
made resonant by thin sheets of maple and spruce separated by a
narrow space, and the chancel floor is supported on a single post of
juniper wood, corresponding to the sounding post in a violin. <forename>Harris</forename>, a
musician himself, designed . <forename>Paul</forename>&apos;s as if it were a large musical
instrument.</p>
          <p n="d1e1545">
The exterior stonework has recently been cleaned, and restored
where necessary. The octagonal vestries were added as 1st World War
memorials. Inside, the lights have been removed from the column
capitals to holes cut in the ceiling, and the chancel floor extended.
Note the red clay tiles in the sanctuary walls, made at the Hornsby
 Pottery, and the beautifully crafted pulpit.</p>
        </div>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e1574" rend="708,772,1342,1430">
            <graphic n="d1e1576" rend="708,772,1342,1430"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div n="15" type="page">
        <pb n="15"></pb>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e1582" rend="210,516,914,984">
            <graphic n="d1e1584" rend="210,516,914,850"></graphic>
            <graphic n="d1e1585" rend="226,850,914,858"></graphic>
            <graphic n="d1e1586" rend="660,858,914,984"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e1589" rend="192,858,660,1014">
          <p n="d1e1595"></p>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e1601" rend="166,232,1480,2022">
          <p n="d1e1610">
6. DesRrisay and Connolly Buildings</p>
          <p n="d1e1616">
The DesBrisay block (below), at the corner of <forename>Grafton</forename> and <persName>
              <surname>Queen</surname>
            </persName>
streets, was built in <date>1901</date> to plans drawn by <persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName>^ and
features the multi-coloured brickwork popularised by the English
architect <persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <surname>Butterfield</surname>
            </persName>. The brick was imported from <placeName>
              <region>Ontario</region>
            </placeName>.</p>
          <p n="d1e1634">
Architecturally, it is one of
the finest buildings of its
kind in .
Both <persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName> and
his older brother <forename>Tom</forename> had
offices in the building On
the morning of <date>February 2,
1904</date>, <forename>Tom</forename> was found
lying on the floor of his
office with his doorkey in
his hand, dead of a heart attack just after arriving at work. For many
years <forename>Hughes</forename> drug store, reputed to be the oldest in <placeName>
              <region type="Country">Canada</region>
            </placeName>, occupied
the ground floor of the building. All that&apos;s left of the drugstore is some
elaborate oak wood work carved by <persName>
              <forename>James</forename>
              <forename>A</forename>
              <forename>Stewart</forename>

            </persName>. The brickwork
was cleaned recently, and the building presents an attractive
appearance appropriate to the premier corner of <placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName>.</p>
          <p n="d1e1702">
The <persName>
              <forename>Owen</forename>
              <surname>Connolly</surname>
            </persName> building (right) at , erected in
<date>1889 two</date> years after <persName>
              <addName type="honorific">Mr.</addName>
              <surname>Connolly</surname>

            </persName>&apos;s death by the trustees of his estate,
on the other hand remains uncleaned. The
black grime on its rough hewn Island and
<placeName key="CBCBY">
              <region type="Province">Nova Scotia</region>
            </placeName> stone facade is a relic of days
gone by when <placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName> was largely
heated by coal fires in open grates. The
exterior of the building is mostly
unspoiled including the passageway on
the left that admitted horse-drawn carts to
the yard at the back. A massive parapet
supports a bust of <persName>
              <addName type="honorific">Mr.</addName>
              <surname>Connolly</surname>
            </persName> carved by
<persName>
              <forename>Howard</forename>
              <forename>Ramsay</forename>
            </persName>.</p>
        </div>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e1760" rend="1006,1512,1422,2058">
            <graphic n="d1e1762" rend="1006,1512,1422,2058"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div n="16" type="page">
        <pb n="16"></pb>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e1768" rend="850,410,1314,936">
            <graphic n="d1e1770" rend="850,410,1314,936"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e1773" rend="54,216,1352,2080">
          <p n="d1e1784">
7. <forename>Rogers</forename> and <persName>
              <surname>Hogan</surname>
            </persName> Buildings and a unique Church</p>
          <p n="d1e1790">
The <persName>
              <forename>Rogers</forename>
              <surname>Hardware</surname>
            </persName> Building (below), at , with</p>
          <p n="d1e1796">
its rusticated stone and brickwork facade, was built as a warehouse in</p>
          <p n="d1e1802">
            <date>1896</date>. The grey stone inserts are <forename>Harris</forename>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e1808">
signatures, and echo those on . <forename>Paul</forename>&apos;s</p>
          <p n="d1e1815">
Church at the other end of   Queen&apos;s</p>
          <p n="d1e1821">
Square.</p>
          <p n="d1e1827">
At        another</p>
          <p n="d1e1833">
Butterfield-style multicoloured <forename>William</forename>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e1839">
            <forename>Harris</forename> business block has not only been</p>
          <p n="d1e1845">
restored but has spawned an offspring in</p>
          <p n="d1e1852">
the shape of a  smaller building in</p>
          <p n="d1e1858">
identical style. The original building</p>
          <p n="d1e1864">
was  a  duplex,   with  living  quarters</p>
          <p n="d1e1870">
opening on a lawn in the back. It
was designed by <persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName> and
built by <persName>
