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HomeMy WebLinkAbout940 Whitevale Road (PLN 10-16) CULTURAL HERITAGE PROPERTY EVALUATION REPORT: 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering, Ontario SUBMITTED TO: The City of Pickering One The Esplanade Pickering, Ontario L1V 6K7 November 10, 2015 SUBMITTED BY: Laurie Smith Heritage Consulting 4 Bullock Avenue Ottawa, Ontario K1S 1G8 613-863-8852 laurie@smithheritage.ca In partnership with: Amy Barnes Consulting and Chris Uchiyama Heritage Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e i Table of Contents 1 Introduction to the Site ............................................................................................................................. 1 2 Methodology .............................................................................................................................................. 4 3 Policy Framework ....................................................................................................................................... 5 4 Historical Context ....................................................................................................................................... 7 5 Architecture and Design ........................................................................................................................ 10 5.1 Stone House ......................................................................................................................................... 13 5.1.1 Interior ........................................................................................................................................... 16 5.1.2 Basement ..................................................................................................................................... 20 5.2 Stone Kitchen Tail ................................................................................................................................ 21 5.3 Stone Wood Shed ............................................................................................................................... 22 5.4 Stone Outbuilding ............................................................................................................................... 22 5.5 Wooden Outbuilding ......................................................................................................................... 22 5.6 Cultural Landscape ............................................................................................................................ 23 5.7 Archaeological Resources ................................................................................................................ 24 6 Contextual Background ......................................................................................................................... 25 7 Heritage Evaluation ................................................................................................................................. 26 7.1 Design or Physical Value ................................................................................................................... 26 7.2 Historic/Associative Value ................................................................................................................. 27 7.3 Contextual Value ................................................................................................................................ 29 7.4 Statement of Significance ................................................................................................................ 29 7.4.1 Description of Property .............................................................................................................. 29 7.4.2 Statement of Cultural Heritage Value .................................................................................... 30 7.4.3 Heritage Attributes ..................................................................................................................... 31 8 Recommendations .................................................................................................................................. 32 9 Sources ...................................................................................................................................................... 33 Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e ii List of Figures Figure 1: 940 Whitevale Road, Location and Boundary of Property Parcel (City of Pickering, 2015) .............................................................................................................................................................................. 2 Figure 2: 940 Whitevale Road, Context (Base map source: Google Earth Pro, 2015) ......................... 3 Figure 3: Front elevation of 940 Whitevale Road (CU, 2015). ................................................................... 3 Figure 4: 940 Whitevale Road, Current Conditions (Base map source: Google Earth, 2015) ............ 4 Figure 5: 940 Whitevale Road, shown on an excerpt from the 1877 Map of Pickering Township (Base map source: J.H. Beers & Co., 1877) .................................................................................................. 9 Figure 6: Facade of the stone house at 940 Whitevale Road. (CU, 2015) ........................................... 10 Figure 7: East elevation, with main house, kitchen tail and woodshed. (CU, 2015) .......................... 10 Figure 8: A modern vestibule at the rear of the stone woodshed. (CU, 2015) ................................... 11 Figure 9: West elevation with wood shed, kitchen and house. (CU, 2015).......................................... 11 Figure 10: Stone outbuilding. (CU, 2015) ..................................................................................................... 12 Figure 11: Modern wooden outbuilding. (CU, 2015) ................................................................................ 12 Figure 12: Detail of front door showing transom and sidelights and original wooden door (CU, 2015). ................................................................................................................................................................. 14 Figure 13: Detail of stone quoins, gable roof end with returning eaves (CU, 2015). .......................... 14 Figure 14: Centre gable with Gothic window and ghosting from former portico. (CU, 2015)......... 15 Figure 15: Gothic window from Bentley House in Brougham, Ontario (Parks Canada, 1973) ......... 15 Figure 16: East elevation, with chimney, return eaves and 6/6 windows. (CU, 2015) ....................... 16 Figure 17: 940 Whitevale Road (date unknown), showing former portico (Ancestry.com, 2015). . 16 Figure 18: Detail of balustrade from second level (CU, 2015). ............................................................... 17 Figure 19: Details of interior of original front wooden door (CU, 2015). ................................................ 17 Figure 20: Parlor room showing window casements and fireplace. (CU, 2015) ................................. 18 Figure 21: Interior of Gothic window. (CU, 2015) ....................................................................................... 18 Figure 22: Detail of wooden door casings and threshold to stone kitchen. (CU, 2015) .................... 19 Figure 23: Detail of white washed stone wall of basement interior. (CU, 2015) .................................. 20 Figure 24: Detail of flooring and support beams, basement interior. (CU, 2015) ............................... 20 Figure 25: Interior of kitchen tail, showing eastern entrance. (CU, 2015) ............................................. 21 Figure 26: Stone woodshed as seen from former orchard. (CU, 2015) ................................................ 