My October column in the Kitchissippi Times was inspired by a photograph that was shared to me months ago by Andrew King, of the old "Westboro Garage" in a very early era. It's one of those almost-too-good-to-be-true kinds of photos that on first glance couldn't have been our Westboro, must be a Westboro from somewhere in the States. Nothing was recognizable in the photo. Through a bit of digging, I was able to confirm that indeed it was the original old wood building that stood on that spot on Richmond Road between Golden and Roosevelt, the precursor of the Westboro Motors that existed for many years. A rare and fantastic photo find. The photo actually originated with Mike Krzyzanowski, who had come across it at an estate sale a few years ago.
The photo led me into researching who the first auto mechanics, salesmen and even car owners were when the automobile first arrived. It would have been primitive days for everything from roads, to licensing and testing, to repairs and car sales. How interesting it would have been to actually live through that era! Well now, through the magic of a couple of old photos and a bit of research, you can experience a little bit of what was happening here in the first quarter of the 20th century, by checking out my column at the link below. Enjoy!
https://kitchissippi.com/2019/10/04/kitchissippis-early-automobile-pioneers/
Dave Allston's blog about west Ottawa's little-known history, with stories, photos and information covering the fascinating history of the historic Kitchissippi neighbourhoods.
Tuesday, October 1, 2019
Sunday, September 1, 2019
The arrival of banking in Kitchissippi
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The Bank of Nova Scotia Westboro Ottawa branch, 1933. Photograph courtesy of the Scotiabank Archives. (RG300010008A) |
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Same view - Google Streetview - July 2018 |
My September column in the Kitchissippi Times was to explore how and when banking first arrived along Wellington Street and Richmond Road in Hintonburg, Wellington Village and Westboro. There have always been a number of banks on our stretch of the main road, and I thought it would be interesting to research when the first banks arrived, how services were different back then, and write out just how many of our current buildings started life as banks. I was aided in my column production by the discovery of several great old photos, like this one above. The print and online editions of the Times did not include many of my extra photos, so I've included them here.
But to read the full article, please click on this link. Thanks!
https://kitchissippi.com/2019/09/03/digging-into-kitchissippis-vault-of-banking-history/
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Westboro's first bank, the Bank of Ottawa, at the north-west corner of Richmond and Churchill (now the site of Gezellig). Photo from 1913. |
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Ottawa Journal ad advertising the opening of the first Westboro bank. May 17, 1912. |
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The Bank of Montreal at Wellington and Huron. It's still there, this is from when it only occupied half the ground floor space, shared with Morris Hardware. From 1955. |
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The TD Bank at Holland and Wellington as it looked back in 1996 during the fire of the Joynt's Pharmacy building. |
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April 3 1937 newspaper announcement of the opening of the Bank of Toronto (in it's original building) at the corner of Holland and Wellington. |
Tuesday, August 13, 2019
Kitchissippi Museum at Westboro Fuse! Saturday only!
It's somewhat late confirmation, but I'll be there! Thanks to the amazing organizers of Westboro Fuse for extending an invite long ago, I was finally able to confirm my attendance, and I will be there on Saturday (this coming Saturday August 17th) from 10:00 a.m. until 4 p.m. on Richmond Road. (Exact location TBD later this week - check back for an update).
I am really happy to be able to be a part of Fuse, and always appreciate the opportunity to share a few old photos, maps and other historical things right on the street in Westboro! I'll have a couple tables worth of different things, and will be happy to chat history with everyone who stops by!
See you Saturday!
Wednesday, August 7, 2019
The lost half of Wellington Village
The new issue of Kitchissippi Times is out this week, and in it is my monthly column "Early Days". For this month's article, my starting point was a question-slash-mystery that I've been asked about many times over the years... why are the streets in Wellington Village in alphabetical order from E to K? And why are they not quite in order? And why did it start with E? And who are Edina, Geneva and Helena?
Little did I know that investigating this story would actually coincide with another mystery I'd been researching... the unexplained development I had noticed in aerial photos of the 1920s around the Royal Ottawa Hospital property.
The headline of this article (and I even use it here for this blog post) calls it Wellington Village, but really the area in question is kind of sandwiched between Wellington Village and Carlington, adjacent to the Civic Hospital area. It literally is only home now a few houses off Island Park Drive south of the Queensway, Kitchissippi United Church, the Hydro station, and the Royal Ottawa campus. But back in the 1910s/1920s, there were big plans for this land... and serious plans at that; to the point that the City paid to install a sewer system underneath a network of streets in anticipation of the housing development to come. But it never did.