              <forename type="initial">M.P.</forename>
              <surname>Hogan</surname>
            </persName> in <date>1886</date>. The
original store front was later
replaced by plate glass and bland
mid-20th century bricks. The bricks
have been removed, and the plate
glass is now set in brickwork that
matches <date>the  1880s</date> work in the</p>
          <p n="d1e1909">
upper storeys.</p>
          <p n="d1e1915">
Two blocks east on  is <orgName>Central Christian Church</orgName>, built
to <persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName>&apos;s plans by Lowe Brothers in <date>1901</date>. Despite its small
size its exterior shows considerable sophistication in the way   its
conical-roofed round tower relates
to the spacial volumes of the nave,
transept and entrance. The bartizans
at the corners, the snub gables and
the holey bargeboards are <forename>Harris</forename>
signatures. Inside there is a groined
ceiling and a small gallery. <forename>An</forename> ell
on the east side is a later addition.</p>
        </div>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e1964" rend="72,1006,346,1260">
            <graphic n="d1e1966" rend="72,1006,342,1126"></graphic>
            <graphic n="d1e1967" rend="72,1126,332,1134"></graphic>
            <graphic n="d1e1968" rend="72,1134,310,1174"></graphic>
            <graphic n="d1e1969" rend="72,1174,346,1242"></graphic>
            <graphic n="d1e1970" rend="72,1242,340,1258"></graphic>
            <graphic n="d1e1971" rend="72,1258,310,1260"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e1974" rend="338,994,614,1214">
            <graphic n="d1e1976" rend="338,994,614,1118"></graphic>
            <graphic n="d1e1977" rend="436,1118,614,1134"></graphic>
            <graphic n="d1e1978" rend="460,1134,614,1142"></graphic>
            <graphic n="d1e1979" rend="464,1142,614,1160"></graphic>
            <graphic n="d1e1980" rend="476,1160,614,1168"></graphic>
            <graphic n="d1e1981" rend="546,1168,614,1214"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e1984" rend="310,1134,546,1250">
          <p n="d1e1992">
liT^.</p>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e2001" rend="340,1242,480,1264">
          <p n="d1e2007">
■ ,&quot;,; ■ &quot;■ ■ ■■ ■■ ■</p>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e2015" rend="338,1370,514,1424">
          <p n="d1e2022"></p>
        </div>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e2028" rend="784,1790,1330,2116">
            <graphic n="d1e2030" rend="784,1790,1330,2116"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div n="17" type="page">
        <pb n="17"></pb>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e2037" rend="162,448,858,950">
            <graphic n="d1e2039" rend="162,448,858,950"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e2042" rend="142,216,1444,2110">
          <p n="d1e2052">
8. The <persName>
              <surname>Maclennan</surname>
            </persName> and <persName>
              <forename type="initial">J.D.MacLeod</forename>
            </persName> ffowes</p>
          <p n="d1e2058">
In <date>1886</date>
            <persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName> designed his most elaborately ornamented
house (below, left) for the widow of the <persName>
              <addName type="honorific">Reverend</addName>
              <forename>John</forename>
              <surname>MacLennan</surname>
            </persName>,
who had been minister to the <placeName key="BACGP">
              <settlement type="UnincorporatedArea">Selkirk</settlement>
            </placeName> settlers at St. <forename>John</forename>&apos;s Presbyterian</p>
          <p n="d1e2072">
Church, <placeName key="BADVA">
              <settlement type="UnincorporatedArea">Belfast</settlement>
            </placeName>, east of
<placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName>. It still stands
at ,
substantially intact, but now
divided into apartments that
have necessitated some
minor changes. The house
is a cookie cutter&apos;s dream -
or nightmare - adorned with
fretwork rabbits, foxes and
squirrels. The bargeboards are a riot of quatrefoils. Gingerbread trim
is everywhere. In keeping with the canons of the Queen <persName>
              <forename>Anne</forename>
              <surname>Style</surname>
            </persName>,
the elevations are non¬
symmetrical, and each differs
from the others. In <date>the 1880s</date>
            <forename>Harris</forename> provided most of his
houses with veranda-like side
entrances, surmounted by open
balconies on the second floor.
Those on the MacLennan house
have been walled in to make
some of the apartments larger.</p>
          <p n="d1e2165">
            <forename>Just</forename> up the street, at 169
Euston, is the <persName>
              <forename type="initial">J.D.</forename>
              <surname>MacLeod</surname>
            </persName> house (above, right), built the same year,
but less elaborate in its trim. It has board and batten cladding in the
gables and in a belt between the first and second floors - another
<forename>Harris</forename> signature from this period of his career. The photograph shows
the house in its original appearance, before the entrance veranda and
the balcony above it were made into a sunporch with Doric features
inappropriate in a Queen <persName>
              <forename>Anne</forename>
              <surname>Style</surname>
            </persName> building. However, an enclosed
stairway giving separate access to an upstairs apartment has been
devised in a manner sympathetic to the style of the house.</p>
        </div>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e2210" rend="826,1170,1424,1606">
            <graphic n="d1e2212" rend="826,1170,1424,1606"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div n="18" type="page">
        <pb n="18"></pb>
        <div n="d1e2218" rend="1288,258,1352,286">
          <p n="d1e2224"></p>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e2230" rend="44,248,1324,2140">
          <p n="d1e2239">
9. The Kirk of  <forename>James</forename>, PownaL Street.</p>
          <p n="d1e2245">
When the <orgName>Presbyterian</orgName> Kirk of . <forename>James</forename> was being built in <date>1877</date>
            <persName>
              <forename type="initial">W.