22 Figure 27: Details of landscape and layout of property in 2005. (Shearer, p. 14) .............................. 23 List of Tables Table 1: Factors Indicating Archaeological Potential or Lack of Archaeological Potential ........... 24 Table 2 - Evaluation of the Cultural Heritage Value or Interest of 940 Whitevale Road as Per O.Reg. 9/06 Criteria 1. i., ii., and iii ................................................................................................................ 27 Table 3 - Evaluation of the Cultural Heritage Value or Interest of 940 Whitevale Road as Per O.Reg. 9/06 Criteria 2. i., ii., and iii ................................................................................................................ 28 Table 4 - Evaluation of the Cultural Heritage Value or Interest of 940 Whitevale Road as Per O.Reg. 9/06 Criteria 3. i., ii., and iii ................................................................................................................ 29 Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 1 1 Introduction to the Site Laurie Smith Heritage Consulting, in partnership with Amy Barnes Consulting and Chris Uchiyama Heritage, was retained by the City of Pickering in April, 2015 to undertake a Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation of the property listed as 940 Whitevale Road in Pickering, Ontario. The property, also known as the John Major House, is located east of the hamlet of Whitevale, on the north side of Whitevale Road, in the City of Pickering, Ontario. It is a rectangular parcel, .56 hectares (1.38 acres) in area, comprising part of Lot 26, Concession V, Pickering Township (Figure 1). The property is surrounded by agricultural lands to the north and west (Figure 2). The property includes three buildings: a one-and-a-half storey, stone house built c. 1860, a small stone outbuilding of unknown date, and a modern, wood-frame, double garage. The house is built of fieldstone, squared and coursed on the façade and more roughly coursed rubble stone on the side elevations. It has two extensions at the rear, both built of heavily mortared, roughly coursed fieldstone: a one-and-a-half-storey kitchen tail and beyond that a one-storey woodshed (Figure 4). The house has a five-bay, symmetrical facade, a wide, central doorcase with sidelights and transom, and a side-gable roof. The ostensibly Georgian design is augmented by two decidedly Gothic touches that reflect its date of construction: an unusually wide centre gable over the entrance and a wide, elliptically arched window with Gothic tracery in the gable. Although it is referred to as the John Major House, the house was most likely built by his grandson, William Henry Major (1822-1899), around 1860, almost 30 years after John Major’s death. The property remained in the Major family for more than a hundred years. The house and outbuildings are surrounded by a grassed lawn and many mature coniferous and deciduous trees. The house is well set back from the road and is hidden by the many trees and shrubs. A gravel laneway runs north from Whitevale Road to the wooden outbuilding, along the east side of the house (Figure 4). The property is currently owned by the Province of Ontario and is managed by Ontario Infrastructure and Lands Corporation (“OILC”). It is listed in the City of Pickering Municipal Heritage Register (2008) and is included in the Whitevale Heritage Conservation District, which was designated under Part V of the Ontario Heritage Act in 1993 (By-law 4074-92, 1993). Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 2 Figure 1: 940 Whitevale Road, Location and Boundary of Property Parcel (City of Pickering, 2015) LAURIE SMITH HERITAGE CONSULTING 940 Whitevale Road CON 5 S PT LOT 26 NOW RP 40R24276 PART 12 PIN: 26386-0113 Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 3 Figure 2: 940 Whitevale Road, Context (Base map source: Google Earth Pro, 2015) Figure 3: Front elevation of 940 Whitevale Road (CU, 2015). Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 4 Figure 4: 940 Whitevale Road, Current Conditions (Base map source: Google Earth, 2015) 2 Methodology This cultural heritage evaluation was conducted using the criteria in O.Reg. 9/06 under the Ontario Heritage Act. The evaluation was based on information contained in previous reports on the site, additional historical research, and a site visit of the property. The City of Pickering excluded public and stakeholder consultation from the consultant contract, except for the purposes of historical research. The heritage value of the property has previously been examined in the following reports (listed chronologically): • Unterman McPhail Heritage Resource Consultants, The Hamlet of Whitevale Heritage Conservation District Study: Background Report. Prepared for the Town of Pickering, August 1989. • Hough, Stansbury, Woodland, Naylor, Dance Limited – Prime Consultants, D.R. Poulton & Associates – Archaeological Assessments and Excavations, André Scheinman – Heritage Preservation Consultant, Seaton Cultural Heritage Resources Assessment: Technical Appendix. Report prepared for the Seaton Interim Planning Team, Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing, July 1994. Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 5 • André Scheinman, Seaton Built Heritage Assessment. Prepared for the North Pickering Land Exchange Team, Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing, Planning and Development Division, November 2004. • Contentworks Inc., Thematic Study and Phase 1 Evaluation of ORC Properties in Pickering. Prepared for Ontario Realty Corporation, March 2009. • Contentworks Inc., Phase II Evaluation of Residences on Whitevale Road, Pickering. Report prepared for the Ontario Realty Corporation, March 2009. • Bray Heritage, Seaton Neighbourhood Planning Background Report: Whitevale Road Heritage Corridor Review. Report prepared for the City of Pickering, May 2010. Sources for additional historical research are noted in the “Sources” section at the end of this document. An exterior and interior site visit was undertaken on June 16, 2015 by Amy Barnes, M.A. and Chris Uchiyama, M.A. 3 Policy Framework In Ontario, the Provincial Policy Statement 2014 (“PPS 2014”), issued under s. 3 of the Planning Act, provides policy direction on matters of provincial interest related to land use planning and development.1 Land use planning decisions made by municipalities, planning boards, the Province, or a commission or agency of the government must be consistent with the PPS 2014.2 The PPS 2014 provides that “significant built heritage resources and significant cultural heritage landscapes shall be conserved” and “development and site alteration shall not be permitted on lands containing archaeological resources or areas of archaeological potential unless significant archaeological resources have been conserved”.3 “Significant” means “resources that have been determined to have cultural heritage value or interest for the important contribution they make to our understanding of the history of a place, an event, or a people.”4 These resources and landscapes are conserved through their “identification, protection, management and use…..in a manner that ensures their cultural heritage value or interest is retained under the Ontario Heritage Act.”5 Part IV of the Ontario Heritage Act (“OHA”) permits municipalities to designate individual properties that are of cultural heritage value or interest, based on criteria set out in Ont. Reg. 9/06.6 Designation is done by by-law and includes a description of the property and a statement explaining the cultural heritage value or interest of the property and a description of the heritage attributes of the property. Part V of the OHA permits municipalities to designate 1 PPS 2014, Part I: Preamble. 