The article talks about those original plans, how things changed, and connects the dots on the street name in Wellington Village. Check it out at: https://kitchissippi.com/2019/08/06/the-wellington-village-neighbourhood-that-never-was/
Here are a few photos/maps that relate to the article that you won't see on the Kitchissippi Times website:
Little did I know that investigating this story would actually coincide with another mystery I'd been researching... the unexplained development I had noticed in aerial photos of the 1920s around the Royal Ottawa Hospital property.
The headline of this article (and I even use it here for this blog post) calls it Wellington Village, but really the area in question is kind of sandwiched between Wellington Village and Carlington, adjacent to the Civic Hospital area. It literally is only home now a few houses off Island Park Drive south of the Queensway, Kitchissippi United Church, the Hydro station, and the Royal Ottawa campus. But back in the 1910s/1920s, there were big plans for this land... and serious plans at that; to the point that the City paid to install a sewer system underneath a network of streets in anticipation of the housing development to come. But it never did.
The article talks about those original plans, how things changed, and connects the dots on the street name in Wellington Village. Check it out at: https://kitchissippi.com/2019/08/06/the-wellington-village-neighbourhood-that-never-was/
Here are a few photos/maps that relate to the article that you won't see on the Kitchissippi Times website:
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1914 map of Ottawa showing the original proposed streets |
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June 1925 aerial of roughly the same area. The streets now appear visible because of the installation of the sewers! |
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Ottawa Citizen February 15, 1910. A rare photo in the paper for that time, showing the Lady Grey at opening. |
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Ottawa Citizen February 18, 1930. The Hydro sub-station on Carling at it's opening! |
The history of pizza in Kitchissippi (and Ottawa)
My article in July's Kitchissippi Times fit into the overall theme of the issue, which was pizza! Of course my monthly column "Early Days" is meant to focus on Kitchissippi related history, but it was tempting to try to dig up the full history of pizza in Ottawa. So I did quite a bit of research to try to nail down the first time pizza showed up in Ottawa, the first dedicated pizzeria, the first to offer delivery, the first place to get it in the neighbourhood, etc. It's a lot of information and pizza-related history squeezed into one article! The main portion of the story tells a bit of the story of David Presley (who deserves far more than just a few paragraphs of one article!). One of the most interesting people I've ever chatted with, David has lived and breathed carnivals in Ottawa and throughout North America since his childhood. Probably no one out there that knows more about the old CCE/Super Ex, and he saw it from the trenches for many, many years running his booth selling Cicero's Pizza.
Anyways, this was a fun article to write, and I hope you enjoy it!
https://kitchissippi.com/2019/07/02/the-early-days-of-pizza-parlours/
Anyways, this was a fun article to write, and I hope you enjoy it!
https://kitchissippi.com/2019/07/02/the-early-days-of-pizza-parlours/
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Newspaper ad from 1974 |
Saturday, June 29, 2019
A final remnant of eras gone by: 388 Albert Street
I'm stepping outside of Kitchissippi for a moment, to do a quick article on a house that I've been curious about for years. It sticks out like a sore thumb in downtown Ottawa as being the last vestige of old Ottawa, a residential house in the heart of downtown Ottawa that has somehow survived all of the massive development that has occurred (and continues to occur) around it. This house was at one time just one of a thousand houses like it that lined the central streets like Albert, Slater and Laurier Avenue, but now remains as one of the last still standing (certainly the last in the central blocks between Bay and Elgin, north of Laurier).
The history of the house ties directly to Nicholas Sparks. THE Nicholas Sparks, original Bytown settler and unexpected downtown Ottawa real estate mogul of the mid-19th century. In fact, though the house at 388 Albert Street is actually the second house to exist on this spot, it was built by Nicholas's nephew!
* * *
388 Albert Street stands in the original Nicholas Sparks land holdings, aka lot C concession C of Nepean Township, which he acquired in 1821 with his savings of £95. At the time, it was swampy, wild, uninhabited land, but today is the land between Wellington and Laurier, from Bronson to east of the Canal. (A good write-up on Sparks can be found at: http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/sparks_nicholas_9E.html)
Sparks gradually sold portions of the property over time. He died in 1862, and following his death, in 1863, City of Ottawa plan 3922 was registered by his heirs, laying out a large portion of the property that had not already been sold.
Registry records are unclear as to how the 388 Albert lot ended up in the hands of his nephew. But here is some of the background: In 1853, Nicholas Sparks apparently encouraged his brother Abraham Sparks Sr. to bring his family to Bytown from Wexford, Ireland. So Abraham and his wife Frances came with their four children Mary, George, Margaret and Abraham Jr., and lived in a stone house at the southeast corner of Sparks and Bay, not too far from where Nicholas lived. Mary was the oldest at 20, but Abraham Jr. was only a year and a half old. Abraham Sr. was 70 years old at the time! (His wife Frances was 42).