Critchlow</forename>
            </persName>

            <forename>Harris</forename>, the father of <forename>Robert</forename> and <forename>William</forename>, observed in a
letter that &quot;the new Kirk will be the A-l building of <placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName>.&quot; In
many respects it still is. The design of the building has always been
attributed to <persName>
              <forename>David</forename>
              <forename>Stirling</forename>   
         </persName>,
<persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName>&apos;s master, who in
<date>1877</date> came to <placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>

            </placeName> from
Halifax, and formed a partnership
with his 23 year old protege. He
had been awarded the
commission to design the new
Falconwood Asylum, built that
same year on the shores of the
<geogName key="BADUF" type="River">
              <name>Hillsborough River</name>
            </geogName> near
<placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName>. Certainly, the
Kirk bears a resemblance in some
respects to other <forename>Stirling</forename>
churches, such as 
and . <forename>David</forename>&apos;s churches in
Halifax, the <persName>
              <forename>Hensley</forename>
              <surname>Memorial</surname>
            </persName>
Chapel in <forename>Windsor</forename>, <placeName>
              <region>Nova Scotia</region>
            </placeName> -
and even the nearby <placeName key="BAETQ">
              <settlement type="UnincorporatedArea">St. Peter</settlement>
            </placeName>&apos;s Cathedral, which almost certainly was
designed by <forename>Stirling</forename> in <date>1869</date>. However, the Kirk is included in a list of
<forename>Harris</forename>&apos;s churches published in his obituary notice in <date>1913</date>. Be that as it
may, there is no doubt about the ceiling and the pews being <forename>Harris</forename>&apos;s
work. They were installed following a fire about <date>1900</date>. A possible clue
to further evidence of <forename>Harris</forename>&apos;s hand in the Kirk is the Perpendicular or
Tudor Style window incorporated in the wall on the north side of the
building - a <forename>Harris</forename> signature throughout his career.</p>
          <p n="d1e2367">
            <persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName> in <date>1888</date> told a story of what he called &quot;despicable
roguery&quot; on the part of the man who supplied the red Island sandstone
used in the Kirk. Some of the stone got soaked in salt water, which is
ruinous to a sandstone, when the scow on which it was loaded sank
The man dried out the stone and supplied it without mentioning the
mishap. The stone later deteriorated and had to be replaced</p>
        </div>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e2396" rend="706,588,1238,1360">
            <graphic n="d1e2398" rend="706,588,1238,1360"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div n="19" type="page">
        <pb n="19"></pb>
        <div n="d1e2404" rend="138,222,1436,1436">
          <p n="d1e2412">
10. The <persName>
              <forename>Charlotte</forename>
              <surname>Residence</surname>
            </persName> &amp; </p>
          <p n="d1e2418">
In <date>1880</date>
            <persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <forename type="initial">A.</forename>
              <surname>Weeks</surname>
            </persName> of <placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName> built himself a new
house in fashionable French style on  to plans drawn
by <persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName> (below). It had 16 rooms and a curved staircase</p>
          <p n="d1e2432">
inside the spacious front hall.
The <forename>Harris</forename> family moved into
<persName>
              <addName type="honorific">Mr.</addName>
              <surname>Weeks</surname>
            </persName>&apos; old house behind
the new one, which now became
<persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName>&apos;s property. Ten
years later he moved it to 32-, where it
remains to <date>this day</date>. <persName>
              <addName type="honorific">Mr.</addName>
              <surname>Weeks</surname>
            </persName>&apos;
new house later had a wing in
nondescript style added to it when it was made into a residence for
retired ladies and renamed The <persName>
              <forename>Charlotte</forename>
              <surname>Residence</surname>
            </persName>.</p>
          <p n="d1e2479">
The house faces on . On <date>May 24, 1894</date>, the Square
was the scene of great activity as trees were planted by members of the
<forename>Harris</forename> family, which by this time included a considerable number of
nephews and nieces of <forename>Robert</forename> and <forename>William</forename>, one for each member of
the family, whether at home or &quot;away&quot;. The whole operation was
under <forename>William</forename>&apos;s direction. His list of names survives, but unfortunately
is plan is lost, so that the individual trees cannot be identified with the
persons they represent.</p>
        </div>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e2516" rend="144,504,776,884">
            <graphic n="d1e2518" rend="144,504,776,884"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e2521" rend="182,1552,1300,1946">
            <graphic n="d1e2523" rend="182,1552,1300,1946"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e2526" rend="154,1992,1368,2122">
          <p n="d1e2532">
 in <date>1895</date>. <persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <surname>Weeks</surname>
            </persName>&apos; house is on the far right. The spire of the
Kirk is in the centre, and <placeName key="BAETQ">
              <settlement type="UnincorporatedArea">St. Peter</settlement>
            </placeName>&apos;s Cathedral, with a wooden front, is on the left.
The original plan for <placeName key="BAETQ">
              <settlement type="UnincorporatedArea">St. Peter</settlement>
            </placeName>&apos;s called for a steeple on the corner. It was never built.</p>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div n="20" type="page">
        <pb n="20"></pb>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e2551" rend="818,458,1340,1038">
            <graphic n="d1e2553" rend="818,458,1340,1038"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e2556" rend="58,246,1354,2142">
          <p n="d1e2564">
/ 7. All Sauls&apos; Chapel at  <forename>Peter</forename>&apos;s Cathedral</p>
          <p n="d1e2570">
In <date>1869</date> a new &quot;chapel-of-ease&quot; was opened on  for
the convenience of poor people who lived at &quot;The Bog&quot; in west end
<placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>

            </placeName> and couldn&apos;t afford the
pew rents at . <forename>Paul</forename>&apos;s <orgName>Parish Church</orgName>
on . The <forename>Harris</forename> family
transferred their attendance to the new
Church, which was dedicated to <placeName key="BAETQ">
              <settlement type="UnincorporatedArea">St.
Peter</settlement>
            </placeName>, and <forename>William</forename> was a member of
the first class confirmed in it that year.
In <date>1879</date> it was made the <orgName>Anglican
Cathedral</orgName> on the Island by the Right
<persName>
              <addName type="honorific">Reverend</addName>
              <forename>Hibbert</forename>
              <surname>Binney</surname>
            </persName>, who, as
Bishop of <placeName key="CBCBY">
              <region type="Province">Nova Scotia</region>
            </placeName>, had, by his
letters patent from the Crown,
episcopal jurisdiction in <placeName key="BAEXR">
              <region type="Province">Prince Edward Island</region>

            </placeName>. This removed it from
the control of the <forename>Rector</forename> of <forename>Charlotte</forename>, a &quot;low&quot; churchman opposed to
the Anglo-Catholic practices desired by many young people, as well as
by the Bishop himself. The consequence was the development of a
strong liturgical, musical and artistic tradition at <placeName key="BAETQ">
              <settlement type="UnincorporatedArea">St. Peter</settlement>
            </placeName>&apos;s, which
flourishes to <date>this day</date>.</p>
          <p n="d1e2655">
When the <persName>
              <addName type="honorific">Reverend</addName>
              <forename>George</forename>
              <forename>Hodgson</forename>
            </persName>, <placeName key="BAETQ">
              <settlement type="UnincorporatedArea">St. Peter</settlement>
            </placeName>&apos;s first priest, died in
<date>1844</date>
            <persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName> designed a small Chapel (above) in memory of
him and other deceased members. <persName>
              <forename>Robert</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName> painted memorial
pictures showing, left side, <forename>Dorcas</forename>,  <forename>Athanasius</forename>, . <forename>Jerome</forename>, 
<forename>Ambrose</forename>, . <forename>Augustine</forename>,  <forename>Chrysostom</forename>, . <forename>Gregory</forename>, and  <forename>Luke</forename>.