2 PPS 2014, Part III: How to Read the Provincial Policy Statement. 3 PPS 2014, s. 2.6.1 and 2.6.2. 4 PPS 2014, s. 6.0, Definitions, at p. 49. 5 PPS 2014, s. 6.0, Definitions, at p. 40. 6 OHA, Part IV, s. 29. Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 6 heritage conservation districts consisting of multiple properties, and adopt a district plan for managing change.7 A property that is included in an area designated as a heritage conservation district may subsequently be individually designated under Part IV.8 Municipalities must keep a register of property that is of cultural heritage value or interest. In addition to designated properties, the register may include other property that the municipality believes to be of cultural heritage value or interest.9 The OHA provides processes for a municipality to approve proposed alterations, demolition or removal of resources on designated properties or within a heritage conservation district, and requires notice be given to a municipality for proposed alterations, demolition or removal of resources on non-designated properties listed on the register.10 Part IV OHA (individual property designation by municipalities) and Part V OHA (heritage conservation district designation) do not apply to property that is owned by the provincial government or by a prescribed public body.11 OILC is a prescribed public body.12 However, municipalities are not prevented from including properties owned by the provincial government or a prescribed public body in the municipal register of non-designated properties.13 Heritage properties owned or occupied by the provincial government or prescribed public bodies are subject to the Standards & Guidelines for Conservation of Provincial Heritage Properties (“the provincial S&Gs”), a set of guidelines issued by the Minister of Tourism, Culture and Sport in 2010.14 The provincial S&Gs require provincial ministries and agencies to establish and maintain a cultural heritage conservation policy and procedures to identify, manage and conserve provincial heritage properties.15 Decisions affecting a provincial heritage property must consider its cultural heritage value and mitigate negative impacts.16 If a provincial heritage property is to leave government ownership, best efforts should be made to ensure its cultural heritage value is protected through designation or easement; demolition or removal should be considered only as a last resort. OILC has followed an internal heritage management process since 2007. The property at 940 Whitevale Road was recommended as an ORC Heritage Property in the 2009 Phase II report prepared by Contentworks Inc. for OILC. The OHA provides that if a property owned by the provincial government or a prescribed public body is included in a designated heritage conservation district, and there is a conflict between 7 OHA, ss. 41 and 41.1. 8 OHA, s. 41(2). 9 OHA, ss. 27(1.1) and (1.2). 10 OHA, ss. 27 (3), 33, 34 and 42. 11 OHA ss. 25.2 (2), 26.1 (1) and 39.1.1(1). 12 OHA, Ont. Reg. 157/10. 13 OHA, s. 26.1(3). 14 The Provincial S&Gs are available online at http://www.mtc.gov.on.ca/en/publications/Standards_Conservation.pdf 15 S&G, s. A.2, A.2 and A.5. 16 S&G, s. A.3 Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 7 a provision of the provincial S&Gs and a provision in Part V as they apply to that property, the provision in Part V prevails.17 The City of Pickering has adopted a policy to respect and conserve cultural heritage resources as part of the City of Pickering Official Plan (Edition 6).18 City Council shall identify important cultural heritage resources from all time periods, and prevent the demolition, destruction or inappropriate alteration of important cultural heritage resources to the extent possible (s. 8.2). City Council shall maintain an inventory of heritage resources designated or worthy of designation under the OHA (s. 8.7). City Council shall encourage the preservation or excavation of important archaeological sites (s. 8.10). Amendment 22 to the Pickering Official Plan, approved by the Ontario Municipal Board in 2013, specifically provides that the Seaton Urban Area shall be planned as a sustainable community, based on seven key sustainability principles, including to “protect cultural heritage resources and archaeological resources”. 4 Historical Context The John Major House is located east of the hamlet of Whitevale, on the south part of Lot 26, Concession V, Pickering Township. Pickering Township was first surveyed in 1797 and Crown patents were issued shortly afterwards. The land around Whitevale was not settled until the early 1820s, when United Empire Loyalist John Major (1768-1831) built a saw mill on the banks of West Duffins Creek. A small settlement, known as Major Mills or Majorville, began to take shape along Concession V. Major was an Irish emigrant who had settled first in Vermont, and then fled with his wife Margaret to Nova Scotia during the American Revolutionary War, becoming a member of the 84th Regiment of the Loyalist Corps.19 After the War of 1812, he accepted a grant of land in Pickering Township. Major was a key part of the early community – his home is noted as the location for a meeting of township officials in 1822.20 The many direct descendants of John Major are credited as being “among the important constituents of the later population of the township.”21 In 1843, Ira White purchased Major’s sawmill and put his son, Truman P. White, in charge of operations.22 An ambitious industrialist, T.P. White further leveraged the power of the West Duffins Creek and developed the milling site to include a flour mill. During the 1850s and 1860s, the settlement grew into an industrial centre with the addition of: a planing mill (1866); a stave and heading factory, T.P. White’s wool factory (1867); a sash and door factory; a wagon and steam carriage factory; and the P.R. Hoover and Co. cheese factory. Commercial enterprises included: a general store; a butcher shop; Major Hotel; and a tinsmith shop. Anticipating the 17 OHA, s. 39.1.1(2). 18 City of Pickering Official Plan (Edition 6), Chapter Eight – Cultural Heritage. 19 William Wood, Past years in Pickering: Sketches of the History of the Community, (Toronto: William Briggs, 1911), p. 263. 20 Scheinman, 2004: 10. Major accepted a grant of Lot 18, Concession 5, Pickering Township. 21 Wood, p. 264. 22 Unterman McPhail, 1989: 2-2. Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 8 growth of the community, T.P. White registered two survey plans, one in 1857 and an amended plan in 1860. The 1869 Ontario Gazetteer and Directory indicates that hamlet’s population was approximately 300 that year. John Shier’s 1870 plan of subdivision was the first time that “Whitevale” was used as the name of the community, in honour of T.P. White; although the mills continued to be called “Majors Mills.” The Crown patent for Lot 26, Concession V, Pickering Township, comprising 200 acres, was issued to John Denison, Jr. in November 1825.23 John died seven weeks later, in 1826, and his son, Colonel George Taylor Denison, sold the 200-acre property to Samuel Major in 1828.24 The Denisons were among the wealthiest landowners in Canada West,25 and it is extremely unlikely they ever settled the property during their brief ownership. The property was owned by the Major family for the next 144 years. Samuel Major sold the northern 100 acres in 1837 but regained it by 1838. When Samuel died suddenly in 1842 from a shovel injury, his son William took over the farm.26 The 1851 census records William Major living in a one-storey, log house with his wife Emma, his daughter Emma and three of his young siblings; William’s mother died in 1849.27 The stone house was likely built by William and Emma around 1860. The 1861 census records them living in a one-and-a-half-storey, stone house with their three children. They had seven children in all; their son William Henry (W.H.) joined his father on the farm. The 1877 Map of Pickering Township in the Historical Atlas for Ontario County shows the two Williams (W. Major and W.H. Major) jointly farming the 200-acre lot (Figure 5).28 They were known into the early 20th century as “well-known and successful” breeders of Shorthorns (cattle) and Clydes (horses).29 The elder William Major died in 1889, his wife Emma in 1888. Five children survived to adulthood: four daughters married and moved off the farm, leaving William the younger to continue on. William had no children and never married. In 1927, Williams’s siblings sold the property to William’s nephew, Isaac Newton Kinley Robinson, suggesting that William had died.30 Isaac 23 Pickering Women’s Institute, 1960 24 LRO# 40, Land Abstract 25 Gagan, David. 