HomeMy WebLinkAboutBy-law 6691/06
THE CORPORATION OF THE CITY OF PICKERING
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BY-LAW NO 6691/06
Being a by-law to designate the property and buildings
at 1505 Whitevale Road, lot 21, Concession 4, (Willson
House) as being of historical and architechtural value or
interest.
WHEREAS authority was granted by Council to designate the property and
buildings at 1505 Whitevale Road, (Willson House) as being of cultural heritage
value or interest; and
WHEREAS the Ontario Heritage Act authorizes the Council of the municipality to
enact by-laws to designate real property, including all the buildings and structures
thereon, to be of cultural heritage value or interest; and
WHEREAS the Council of the City of Pickering has caused to be served upon the
owners of the land and premises known as 1505 Whitevale Road and upon the
Ontario Heritage Foundation, Notice of Intention to designate the property and
has caused the Notice of Intention to be published in a newspaper having a
general circulation in the municipality as required by the Ontario Heritage Act,
and
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WHEREAS the reasons for designation are set out in Schedule 'A' to this by-law;
and
WHEREAS no notice of objection to the proposed designation was served upon
the Clerk of the municipality.
NOW THEREFORE THE COUNCil OF THE CORPORATION OF THE CITY OF
PICKERING ENACTS AS FOllOWS:
1. The property at 1505 Whitevale Road, more particularly described in
Schedule 'B' is designated as being of cultural heritage value or interest.
2. The City Solicitor is hereby authorized to cause a copy of this by-law to be
registered against the property described in Schedule 'B' to this by-law in
the property land Registry Office. .
3. The City Clerk is authorized to cause a copy of this by-law to be served
upon the owners of the property at 1505 Whitevale Road and upon the
Ontario Heritage Foundation and to cause notice of this by-law to be
published in a newspaper having general circulation in the City of
Pickering as required by the Ontario Heritage Act.
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By-law read a First, Second and Third time and finally passed this 24th day of
July, 2006.
David Ryan r
Bv-Iaw 6691/06
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Schedule 'A'
Reasons for Desionation
Willson House
1505 Whitevale Road
The Willson house is one of the earliest surviving farmhouses in Pickering. The
Willson family descendents were successful, contributing members of Pickering
society, and participated in th,e maturing of the township.
The building dates to 1861, and is a classic example of an Ontario vernacular
farmhouse. The exterior is Georgian in form, while the interior is representative
of the mid 19th century, with a Greek revival sensibility.
The Willson House is of contextual significance as. one of the earliest farmhouses
in the Township. The remaining cultural landscape in the vicinity of the house
and two acre property currently enables the original context to remain partially
intact.
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Cultural Heritaqe Value: On October 16, 1843, Casper Willson purchased 50
acres in Lot 21, Concession 5 of the Township of Pickering from F.W. Heward,
who had obtained a Crown Grant of 200 acres on September 24, 1840. The
1851 census showed Casper living on this property in a one-story frame house.
The one and a half story brick clad house was built in 1861 as an addition to the
front of the frame house. The original frame stood until the mid 1940's and was
used as a kitchen, utility room and woodshed for the brick house. The property
was passed on to Edward Willson in 1882, to Marie (Willson) Gannon in 1938, to
Donald Willson in 1949 and, in part, to Douglas Willson in 1986, remaining in the
Willson family until 2001.
Born in 1814, Casper was the second child, and first son, of Asher and Susannah
Willson, who settled land along Concession 5, Lot 22 in February, 1832 (the
house is still located on the north side of Concession 5 to the west of this
property). In Home District, Upper Canada on April 2, 1839, Casper married
Elizabeth Hubbard (the granddaughter of Thomas Hubbard, one of the earliest
and influential settlers in Pickering Township). They were married by Rev. Israel
Marsh, pastor of second Baptist Church, Whitby, Ontario and witnessed by
Thomas Hubbard and Nancy Sharrard. Elizabeth Hubbard was born in 1821.
She and Casper had seven children.
In addition to farming the land, raising livestock and crops, Casper played a
significant role in community life; elected as a deacon of the Christian Church in
1842, became a charter member of the Sons of Temperance in 1850, was the
r- superintendent of the Sunday School as early as 1851 and for many years after,
and elected Committee-man for Ward 4 of the Pickering Agricultural Society in
1851. Elizabeth was active as a Sunday school teacher; she owned one of the
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first Bell organs in the community and loved to entertain. Their son, Edward (who
was Township Assessor for many years) took over the farm before Casper's
death and continued to farm the land until his son; Warren (who lived on Lot 20,
Concession 4) took over the farm chores.