On the right side are <persName>
              <forename>Christ</forename>
              <surname>Calling</surname>
            </persName> . <forename>Andrew</forename>, the <persName>
              <forename>Morson</forename>
              <surname>
Children</surname>
            </persName>, The Martyrdom of . <forename>Stephen</forename>^ the <persName>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
              <surname>Family</surname>
            </persName> (shown
as a Holy Land family being blessed by <forename>Christ</forename>), and . <forename>James</forename>. Over
the entry, and under a window showing <forename>Christ</forename>&apos;s Resurrection, is
<forename>Robert</forename>&apos;s tribute to <forename>William</forename>, the Crucifixion of <forename>Christ</forename>. Three other
windows, by the English firms of Kemp and <forename>Morris</forename>, show, from the
left,  <forename>Michael</forename>,  <forename>Mary</forename>, and <forename>Christ</forename> the King. Dominating the
interior is one of <persName>
              <forename>Robert</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName>&apos;s finest paintings, the Ascending
<forename>Christ</forename>. There is a daily mass in the Chapel, preceded by Morning
Prayer, and Evensong is also said daily, at <date>5 p.m.</date> (<date>6 p.m.</date> on Sundays).</p>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div n="21" type="page">
        <pb n="21"></pb>
        <div n="d1e2724" rend="144,218,1454,1340">
          <p n="d1e2732">
12.  <forename>Peter</forename>&apos;s Rectory &amp; Cathedral Furniture</p>
          <p n="d1e2738">
In <date>1904</date> the five <placeName key="BAETQ">
              <settlement type="UnincorporatedArea">St. Peter</settlement>
            </placeName>&apos;s Cathedral Trustees* built a <orgName>Rectory</orgName> at  (below) to plans by <persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName>. Apart from the loss</p>
          <p n="d1e2748">
of a &quot;piano&quot; window on the west side and the addition of a garage the</p>
          <p n="d1e2754">
house remains very much as it was built.</p>
          <p n="d1e2760">
Inside the Cathedral <persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <surname></surname>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName>, while not its architect,
has contributed much to its
furnishing. He designed the
rood or chancel screen while
still an apprentice in Halifax in
<date>1873</date>, and the reredos, or altar
screen (below left), with its
characteristic <forename>Harris</forename> arched
niches for statues,  the pulpit</p>
          <p n="d1e2804">
(below right), and the stalls in the choir are his work.</p>
          <p n="d1e2810">
Hanging in the sacristy is the portrait <persName>
              <forename>Robert</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName> painted while</p>
          <p n="d1e2816">
he was still in his early 20s, and as yet without formal artistic training,</p>
          <p n="d1e2822">
of the Cathedral&apos;s founder, Bishop <persName>
              <forename>Hibbert</forename>
              <surname>Binney</surname>
            </persName>. Another portrait, of</p>
          <p n="d1e2828">
the <persName>
              <addName type="honorific">Reverend</addName>
              <forename>George</forename>
              <forename>Hodgson</forename>
            </persName>, who died in <date>1884</date>, is in storage at the</p>
          <p n="d1e2834">
            <orgName>Confederation Centre</orgName>
            <orgName>Gallery</orgName> awaiting restoration.</p>
        </div>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e2842" rend="164,538,788,1004">
            <graphic n="d1e2844" rend="164,538,788,1004"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e2847" rend="150,1428,808,1980">
            <graphic n="d1e2849" rend="150,1428,808,1980"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e2852" rend="884,1452,1334,1988">
            <graphic n="d1e2854" rend="884,1452,1334,1988"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e2857" rend="150,2020,1310,2120">
          <p n="d1e2863">
Because it was a Cathedral - and in order to safeguard its Anglo-Catholic character
- it did not have at that time a parochial corporation of rector, wardens and vestry.</p>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div n="22" type="page">
        <pb n="22"></pb>
        <div n="d1e2878" rend="72,242,1362,882">
          <p n="d1e2884">
13. Beaconsfield and The Priory</p>
          <p n="d1e2890">
A block west down  from  are two of
<persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName>&apos;s most interesting houses.</p>
          <p n="d1e2900">
The Priory (below right) is built of <forename>Wallace</forename> sandstone with red
Island stone facings. <forename>Harris</forename> is said to have modelled it on a Welsh
cottage - but its pillared piazza on the south side is pure Romanesque
Revival. Inside there is dark woodwork and stained glass. The
downstairs is designed for entertaining. Reception rooms open through
french doors to a &quot;living hall&apos; dominated by a curved staircase that
wraps around interior stairs connecting the maids&apos; rooms in the attic
with the kitchen in the back. The house was constructed in <date>1887</date> by
railway accountant <persName>
              <forename>Richard</forename>
              <forename>Jackson</forename>
            </persName> in an attempt, it is said, to lure</p>
        </div>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e2941" rend="90,894,1332,1338">
            <graphic n="d1e2943" rend="90,894,1332,1338"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e2946" rend="64,1386,1354,2126">
          <p n="d1e2952">
into matrimony a local lady who had proven difficult otherwise to
impress. When he was found to have diverted men and materials from
the railway to work on the house he left the province, and it became
the home of his mortgagee, <persName>
              <forename>James</forename>
              <surname>Beales</surname>
            </persName>.</p>
          <p n="d1e2970">
            <persName>
              <forename>James</forename>
              <surname>Peake</surname>
            </persName> had similar ill fortune with Beaconsfield (above left),
across the street from The Priory. After marrying the daughter of the
<persName>
              <addName type="honorific">Lieutenant</addName>
              <addName type="honorific">Governor</addName>
            </persName>, he engaged the fledgling architect <persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <surname></surname>
              <forename>Harris</forename>

            </persName> to design for him Charlottetown&apos;s most luxurious and expensive
house, in fashionable French Second Empire Style, which he built on a