1972. George Taylor Denison. Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol. 10. University of Toronto/Universite Laval. Accessed online at http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/denison_george_taylor_1816_73_10E.html 26 According to documents found in the Major home, Samuel was struck in the head with a shovel by Wallingford Saunders in June 1842 and succumbed to his injuries a week later. William D. Reid, Death Notices of Ontario (Hunterdon House, 1980) 27 Year: 1851; census place: Pickering, Ontario County, Canada West (Ontario); Schedule : A; Roll: C-11742; Page: 179; Line: 1. 28 “Map of Pickering Township,” in J.H. Beers & Co., Illustrated Historical Atlas of the County of Ontario, Ont., (Toronto: J.H. Beers & Co., 1877), p. 19. 29 Wood, p. 264. 30 Robinson was the only living child of Mary Maude Major, daughter of William Major the elder and sister of William Major the younger. Mary died in 1926, her husband Rev. Isaac Newton Robinson died in 1888, and their other six children were all dead by 1926. Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 9 Robinson and his wife raised five children on the property, continuing to farm it until Isaac’s death in 1969. In 1972, his widow Mildred sold the property to the Crown.31 The date of construction of the “John Major House” is recorded in the Municipal Heritage Register as 1822. However, both the date of construction and the attribution appear to be in error. The available evidence suggests that the house was built by John’s grandson William Major around 1860. John Major never owned this property, and he died almost 30 years before the house was built. The 1851 census refers to a log house; the 1861 census is the first to refer to a stone house. The property assessment shows an increase in value between 1858 and 1861, suggesting the addition of a new building.32 The style and construction of the house, including the wide, centre gable and the Gothic window point to a post-1850 construction date. The window in particular is a duplicate of the “Gothicized Palladian” window found in the Bentley House, at Brougham, Ontario, which was built 1853-55.33 Figure 5: 940 Whitevale Road, shown on an excerpt from the 1877 Map of Pickering Township (Base map source: J.H. Beers & Co., 1877) 31 LRO #40, Abstract for Lot 26, Concession V, Pickering Township. 32 Scheinman, 2004. The Municipal Heritage Register (2008) gives a construction date of 1822, but this is not supported by the census records and the style and construction of the house itself. 33 “Bentley House, 3590 Brock Road, Brougham, Ontario, Canada”, in Canada’s Historic Places at http://www.historicplaces.ca/en/rep-reg/place-lieu.aspx?id=9836 Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 10 5 Architecture and Design There are three buildings on the property: a stone house with a kitchen tail and an attached stone woodshed; a small, stone outbuilding; and a modern wooden outbuilding. Figure 6: Facade of the stone house at 940 Whitevale Road. (CU, 2015) Figure 7: East elevation, with main house, kitchen tail and woodshed. (CU, 2015) Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 11 Figure 8: A modern vestibule at the rear of the stone woodshed. (CU, 2015) Figure 9: West elevation with wood shed, kitchen and house. (CU, 2015) Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 12 Figure 10: Stone outbuilding. (CU, 2015) Figure 11: Modern wooden outbuilding. (CU, 2015) Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 13 5.1 Stone House The one-and-a-half-storey, stone house has a symmetrical, five-bay façade, a wide, central doorcase with sidelights and transom, and a side-gable roof with returned eaves. This design, essentially Georgian in its structure, is augmented by two very Gothic touches that are in keeping with its early Victorian date of construction: an extremely wide centre gable over the entrance and a wide, elliptically arched window with gothic tracery in the gable. The extra-wide centre gable is an unusual variation on the Gothic cottage house type of the mid-19th century, although Cruikshank and Stokes note several examples in the Marysburgh area of Prince Edward County.34 The window has been described as “gothicized Palladian” although strictly speaking it lacks the flat-topped side sections typical of the Palladian profile. A window of the same proportions and design appears on the façade of the Bentley House at Brougham, a grand two-storey house built in 1853-55 for William Bentley (Figure 15).35 Authors Kim Ondaatje and Lois McKenzie have suggested that “This Bentley window is a regional style and can be seen in wood, stone and brick houses in the Brougham-Markham area”.36 The house is built of local fieldstone: the façade is made with cut, field stone that has been squared, coursed and lightly mortared, with larger quoins at corners and voussoirs above openings. The side and rear elevations are made with roughly coursed, rubble stone heavily mortared and with incised lines to suggest ashlar. There are two, red-brick, interior chimneys. The building is encircled below an overhanging molded cornice with a plain, wide, frieze. It rests on a rubble stone foundation. Openings are flat-arched with stone voussoirs and wooden lug sills covered in siding. Window units are 6/6, wood, double sash. The house has been altered by the addition of storm windows; the boarding over of one of the façade windows; the addition of an exterior ventilation pipe to the façade; and the replacement of a rear window unit with a vinyl unit. Other examples of stone construction in the Whitevale area include: 615 Whitevale Road, 750 Whitevale Road, 1130 Whitevale Road, 1390 Whitevale Road and the rear tail at 3285 Sideline 20. 34 Tom Cruikshank and Peter John Stokes, The Settlers Dream: A Pictorial History of the Older Buildings of Prince Edward County, (Picton: The Corporation of the County of Prince Edward, 1984). 35 “Bentley House” at http://www.historicplaces.ca/en/rep-reg/place-lieu.aspx?id=9836 36 Kim Ondaatje and Lois Mackenzie, Old Ontario Houses, (Gage Publishing, 1977), n.p. Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 14 Figure 12: Detail of front door showing transom and sidelights and original wooden door (CU, 2015). Figure 13: Detail of stone quoins, gable roof end with returning eaves (CU, 2015). Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 15 Figure 14: Centre gable with Gothic window and ghosting from former portico. (CU, 2015) Figure 15: Gothic window from Bentley House in Brougham, Ontario (Parks Canada, 1973)37 37 Parks Canada, “Bentley House,” on Canada’s Historic Places, accessed November, 2015 at http://www.historicplaces.ca/en/rep-reg/place-lieu.aspx?id=9836&pid=0 Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 16 Figure 16: East elevation, with chimney, return eaves and 6/6 windows. (CU, 2015) Figure 17: 940 Whitevale Road (date unknown), showing former portico (Ancestry.com, 2015). 