The Willson family members have played key roles in Pickering Township's
history. Casper's father, Asher Willson, served as Pathmaster in the early
1800's. Asher, along with two of his sons, Joseph and William, were involved in
the 1837 rebellion and were imprisoned for their participation. Casper died in
1888 and is buried, along with other family members in the Brougham Cemetery.
Douglas Willson, the last descendant to live in the home, was born on February
1, 1923 in Toronto, Ontario. He served in the military from 1942 to 1946 in the
R.C.A.F. as a Radar Mechanic .and was stationed in Gander, Newfoundland
(overseas). In 1988, he restored and renovated the house, where he and his
wife Margaret Phyllis Willson (new Campbell) lived until 2001. The Willson
descendants have been successfuf, contributing members of society, many
remaining in Pickering or the area - a true and lasting connection to the heritage
of Pickering Township.
The 1994 (Hough Stansbury) inventory report rates this property as a Class A,
the highest possible score.
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Heritage Attributes: The one and one-half storey brick house at 1505 Whitevale
Road was built in 1861. Prior to that, form ca. 1843 to 1861, they had lived in a
single-storey, frame, neo-Classical house on the same lot. This latter structure
became the kitchen, utility rooms and woodshed for the new brick house.
'Features such as the segmentally arched window and door openings, the centre
gable with lancet window, finial and pendant would have probably been added at
that time (1861}...dicoromatic with quoins and arches picked out of buff brick.'
(Hough Stansbury Inventory, 1994) .Gasper Willson's grandfather-in-law, Casper
Staats (also referred to as Stotts), was United Empire Loyalist. Yet the house
built in 1861 reflects the fact that the two main streams of immigration into Upper
Canada were melding into an Ontario identity.
The 1994 inventory describes the interior:
The interior features entry directly into the parlor where a wide enclosed stair
leads via a winder section of the second storey. The formal dining roorn is
entered through the doorway directly to the west of the main door. The wood trim
is largely intact and features broad mouled door and window casings; a
wainscoted dado of beaded boards in the parlor (to which the window casings
finish) and a separate paneled dado treatment for the windows in the dining room
with casing extending to the floor to which the high bases finish. The doors are
of four-paneled design.
This remains an accurate description of the interior of the property.
.r- To quote Marion MacRae and Anthony Adamson, 'The little vernacular house,
still stubbornly Georgian in form and wearing its little gable with brave gaiety
became the abiding image of the province. It was to be the Ontario Classic style.
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In plan this house is derivative of American copy-books, i.e. axial, stable virtuous;
but the elements which push the design towards the picturesque are the
polychrome~patterned brick details from industrial and lower-middle class Gothic
Revival usages in northern England, southern Scotland and Ulster.' As Alan
Gowans has written, so ...six years before Confederation the Willsons had had
built for them an Ontario Classic style house in which they and two succeeding
generations would live (the earlier, neo Classical structure was replaced in 1988
with the extant entrance and family room). Situated on a knoll and facing the
road as the house does, and with protecting trees around it, the house placement
harks back to Casper's boyhood home at 1390 Whitevale Road.
In conclusion, of particular note are the high quality of the polychrome brickwork,
the brick themselves which reportedly were kilned nearby and are of a
remarkably uniform colour, the shutters which appear identical to those in the
1880 oil painting, the gently arched window heads, the roof-top finial, and the two
entrance doors of the 1861 house with their distinguishing arched-head
transoms.
A number of images of the house have been preserved, for example: an 1880
painting of the Willson House by Southworth; a 1908 photograph of the Christian
Ladies' Aid Social Evening. .
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The house and grounds should be preserved to enable this significant heritage
building to remain, at least partially, in its original contextual environment, that of
an early example of an Ontario farmhouse.
This house and the remaining property (2 remaining acres of the original 50
acres) deserve designation as a heritage site for the architectural merit and for
the long and well-documented contribution of an original settler family of
Pickering. Of particular significance is the continued dedication to the
preservation of this property, in spite of expropriation, the Willsons remained loyal
to their heritage. The Willson family and their descendants participated in the
beginning and the maturing of the Pickering Township.
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Bv-Iaw 6691/06
Schedule 'B'
Legal Description
Willson House
1505 Whitevale Road
Part Lot 21, Concession 4,
Part 1, Plan 40R-9437