splendid site facing the <addName type="honorific">Governor</addName>&apos;s mansion. Within 6 years of its
construction in <date>1877</date> he was bankrupt, and his mortgagee, the
parsimonious bachelor, <persName>
              <forename>Henry</forename>
              <surname>Cundall</surname>
            </persName>, moved in and made it his
home. Today it houses the <orgName>Prince Edward Island Museum</orgName> and
<orgName>Heritage Foundation</orgName>, and is filled with late Victorian antiques.</p>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div n="23" type="page">
        <pb n="23"></pb>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e3019" rend="1046,526,1146,666">
            <graphic n="d1e3021" rend="1046,526,1146,666"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e3024" rend="1020,676,1302,782">
          <p n="d1e3031">
&apos;pjsp-</p>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e3039" rend="122,216,1454,2126">
          <p n="d1e3051">
14. The Cottase fCaroma Tnd^) 4 The Qa&amp; HoMSg</p>
          <p n="d1e3057">
At  is The Cottage (right), built in <date>1894</date> to plans by</p>
          <p n="d1e3063">
            <persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <surname>Hams</surname>
            </persName> as a wedding present to</p>
          <p n="d1e3069">
            <persName>
              <forename>Frank</forename>
              <surname>Heartz</surname>
            </persName>   from   his   parents.   The                        <persName>
              <surname>i</surname>
            </persName>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e3075">
Cottage is a modest name for such a</p>
          <p n="d1e3082">
house, but similar villas being built at New</p>
          <p n="d1e3088">
            <placeName>
              <region>England</region>
            </placeName> seaside resorts at the time by</p>
          <p n="d1e3094">
millionaires    were     commonly    called</p>
          <p n="d1e3100">
cottages, so it was really a pretentious</p>
          <p n="d1e3106">
title. In <date>1914</date> it was bought by the <addName type="honorific">Premier</addName>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e3112">
of <placeName key="BAEXR">
              <region type="Province">Prince Edward Island</region>
            </placeName>, <persName>
              <forename type="initial">J.A.</forename>
              <surname>Mathieson</surname>
            </persName>.
Years later his daughters, <persName>
              <addName type="honorific">Mrs</addName>
              <forename>Campbell</forename>
            </persName> and <persName>
              <addName type="honorific">Mrs.</addName>
              <forename type="initial">.</forename>
              <forename>Rogers</forename>

            </persName>, turned it
into a guest house, renaming it Caroma <forename>Lodge</forename>, a title concocted out of
their married surnames. In recent years the exterior has been
splendidly restored by <addName type="honorific">Mr</addName> and <persName>
              <addName type="honorific">Mrs</addName>
              <forename>Keir</forename>
              <surname>Kenny</surname>
            </persName>. Note the sunburst
ornament in the gables on the  side. All now missing is
a part of the veranda, removed some years ago to allow more light into
the reception rooms. A beautiful arch and a fine &quot;crinoline&quot; staircase
were destroyed when the house was for a time subdivided into
apartments.</p>
          <p n="d1e3156">
The Clergy <orgName>House</orgName> (left), at , was built to <persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName>&apos;s
plans in <date>1877</date> for his pastor at <placeName key="BAETQ">
              <settlement type="UnincorporatedArea">St.
Peter</settlement>
            </placeName>&apos;s Cathedral, the <persName>
              <addName type="honorific">Rev.</addName>
              <forename>George</forename>
              <surname></surname>
              <forename>Hodgson</forename>

            </persName>. It served not only as a home
for him and his curates, but also as a
residence for the out-of-town students
and teachers of <placeName key="BAETQ">
              <settlement type="UnincorporatedArea">St. Peter</settlement>
            </placeName>&apos;s School that operated in association with the
Cathedral <date>from 1871 to 1932</date>. Father <forename>Hodgson</forename> died at the age of 44
eight months after marrying <persName>
              <forename>Gertrude</forename>
              <forename>Magdalene</forename>
              <surname>DesBrisay</surname>
            </persName>. She and
her four sisters, all widows, took up residence in the house. They were
known as &quot;The Holy <persName>
              <surname>Family</surname>
            </persName>&quot;, making their way daily to mass and
evensong at <date>All Souls&apos;</date> Chapel, built as a memorial to Father <forename>Hodgson</forename>
and others, many of them their relatives. The house <date>today</date> is divided
into apartments, and has lost much of its character by the application
of vinyl siding and other poorly informed changes.</p>
        </div>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e3226" rend="152,1290,648,1618">
            <graphic n="d1e3228" rend="152,1290,648,1618"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div n="24" type="page">
        <pb n="24"></pb>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e3234" rend="156,490,854,856">
            <graphic n="d1e3236" rend="158,490,750,500"></graphic>
            <graphic n="d1e3237" rend="156,500,854,856"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e3240" rend="134,224,1436,2064">
          <p n="d1e3251">
16. Two Terraces - <placeName key="BAAXO">
              <settlement type="UnincorporatedArea">Dundas</settlement>
            </placeName> and Wellner</p>
          <p n="d1e3257">
After the death of <persName>
              <forename>Owen</forename>
              <surname>Connolly</surname>
            </persName> his trustees erected  (below) in <date>1889</date>, a typical <persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName> design, and yet with
its own unique assembly of characteristic <forename>Harris</forename> elements.  The</p>
          <p n="d1e3271">
asymmetrical facade boasts
snub and hipped gables,
monumental chimneys, a
balcony, verandas with
spool           ornamentation,</p>
          <p n="d1e3293">
scalloped and straight
shingles, board and batten
cladding, and the flared
string courses common to Queen <persName>
              <forename>Anne</forename>
              <surname>Style</surname>

            </persName> buildings. The
architectural integrity of  has been maintained over