5.1.1 Interior The interior follows a centre-hall plan with twelve-foot ceilings. Many interior wood finishes and trim have been retained, including: the wooden balustrade; wide, pine, plank flooring; deep Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 17 wooden sills with decorative paneling and wide, molded, trim casement; 12-inch baseboards; door casings; doors; wainscot in the kitchen; and a wooden fireplace mantel with pilastered architrave and elliptical and circular motifs in relief. Figure 18: Detail of balustrade from second level (CU, 2015). Figure 19: Details of interior of original front wooden door (CU, 2015). Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 18 Figure 20: Parlor room showing window casements and fireplace. (CU, 2015) Figure 21: Interior of Gothic window. (CU, 2015) Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 19 Figure 22: Detail of wooden door casings and threshold to stone kitchen. (CU, 2015) Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 20 5.1.2 Basement The basement is accessed from the main house and extends under the kitchen tail. It is made of broken-coursed rubble stone, which has been whitewashed on the interior. Figure 23: Detail of white washed stone wall of basement interior. (CU, 2015) Figure 24: Detail of flooring and support beams, basement interior. (CU, 2015) Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 21 5.2 Stone Kitchen Tail A one–and-half–storey, stone kitchen extends from the rear of the house. It is built with heavily mortared rubble stone with large stone quoins and it sits on a stone foundation. The medium- pitched roof has overhanging eaves, and a molded cornice and plain frieze continuing from the main house. All window units are rectangular, 6/6 double sash wood with lug sills and have stone voussoirs with keystones. The tail has been altered by the insertion of a pedimented gable dormer on the eastern slope of the roof and an L-shaped porch in the interior corner between the house and the tail. The interior of the kitchen tail retains wood finishes and fixtures including: wide, pine, plank flooring; deep-set window sills with wooden casings; 10”-high, baseboards; and chair rail. A former cooking hearth, referred to in the Scheinman report, was covered over and not visible during the site visit. Four metal hooks in the ceiling may have, once been used for hanging meats. Figure 25: Interior of kitchen tail, showing eastern entrance. (CU, 2015) Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 22 5.3 Stone Wood Shed A one–storey, stone, wood shed extends from the rear of the kitchen tail. It has three entrances: through the kitchen; through a newly added rear entrance; and through an entrance on the west elevation. The building is made of roughly coursed rubble stone, heavily mortared (especially on the western elevation), with large, cut-stone quoins at the rear corners. The wood shed has a gable roof and 6/6, double sash, window units. A modern bay window has been added to the eastern elevation. The interior is paneled and has 7-inch baseboards. Figure 26: Stone woodshed as seen from former orchard. (CU, 2015) 5.4 Stone Outbuilding The one-storey stone outbuilding is made of uncoursed, heavily mortared, rubble stone with a shed roof. The original function is unknown. The board-and-batten breezeway that connected the outbuilding to the house, noted by Scheinman in 2004, is no longer evident. The interior was not accessed. 5.5 Wooden Outbuilding There is a one and half storey barn made of board and batten with a shingle gable roof and overhanging eaves. There are two garage doors and a second storey casement style wooden opening. There is also an access door on the west elevation. The building is current being used as a garage and replaced a timber frame carriage shed and barn complex38. 38 Scheinman, 2004 Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 23 5.6 Cultural Landscape The property follows a traditional farmstead pattern, with the house set on an elevated site, and the gravel drive leading from the road, past the house, to the former farm work area. The barn has been demolished, but heavily overgrown fencerow suggests the original configuration39. The grassed lawn is surrounded by a number of mature trees, including Red Maple, Ash, Spruce and Cedar. The remains of an orchard with apple, cherry, and pear trees are located west of the house40. Some of the traditional pathways from the farmstead to the farm land remain visible. A path through the northwest section of the property leads to the fields and former orchard. A path on the west side of the wood outbuilding leads to the fields at the north end of the property. Figure 27: Details of landscape and layout of property in 2005. (Shearer, p. 14) 39 Shearer, p. 13. 40 Shearer, p. 14. Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 24 5.7 Archaeological Resources Although the archaeological potential of the general area in and around the property is well documented41 the archaeological potential of the property, itself, will be addressed in this section. Archaeological potential determination is based on a number of factors related to the attractiveness of a site for either temporary or permanent human occupation. Archaeological features that are considered when determining potential are generally related to basic necessities of survival (e.g., proximity to water), access to transportation (e.g., historic transportation routes, trails, and navigable watercourses), or access to resources (e.g., raw materials for tool making or construction, or food resources). The Ontario Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Sport lists in its 2010 Standards and Guidelines for Consultant Archaeologists42 a series of features that are considered, in Ontario, to be related to archaeological potential, or removal of archaeological potential as summarised in Table 1. Table 1: Factors Indicating Archaeological Potential or Lack of Archaeological Potential Archaeological Feature 940 Whitevale Rd. (y/n) Previously identified archaeological sites Y Water sources: Primary water sources (lakes, rivers, streams, creeks) N Secondary water sources (intermittent streams, creeks, marshes) N Features indicating past water sources (e.g., glacial lake shorelines, relic river or stream channels) Y Accessible or inaccessible shoreline N Elevated topography (e.g. eskers, drumlins, plateau) Y Pockets of well-drained sandy soil, especially near areas of heavy soil or rocky ground Not assessed Distinctive land formations that might have been special or spiritual places such as waterfalls, rock outcrops, caverns, mounds and promontories and their bases. N Resource areas: Food or medicinal plants Not assessed Scarce raw materials N Early Euro-Canadian industry (e.g., fur trade, logging, prospecting, mining) N Areas of early Euro-Canadian settlement Y Early historical transportation routes Y 41 See Hough Stansbury Woodland Naylor Dance Limited et. al., 1994 and Scheinman, 2004 for an overview of archaeological research in the area. 42 Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Sport. Standards and Guideline for Consultant Archaeologists. 2011: 17-18. Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 25 Archaeological Feature 940 Whitevale Rd. (y/n) Property listed on a municipal register or designated under the Ontario Heritage Act or that is a federal, provincial or municipal historic landmark or site Y Property that local histories or informants have identified with possible archaeological sites, historical events, activities, or occupants N Archaeological potential can be determined not to be present if the site has been subject to modern extensive and deep land alterations such as: quarrying; sewage and infrastructure development; building footprints; or major landscaping involving grading. N Based on a review of these factors, the property at 940 Whitevale Road exhibits archaeological potential. 6 Contextual Background The John Major House is located east of the hamlet of Whitevale, on the north side of Whitevale Road. The property is surrounded by agricultural lands to the north, east and west. A 19th century farmstead is located immediately south of the property: the Hugh Pugh House at 3185 Sideline 26. The Whitevale Cemetery, established in 1832 on land donated by Henry Major, is situated approximately 650 meters west of the property. The John Major House is included within the boundaries of the Whitevale Heritage Conservation District (HCD) and has historical links with other resources in the HCD, including the Henry Major House at 615 Whitevale Road and the Whitevale Cemetery. The property reinforces the rural character of the HCD, described as follows: The hamlet of Whitevale is located in a scenic river valley along the banks of West Duffins Creek in the City of Pickering. Dominated by its rural setting and modest vernacular buildings, the hamlet has not changed significantly in character since the late nineteenth century. It had a small but thriving industrial centre until the 1870's, when a disastrous fire effectively destroyed most of the mill buildings except for the feed mill. With the depopulation of rural Ontario during the late 1800s and early 1900s Whitevale's role as a small service centre for the local farming community waned, resulting in the complete disappearance of its commercial enterprises on Main Street with the exception of the general store and the mill. The building style in Whitevale is a mixture of typical rural Ontario vernacular architecture combined with Victorian influences and materials in common usage at the time of construction. The result is a distinctive cohesiveness of scale, mass, decorative detailing and building materials. Although many Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 26 individual buildings and properties have been altered over the decades, the overall nineteenth century village character has been retained. Most of the existing nineteenth century buildings have wood frame structures, and siding ranging from clapboard, shiplap to vertical board and batten. The majority of structures are one-and-a-half storeys in height with a three bay front facade and centre gable. The rural character of Whitevale, with its narrow tree-lined streets, scenic views over the surrounding agricultural lands and the West Duffins Creek and its steep river valley, provides a distinctive context and setting for its buildings. The community has a rich and diverse character within a relatively small area. Archaeological remains located in and around Whitevale attest to its enduring attractiveness as a settlement area.43 More specifically, the John Major House reinforces the rural and historic nature of the Whitevale Road corridor. 7 Heritage Evaluation The property and associated resources have been evaluated for Cultural Heritage Value or Interest (CHVI) under Ontario Regulation 9/06 Criteria for Determining Cultural Heritage Value or Interest under the Ontario Heritage Act. A summary of the evaluation based on the criteria is presented in Tables 2, 3 and 4 below. 7.1 Design or Physical Value The one-and-a-half-storey house nicely illustrates the transition between the Georgian or Loyalist tradition that was favoured in Upper Canada in the 1830s and 1840s, and the Gothic Revival style which began to influence building design in the 1850s. The essential design of the house, and many of its details, are Georgian, including: the low-pitched gable roof, the five-bay, symmetrical façade; the wide, central doorcase with transom and sidelights; the heavily molded door; Classical detailing such as the overhanging molded cornice, plain, wide frieze, and returned eaves; and a central, Palladian window. The Gothic influence is introduced through the use of a centre gable with a window, and the Gothic tracery of the window. In typical Georgian fashion, though, the gable is flattened and wide, rather than tall and narrow, and the window has a Palladian, tripartite form, set in an elliptical arch. Both the centre gable and window are unusual features, and may reflect regional preferences. A duplicate of the window is found at the Bentley House, Brougham. Their application to a typically Georgian house reflects the development of housing design during this period. 43 City of Pickering. Whitevale Heritage Conservation District Guide, 2013: 5. Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 27 Although most houses in Whitevale HCD exhibit later styles, there are at least three comparable five-bay examples: 615 Whitevale Road; 750 Whitevale Road and 1130 Whitevale Road (1835- 40). The house provides a good illustration of local stone construction in the late1850s and early1860s, including the use of local fieldstone, the coursed, cut-stone treatment of the façade, quoins at corners, voussoirs over openings and the roughly coursed rubble stone at the rear and side elevations. Other examples of stone construction are evident at 615 Whitevale, 750 Whitevale, 1130 Whitevale and 1390 Whitevale. Table 2 - Evaluation of the Cultural Heritage Value or Interest of 940 Whitevale Road as Per O.Reg. 9/06 Criteria 1. i., ii., and iii O.Reg. 9/06 Criteria Criteria Met (y/n) Justification 1. The property has design value or physical value because it, i. is a rare, unique, representative or early example of a style, type, expression, material, or construction method, Y The house is a representative example of a Georgian style dwelling with Gothic features, reflecting the transition between the two styles in the mid-19th century. Standard Georgian features such as the five-bay symmetrical façade, central door with transom and side- lights, and Classical detailing, are included. The house is a rare example of two features that combine Georgian and Gothic design: the extra-wide gable, and the Palladian window with Gothic tracery, both unusual features that may reflect regional preferences. The house provides a representative example of stone construction in the late 1850s and early 1860s, including the use of cut stone, rubble stone, quoins and voussoirs. ii. displays a high degree of craftsmanship or artistic merit, or N The building does not display a high degree of craftsmanship or artistic merit. iii. demonstrates a high degree of technical or scientific achievement. N The building does not demonstrate a high degree of technical or scientific achievement. The property at 940 Whitevale Road meets the criteria for design or physical value under O.Reg. 9/06. 7.2 Historic/Associative Value The property is associated with the development of local agriculture in the mid-19th century. The house was built by William Major, c. 1860, replacing an earlier log dwelling on the site. Major was Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 28 a well-known cattle and horse breeder, and was descended from John Major, one of the community’s first settlers. The current property is a remnant of the 200-acre farm that was owned and farmed by members of the Major family from 1828 until government acquisition in 1972, a span of 144 years. The property retains a few remnants of this agricultural use by the Major family, including the stone outbuilding, pathways to former fields, the gravel drive and remnants of the orchard. 