the years, and it remains <date>today</date> after 100 years one of the landmark
buildings of <placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName>.</p>
          <p n="d1e3324">
 (right), 55 - , shows some
of the same characteristics as
, but it was built 11
years later in <date>1900</date>. <forename>Harris</forename>&apos;s
treatment of verandas underwent
change in the meanwhile. Lathe-
turned ornament is gone, replaced
by horseshoe shaped openings
related to the umbrages within
which he set the front doors of
several of his  houses.  was built by
<persName>
              <forename type="initial">W.W.</forename>
              <surname>Wellner</surname>
            </persName> out of materials salvaged from the demolition of a 32
room hotel built in  in <date>1879</date> that had turned out to be a
financial disaster for its owner, <persName>
              <forename>Henry</forename>
              <surname>Coombs</surname>
            </persName>. <persName>
              <addName type="honorific">Mr.</addName>
              <surname>Wellner</surname>
            </persName> was <persName>
              <addName type="honorific">Mr.</addName>
              <surname>
Coombs</surname>
            </persName> mortgagee, and like <persName>
              <addName type="honorific">Mr.</addName>
              <surname>Cundall</surname>
            </persName> and <persName>
              <addName type="honorific">Mr.</addName>
              <surname>Beales</surname>
            </persName> before him,
came into possession of a building its builder failed to pay for.  was restored by <persName>
              <forename>Ron</forename>
              <forename>Cameron</forename>
            </persName> in <date>the early 1980s</date>. A scale
model of the building made from a photocopy of <forename>Harris</forename>&apos;s plans is
preserved at the <orgName>Confederation Centre</orgName>
            <persName>
              <forename>Art</forename>
              <surname>Gallery</surname>
            </persName>.</p>
        </div>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e3407" rend="860,1152,1408,1588">
            <graphic n="d1e3409" rend="860,1152,1408,1588"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div n="25" type="page">
        <pb n="25"></pb>
        <div n="d1e3415" rend="122,230,1432,2126">
          <p n="d1e3421">
18. </p>
          <p n="d1e3427">
About <date>1890</date>
            <persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName>, after having worked with property
owners for some time, and having seen how a number of them
prospered (with the exception of those like <persName>
              <forename>James</forename>
              <surname>Peake</surname>
            </persName> and
<persName>
              <forename>Alexander</forename>
              <surname>Coombs</surname>
            </persName> whose financial troubles we have already noted),
decided to go into property development for himself. He bought land
opposite the old exhibition ground on  and moved on to
it the old <orgName>Revere Hotel</orgName> from the foot of Great . The hotel
was very large, so he cut it in half, and made each half into a semi¬
detached dwelling, Nos. 24-26 and 28-. Buildings
were moved in those days by putting them on rollers and attaching
them by ropes to a capstan in the middle of the street that was turned
by a horse. <forename>William</forename> installed himself, his sister <forename>Sarah</forename>, and his parents
into No. 24, his brother <forename>Tom</forename> and his wife <forename>Etta</forename> and their four children
into No. 26, and his sister <forename>Maggie</forename> and her husband, <persName>
              <forename>Will</forename>
              <surname>Cotton</surname>
            </persName>
(publisher of <placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName>&apos;s daily paper, The Examiner), and their
seven children into No. 30. <forename>Tom</forename>&apos;s business partner, <persName>
              <forename type="initial">W.H.</forename>
              <forename>Stewart</forename>

            </persName>,
bought the lot on the corner in <date>1891</date> and built on it a house, No. 22,
designed by <forename>William</forename>, that had an umbrage and holey bargeboards. The
Harrises called No. 24  <forename>Villa</forename>, so No. 22 became 
Cottage. As you can see from the picture the name <placeName key="BABHS">
              <settlement type="UnincorporatedArea">Hawthorne</settlement>
            </placeName> was
most appropriate, for within a few years the property was smothered in
creeper. <persName>
              <surname>Houses</surname>
            </persName> with creepers are difficult to paint, and present
problems in maintenance. But they appealed to lovers of the
Picturesque a hundred years ago. <persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName> always drew creepers
in his architectural drawings of exterior elevations.</p>
          <p n="d1e3533">
On the next corner, in <date>1903</date>, <persName>
              <forename>Harold</forename>
              <surname>Jenkitis</surname>
            </persName> built hihtself a house
(No. 36) to a <persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName> design with cottier buttresses (like the
buttress On <placeName key="BAETQ">
              <settlement type="UnincorporatedArea">St. Peter</settlement>
            </placeName>&apos;s <orgName>Rectory</orgName>) and an umbrage (like the umbrage on
 Cottage). Unfortunately, the umbrage was later filled in
with a Colonial Style doorway appropriate to a different style of
architecture. <persName>
              <addName type="honorific">Mr.</addName>
              <surname>Jenkin</surname>
            </persName>&apos;s claim to fame is that he coined the word
groceteria.</p>
          <p n="d1e3564">
In <date>1892</date>
            <persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName> moved the old Weeks house on , in which he and his parents had lived since <date>1880</date>, to No. 32 -
, turning it into a duplex. It was later the home of</p>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div n="26" type="page">
        <pb n="26"></pb>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e3583" rend="152,642,780,1150">
            <graphic n="d1e3585" rend="152,642,780,1150"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e3588" rend="128,224,1432,2118">
          <p n="d1e3597">
20. More  <persName>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
              <surname>Houses</surname>
            </persName>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e3603">
No.  (below) provides yet another example of a
handsome <forename>Harris</forename> house turned into apartments that has lost some part
of its architectural character by reason of unsympathetic modification.