940 Whitevale Road also exhibits archaeological potential, given its proximity to a number of archaeological features outlined in the Ontario Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Sports Standards and Guidelines for Consultant Archaeologists,44 including: a secondary water course, elevated topography, known pre-contact and Euro-Canadian archaeological sites, an early historical transportation route, and as a property listed on the Municipal Heritage Register (2008) and designated under Part V of the Ontario Heritage Act. The property has also not undergone any recent or extensive ground disturbances which might indicate the removal of archaeological potential. As a result, the property has the potential to yield information that contributes to an understanding of a community or culture. Table 3 - Evaluation of the Cultural Heritage Value or Interest of 940 Whitevale Road as Per O.Reg. 9/06 Criteria 2. i., ii., and iii O.Reg. 9/06 Criteria Criteria Met (y/n) Justification 2. The property has historical value or associative value because it, i. has direct associations with a theme, event, belief, person, activity, organization or institution that is significant to a community, Y The property has direct associations with the theme of the development of local agriculture. The property is a remnant of the 200-acre farm that was owned and farmed by descendants of John Major for 144 years, from 1828 until 1972.The house was built c.1860 by William Major, a well-known cattle and horse breeder. ii. yields, or has the potential to yield information that contributes to an understanding of a community or culture, or Y Given that the property surrounding the farmhouse has not been recently and significantly altered, it has the potential to yield information that contributes to the understanding of the community or a pre- contact culture. iii. demonstrates or reflects the work or ideas of an architect, artist, builder, designer N Designer or builder unknown. 44 Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Sport. Standards and Guideline for Consultant Archaeologists. 2011: 17-18. Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 29 O.Reg. 9/06 Criteria Criteria Met (y/n) Justification or theorist who is significant to a community. The property at 940 Whitevale Road meets the criteria for historical or associative value under O.Reg. 9/06. 7.3 Contextual Value The property is located within the Whitevale HCD. Its rural nature and Georgian/Gothic style are important in defining and maintaining the heritage character of the district and in supporting the rural nature of the Whitevale Road corridor within the HCD. The property is visually and historically linked to the surrounding agricultural fields which were farmed by members of the Major family for 144 years, to the Hugh Pugh House at 3185 Sideline 26 and to the Whitevale Cemetery. Table 4 - Evaluation of the Cultural Heritage Value or Interest of 940 Whitevale Road as Per O.Reg. 9/06 Criteria 3. i., ii., and iii O.Reg. 9/06 Criteria Criteria Met (y/n) Justification 3. The property has contextual value because it, i. is important in defining, maintaining or supporting the character of an area, Y The property is important in defining and maintaining the heritage character of the Whitevale HCD and of the Whitevale Road corridor within the HCD. ii. is physically, functionally, visually or historically linked to its surroundings, or Y The property is visually and historically linked to the surrounding agricultural fields which were farmed by the Major family for 144 years. It is also visually and historically linked to the Whitevale Cemetery and to nearby 19thcentury farmsteads including the Hugh Pugh House at 3185 Sideline 26. iii. is a landmark. N 940 Whitevale Road is not a landmark. The property at 940 Whitevale Road meets the criteria for contextual value under O.Reg. 9/06. 7.4 Statement of Significance 7.4.1 Description of Property The property at 940 Whitevale Road is located east of the hamlet of Whitevale, on the north side of Whitevale Road, in the City of Pickering Ontario. It is a rectangular parcel, .56 hectares (1.38 Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 30 acres) in area, comprising part of Lot 26, Concession V, Pickering Township. The property is surrounded by agricultural lands and 19th century farmsteads. The key resource on the property is a one-and-a-half-storey, stone house with a stone kitchen tail and a stone woodshed attached at the rear. The property also includes a stone outbuilding, and a modern wood-frame garage, although these do not contribute to heritage value. The house combines features of the Georgian Classical and Gothic Revival traditions, including: a five-bay, symmetrical façade; a wide, central doorcase with transom and sidelights; a low-pitch gable roof; and an extra-wide centre gable with a Gothic-style Palladian window. The house and outbuildings are set back from the road and surrounded by a grassed lawn and mature coniferous and deciduous trees. A gravel laneway runs from the road to the outbuildings. The property is within the Whitevale Heritage Conservation District (By-law 4074-92). The property is owned the Province of Ontario and managed by Ontario Infrastructure and Lands Corporation. 7.4.2 Statement of Cultural Heritage Value The stone house is a representative example of the transition between the Georgian or Loyalist tradition of the 1840s and the Gothic Revival style introduced in the 1850s. The essential design of the house and many of its details is Georgian, including: the low-pitched gable roof, the five-bay façade; symmetrically arranged openings throughout; the wide, central doorcase with transom and sidelights; the heavily molded door; Classical detailing; and the central Palladian window. The Gothic style is introduced through the centre gable and the Gothic tracery of the window, although the form and proportions of both features are more Georgian than Gothic. Both the centre gable and window are unusual variations, and may reflect regional preferences: the window is also found in the Bentley House in Brougham. The house provides a representative example of stone construction in the late 1850s and early 1860s, including the use of coursed, cut stone on the façade, large quoins at corners, voussoirs over openings, and uncoursed rubblestone on the side and rear elevations and the kitchen and woodshed. The property is associated with the development of local agriculture in the mid-19th century. The house was built by William Major, c. 1860, replacing an earlier log dwelling on the site. Major was a well-known cattle and horse breeder, and was descended from John Major, one of the community’s first settlers. The current property is a remnant of the 200-acre farm that was owned and farmed by members of the Major family from 1828 until government acquisition in 1972, a span of 144 years. The property retains a few remnants of this agricultural use by the Major family. Given that the property surrounding the farmhouse has not been recently and significantly altered, it has the potential to yield information that contributes to the understanding of the community or a pre-contact culture. Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 31 The property is located within the Whitevale HCD, and is important in defining and maintaining the heritage character of the district and the Whitevale Road corridor within the district. The property is visually and historically linked to the surrounding agricultural fields which were farmed by members of the Major family for 144 years, to nearby 19th century farmsteads including the Hugh Pugh House at 3185 Sideline 26, and to the Whitevale Cemetery. 7.4.3 Heritage Attributes The heritage attribute essential to the cultural heritage value of the property is the one-and-a- half-storey, stone house with its kitchen tail and attached woodshed. Key elements of the house include: • its form and proportions, including the T-shaped placement of house, kitchen tail and woodshed; the one-and-a-half-storey height of the house and kitchen tail; and the one- storey height of the woodshed; • the Georgian Classical style of house, tail and woodshed, including: low-pitched gable roofs; symmetrically arranged openings; centre-hall plan; five-bay façade; wide, central door and doorcase; and Classical detailing; • Classical detailing, including the wide, plain frieze, molded cornice and eave returns; • the wide, central door and doorcase with: its glazed transom; fine, single-panel sidelights; and heavily molded door • its Gothic Revival elements, including the wide, low-pitch, centre gable and the elliptically arched gable window with its Gothic tracery; • its stone construction using local fieldstone, including coursed, cut stone on the façade, large quoins at corners, voussoirs over openings, and random-coursed rubblestone on the side and rear elevations and the kitchen and woodshed • brick chimneys with corbelled tops; • surviving multi-pane, double-hung window sash; • surviving interior wood features, including: pine flooring; baseboards; window and door casings; and stair balustrade; and • surviving interior hearths and hardware. Key elements of the property as a whole include: • Its relationship to the surrounding agricultural fields, including driveways, pathways and views; and • The stone outbuilding. Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 32 8 Recommendations As outlined above, the property at 940 Whitevale Road meets the criteria for determining cultural heritage value or interest under Ontario Regulation 9/06; specifically criteria 1.i, 2.i, 2.ii, 3.i., and 3.ii. While the property remains in Crown ownership, the municipality should consider updating the property listing on the Pickering Heritage Registry to include the Statement of Significance. The results of this evaluation should be shared with the province, along with a request that the property be managed in compliance with the Standards & Guidelines for Conservation of Provincial Heritage Properties. If the property passes out of Crown ownership, the municipality should consider individual designation of the property under S. 29 OHA. The municipality may decide as a matter of policy not to include the interior features of the house in any s. 29 designation. As outlined above, the property exhibits archaeological potential. Future cultural heritage policy decisions regarding this property should consider this potential for previously undiscovered archaeological sites or resources and a Stages 1 and 2 Archaeological Assessment should be carried out by a licenced professional archaeologist prior to any below-grade construction activities. Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 33 9 Sources Ancestry.com and Genealogical Research Library (Brampton, Ontario, Canada) Public Member contribution. found online at http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/982750/person/-2010003654/fact/-1534664280 http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/7415900/person/-1098283192/facts/sources Our family Tree: Major and Adele Robinson. Created December 18th, 2001 by Easy Tree. Accessed online at http://www.sentex.net/~major/Robinson_Tree/WC_TOC.htm/ “Bentley House, 3590 Brock Road, Brougham, Ontario, Canada”, in Canada’s Historic Places at http://www.historicplaces.ca/en/rep-reg/place-lieu.aspx?id=9836 Bray Heritage, Seaton Neighbourhood Planning Background Report: Whitevale Road Heritage Corridor Review, Report prepared for the City of Pickering, May 2010. City of Pickering. Whitevale Heritage Conservation District Guide, 2013: 5. Official Plan. (Edition 6), Chapter Eight – Cultural Heritage Contentworks, Phase II Evaluation of Residences on Whitevale Road, Pickering. Report prepared for the Ontario Realty Corporation, March 2009. Cruikshank, Tom and John de Visser, Old Ontario Houses: Traditions in Local Architecture, (Willowdale: Firefly Books, 2000). Cruikshank, Tom, Peter John Stokes and John de Visser, The Settlers Dream: A Pictorial History of the Older Buildings of Prince Edward County, (Picton: Corporation of the County of Prince Edward, 2000). Farewell, J.E., Ontario County: A Short Sketch of its Settlement, Physical Features and Resources with Brief Historical Notes as to the early settlement of its Towns, Villages and Townships and their progress, (Whitby: Gazette-Chronicle Press, 1907) Gagan, David. 1972. George Taylor Denison. Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol. 10. University of Toronto/Universite Laval. Accessed online at http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/denison_george_taylor_1816_73_10E.html Hough Stansbury Woodland Naylor Dance Limited – Prime Consultants, D.R. Poulton & Associates – Archaeological Assessments and Excavations, André Scheinman – Heritage Preservation Consultant, Seaton Cultural Heritage Resources Assessment: Technical Appendix. Report Prepared for the Seaton Interim Planning Team (Ontario Ministry of Housing), July 1994. Accessed online at http://www.pada.ca/books/details/?id=2023&keywords=vardon. J.H. Beers &. Co., Illustrated Historical Atlas of the County of Ontario, Ont., J.H., Beers & Co.: Toronto, 1877. Land Registry Office #40. Abstract pages for Lot 26, Concession V, Pickering Township. Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 34 Library and Archives Canada 1851, Census of 1851, Canada East, Canada West, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia; Pickering Township, Ontario County, Canada West; Schedule A: Roll C11742. Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Sport. Standards & Guidelines for Conservation of Provincial Heritage Properties. April, 2010. ---. Standards and Guidelines for Consultant Archaeologists. 2011. Ondaatje, Kim and Lois Mackenzie, Old Ontario Houses, (Gage Publishing, 1977). Ontario Heritage Act, R.S.O. 1990, c.0.18. Parks Canada. 2010. Standards and Guidelines for the Conservation of Historic Places in Canada. Access online at, http://www.historicplaces.ca/media/18072/81468-parks-s+g-eng- web2.pdf ---. “Bentley House, Detail view of the main window on the principal façade of Bentley House, showing the belvedere crowning the house with glazed, arched openings and bracketed roof, 1973.” on Canada’s Historic Places, accessed November, 2015 at http://www.historicplaces.ca/en/rep-reg/place-lieu.aspx?id=9836&pid=0 Pickering-Ajax Digital Archives. 2003. Accessed online at http://www.pada.ca/. Pickering Women’s Institute. Tweedsmuir History. Pickering Women’s Institute, Pickering: circa 1960. Accessed online at http://www.pada.ca/books/details/?id=70&keywords=tweedsmuir. Provincial Policy Statement. 2014. Accessed online at, http://www.mah.gov.on.ca/Page10679.aspx Reid, William. 1980. Death Notices of Ontario. Pg. 313 Scheinman, André. Seaton Built Heritage Assessment, Report prepared for the North Pickering Land Exchange Team, Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing, November 2004. Shearer, Wendy. 2005. Cultural Landscape Assessment Central Pickering: Seaton Lands. Prepared by Wendy Shearer Landscape Architects Limited. Smith, George. Centennial Souvenir Map of Pickering Township. Pickering Historical Society: Pickering, Ontario, 1967. Unterman McPhail Heritage Resource Consultants, The Hamlet of Whitevale, Heritage Conservation District Study, Background Report. Report prepared for the City of Pickering, August 1989. Weller, Sue. The Unknown Clerk of the Senate of Canada. Found online at http://www.denisonfamily.on.ca/Documents/JFTaylor.html Cultural Heritage Property Evaluation Report Prepared for The City of Pickering 940 Whitevale Road, Pickering ON November 10, 2015 Amy Barnes Consulting cuHeritage Pa g e 35 Wood, William. Past years in Pickering: Sketches of the History of the Community, (Toronto: William Briggs, 1911). Accessed online at http://archive.org/stream/pastyearsinpicke00wooduoft/pastyearsinpicke00wooduoft_djvu.txt.