The house was built in <date>1896</date> by Sherriff <persName>
              <forename>Ewen</forename>
              <surname>MacDougall</surname>
            </persName>, and it
boasted an open balcony, an umbrage at the front door, and a couple of
shed roofs as labels over windows. Some years ago the house was</p>
          <p n="d1e3630">
damaged by fire; an abusive
husband set it on fire in order
to harm his wife, who lived in
one of the apartments. The roof
was destroyed and had to be
replaced; unfortunately, it was
rebuilt without the snub gables.
Down at the far end of
 on a site
overlooking <placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName>
harbour and the <geogName key="BADUS" type="River">
              <name>North River</name>
            </geogName>,
<persName>
              <forename>Frederick</forename>
              <forename type="initial">W.</forename>
              <surname>Hyndman</surname>
            </persName> in <date>1877</date> built a house known variously as
Watermere or Windermere (below). Contemporary with Beaconsfield,
Westbourne, and the Clergy <orgName>House</orgName>, it shares no similarity of features
with any of these, or with <forename>Harris</forename>&apos;s later buildings. The 23 year old
architect had yet to develop his own distinctive style. The house is
<forename>Harris</forename>&apos;s only essay in a familiar Island type, the L-shaped farmhouse.
When the house was under construction a passerby remarked to <forename>Harris</forename>
that it looked &quot;odd&quot;; he replied, &quot;Have you ever seen an egg that
looked like a chicken?&quot; At the time it was built, Watermere was
outside town. <persName>
              <addName type="honorific">Mrs.</addName>
              <surname>Hyndman</surname>
            </persName> didn&apos;t like the isolation and persuaded
her husband to move back into town.
Their son, Eardley, grew up and married
<persName>
              <forename>Winnifred</forename>
              <surname>Cotton</surname>
            </persName>, the daughter of
<forename>William</forename> and <forename>Robert</forename>
            <forename>Harris</forename>&apos;s sister,
<persName>
              <forename>Margaret</forename>
              <forename>Ellin</forename>
            </persName> (or <forename>Maggie</forename>, as she was
called). <persName>
              <forename type="initial">F.W.</forename>
              <surname>Hyndman</surname>
            </persName> was founder of
the <placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName> insurance firm,
<orgName>Hyndman &amp; Company</orgName>.</p>
        </div>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e3754" rend="942,1744,1394,2104">
            <graphic n="d1e3756" rend="942,1744,1394,2104"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div n="27" type="page">
        <pb n="27"></pb>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e3762" rend="870,580,1418,1032">
            <graphic n="d1e3764" rend="870,580,1418,1014"></graphic>
            <graphic n="d1e3765" rend="884,1014,1418,1032"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e3768" rend="132,228,1448,2126">
          <p n="d1e3779">
22. Big and Little Sisters on  Road</p>
          <p n="d1e3785">
In <date>1888</date>
            <persName>
              <forename>Justice</forename>
              <forename type="initial">J.H.</forename>
              <surname>Peters</surname>
            </persName> built a large house at 121 
Road (below right) to plans drawn by <persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName> as a wedding gift
for his son. The design of the house indicated the direction <forename>Harris</forename>&apos;s
style would take in the future. It is the first of his houses to have the
semi-hipped or snub gables, and the holey bargeboards, that became
signatures of his style. Originally
the veranda spread around the semi-
octagonal ell on the left hand side.
The house was set back from the
road and is approached by a short
carriage drive. In <date>1913</date> it was
bought by <persName>
              <forename>Arthur</forename>
              <forename type="initial">G.</forename>
              <surname>Peake</surname>
            </persName>. Today it
serves as a popular bed and
breakfast hotel.</p>
          <p n="d1e3845">
At the corner of 
Road and  is
the cottage <persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName>
drew for his nephew <persName>
              <forename>Robert</forename>
              <surname>
Cotton</surname>
            </persName> in <date>1904</date> (left). It is
influenced by the American
architect <persName>
              <forename type="initial">H.H.</forename>
              <surname>Richardson</surname>
            </persName>&apos;s
Shingle Style, a fact less
apparent now that it has been
sheathed in imitation stone and
clapboard. In <date>1910</date>
            <forename>Robert</forename> and <forename>William</forename>
            <forename>Harris</forename> and their siblings added
the extension shown on the right in the photograph to serve as The
<persName>
              <surname>Family</surname>
            </persName> Room. It housed <forename>Harris</forename> family memorabilia in a kind of
museum. The collection was to remain intact in perpetuity under the
care of the senior male of the <forename>Harris</forename> name. But when <persName>
              <forename>Margaret</forename>
              <forename>Ellin</forename>
              <surname></surname>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
              <surname>Cotton</surname>
            </persName>, <persName>
              <forename>Robert</forename>
              <surname>Cotton</surname>
            </persName>&apos;s mother, died in <date>1944</date> the house was
sold and the collection was divided among descendants. Some
important items went to the <persName>
              <forename>Robert</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
              <surname>Memorial</surname>
            </persName>
            <orgName>Gallery</orgName> built on
Queen&apos;s Square after the death of <persName>
              <forename>Robert</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName>&apos;s widow, <forename>Bessie</forename>, in
<date>1928</date>. They eventually found their way into The <orgName>Confederation Centre</orgName>
of the Arts <orgName>Gallery</orgName> and Museum.</p>
        </div> 
       <div>
          <figure n="d1e3936" rend="158,1080,792,1522">
            <graphic n="d1e3938" rend="158,1080,792,1522"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div n="28" type="page">
        <pb n="28"></pb>
        <div n="d1e3944" rend="248,12,548,102">
          <p n="d1e3950">
7R3<persName>
              <surname>D</surname>
            </persName>98</p>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div n="29" type="page">
        <pb n="29"></pb>
        <div n="d1e3962" rend="150,206,1282,286">
          <p n="d1e3968">
The <placeName key="BAARG">
              <settlement type="City">Charlottetown</settlement>
            </placeName> of <forename>William</forename> and <forename>Robert</forename>
            <forename>Harris</forename>
          </p>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e3976" rend="110,294,1194,356">
          <p n="d1e3982">
by <persName>
              <forename>Robert</forename>
              <forename type="initial">C.</forename>
              <surname>Tuck</surname>
            </persName>, published by  Books, <persName>
              <forename>Charlottetown,</forename>
              <forename type="initial">P.E.I.</forename>
            </persName>
          </p>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e3990" rend="72,352,1350,496">
          <p n="d1e3998">
            <persName>
              <surname>i</surname>

            </persName> mix of architectural history, gossip and anecdote, this little book will fit in your
pocket as you roam the streets of the <placeName key="BAEXR">
              <region type="Province">Prince Edward Island</region>
            </placeName> capital spotting the 39
<persName>
              <forename>William</forename>
              <forename>Harris</forename>
            </persName> designed churches, business blocks, tenements and dwelling houses.</p>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e4014" rend="48,480,446,2006">
          <p n="d1e4021">
            <date>1877</date>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e4027">
Beaconsfield</p>
          <p n="d1e4033">
Westbourne*</p>
          <p n="d1e4039">
The Clergy <orgName>House</orgName>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e4045">
Watermere</p>
          <p n="d1e4052">
(Kirk of . <forename>James</forename>)</p>
          <p n="d1e4058">
            <date>1879</date>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e4064">
Houle <orgName>House</orgName>*</p>
          <p n="d1e4070">
            <date>1880</date>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e4076">
            <persName>
              <forename>Charlotte</forename>
              <surname>Residence</surname>
            </persName>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e4082">
            <date>1881</date>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e4089">
MacLennan <orgName>House</orgName>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e4095">
            <date>1885</date>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e4101">
            <persName>
              <forename>Cameron</forename>
              <surname>Block</surname>
            </persName>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e4107">
Newson <persName>
              <surname>Block</surname>
            </persName>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e4113">
            <date>1886</date>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e4119">
Hogan <persName>
              <surname>Block</surname>
            </persName>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e4126">
            <persName>
              <forename type="initial">J.D.</forename>
              <surname>MacLeod</surname>
            </persName>
            <orgName>House</orgName>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e4132">
            <date>1887</date>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e4138">
 . <orgName>House</orgName>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e4144">
The Priory</p>
          <p n="d1e4150">
The Cooperage</p>
          <p n="d1e4156">
            <date>1888</date>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e4163">
            <orgName>House</orgName>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e4169">
. <forename>Paul</forename>&apos;s <orgName>Rectory</orgName>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e4175">
            <date>All Souls&apos;</date> Chapel</p>
          <p n="d1e4181">
            <date>1889</date>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e4187">
Connolly Building</p>
          <p n="d1e4193"></p>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e4201" rend="636,490,1196,2008">
          <p n="d1e4208">
            <date>1891</date>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e4214">
            <forename>Villa</forename> A
<placeName key="BABHS">
              <settlement type="UnincorporatedArea">Hawthorne</settlement>
            </placeName>
            <persName>
              <forename>Villa</forename>
              <surname>B
Hawthorne</surname>
            </persName> Cottage
<date>1892</date>
            <persName>
              <forename>Major</forename>
              <surname>Weeks</surname>
            </persName>
            <orgName>House</orgName>
            <forename>Lodge</forename>
            <persName>
              <forename type="initial">E.J.</forename>
              <forename>Hodgson</forename>
              <surname>Library</surname>
            </persName>
            <date>1895</date>
The Cottage/Caroma <persName>
              <forename>Lodge</forename>
              <forename type="initial">
R.</forename>
              <forename>Moore</forename>
              <surname>House</surname>
            </persName>
. <forename>Paul</forename>&apos;s Church
<date>1896</date>
            <persName>
              <forename type="initial">J.</forename>
              <forename>MacMillan</forename>
              <surname>House</surname>
            </persName>
Sheriff  <orgName>House</orgName>
            <persName>
              <forename>Rogers</forename>
              <surname>Warehouse</surname>
            </persName>
1900</p>
          <p n="d1e4282">
Wellner Terrace
Central <forename>Christian</forename> Church
<persName>
              <forename>John</forename>
              <forename type="initial">D.</forename>
              <forename>Reid</forename>
              <surname>House</surname>
            </persName>
            <date>1901</date>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e4300">
DesBrisay <persName>
              <surname>Block</surname>
            </persName>
            <date>1903</date>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e4310">
            <persName>
              <forename type="initial">R.H.</forename>
              <forename>Jenkins</forename>
              <surname>House</surname>
            </persName>
Beales <orgName>House</orgName>
            <date>1904</date>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e4325">
            <persName>
              <surname>Family</surname>
            </persName> Room <orgName>House</orgName>
            <placeName key="BAETQ">
              <settlement type="UnincorporatedArea">St. Peter</settlement>
            </placeName>&apos;s <orgName>Rectory</orgName>
          </p>
          <p n="d1e4335">
*Not shown in the text</p>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div n="30" type="page">
        <pb n="30"></pb>
        <div n="d1e4346" rend="0,0,42,38">
          <p n="d1e4352"></p>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e4358" rend="342,298,1072,494">
          <p n="d1e4364">
            <persName>
              <surname>COLLECTION</surname>
            </persName>
            <persName>
              <surname>LIBRARY</surname>
            </persName> OF <persName>
              <forename type="initial">U.RE</forename>
            </persName>.L</p>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e4376" rend="428,684,1102,1096">
          <p n="d1e4383"></p>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e4389" rend="300,1010,778,1158">
          <p n="d1e4395">
*»&quot;&amp;</p>
        </div>
        <div n="d1e4403" rend="228,1776,960,1872">
          <p n="d1e4409">
            <persName>
              <surname>LIBRARY</surname>
            </persName> USE ONLY</p>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div n="31" type="page">
        <pb n="31"></pb>
        <div>
          <figure n="d1e4420" rend="0,0,1518,2493">
            <graphic n="d1e4422" rend="0,0,1518,2493"></graphic>
          </figure>
        </div>
      </div>
    </body>
  </text>
</TEI>