Anyhow, it was in 1874 that the first, original house at 388 Albert was built by Abraham Jr. (and possibly also by his brother George). This old house would have been a simple 1 1/2 storey wood-frame home, that actually was located quite a bit further out than the current house does, likely to where the sidewalk now ends (Albert Street has been widened over time of course, since the earliest days of horse and buggy).
Abraham Jr. grew up in Ottawa, and became one of the first contractors for hire in Ottawa, a trade in which he would have a long and distinguished career, recognized as one of Ottawa's best. He built, among others, the Lauder Memorial Hall at Christ Church, the old Dominion Fruit Exchange building, a wing of the old Russell Hotel, and part of the Rideau Club on Wellington. On Canada Day 1874 in the village of Hazeldean, he married Mary Jane Patterson of Perth, and it was likely for his wife and soon-to-be family that he built the house on his late uncle's former land. Abraham Jr. and his wife would have their first of six children in 1875.
1874 seems to be the milestone date for a lot of key pieces of info related to the house... It was in late 1874 that the City Engineer's Office decided on the official numbering for houses in Ottawa, and thus Abraham Sparks Jr.'s house was given the number 388 Albert Street, the same civic address is maintains today. (Read more on the history of house numbering in Ottawa at: https://kitchissippimuseum.blogspot.com/2017/01/the-history-of-civic-addressing-in-west.html)
The 1878 fire insurance plan for Ottawa shows the house and the handful of others on the block between Bay and Sally (later renamed Lyon):
July 2018 Google Streetview - the last house standing |
The house is located at 388 Albert Street, and is probably best-known in recent history as the original and somewhat long-time location of Scone Witch, which moved a few years ago down to Elgin Street. It was recently 'Good Eats', though they have moved out, and it may well be vacant right now. I couldn't find any history on it anywhere on the net, and felt it deserved a bit of a story. Little did I know how connected it would be to two prominent Ottawa families of the 19th century...
The history of the house ties directly to Nicholas Sparks. THE Nicholas Sparks, original Bytown settler and unexpected downtown Ottawa real estate mogul of the mid-19th century. In fact, though the house at 388 Albert Street is actually the second house to exist on this spot, it was built by Nicholas's nephew!
* * *
388 Albert Street stands in the original Nicholas Sparks land holdings, aka lot C concession C of Nepean Township, which he acquired in 1821 with his savings of £95. At the time, it was swampy, wild, uninhabited land, but today is the land between Wellington and Laurier, from Bronson to east of the Canal. (A good write-up on Sparks can be found at: http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/sparks_nicholas_9E.html)
Sparks gradually sold portions of the property over time. He died in 1862, and following his death, in 1863, City of Ottawa plan 3922 was registered by his heirs, laying out a large portion of the property that had not already been sold.
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Scan of original Plan 3922 (was originally done in two separate maps I've quickly mashed them together) |
Registry records are unclear as to how the 388 Albert lot ended up in the hands of his nephew. But here is some of the background: In 1853, Nicholas Sparks apparently encouraged his brother Abraham Sparks Sr. to bring his family to Bytown from Wexford, Ireland. So Abraham and his wife Frances came with their four children Mary, George, Margaret and Abraham Jr., and lived in a stone house at the southeast corner of Sparks and Bay, not too far from where Nicholas lived. Mary was the oldest at 20, but Abraham Jr. was only a year and a half old. Abraham Sr. was 70 years old at the time! (His wife Frances was 42).
Anyhow, it was in 1874 that the first, original house at 388 Albert was built by Abraham Jr. (and possibly also by his brother George). This old house would have been a simple 1 1/2 storey wood-frame home, that actually was located quite a bit further out than the current house does, likely to where the sidewalk now ends (Albert Street has been widened over time of course, since the earliest days of horse and buggy).
Abraham Jr. grew up in Ottawa, and became one of the first contractors for hire in Ottawa, a trade in which he would have a long and distinguished career, recognized as one of Ottawa's best. He built, among others, the Lauder Memorial Hall at Christ Church, the old Dominion Fruit Exchange building, a wing of the old Russell Hotel, and part of the Rideau Club on Wellington. On Canada Day 1874 in the village of Hazeldean, he married Mary Jane Patterson of Perth, and it was likely for his wife and soon-to-be family that he built the house on his late uncle's former land. Abraham Jr. and his wife would have their first of six children in 1875.
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February 1873 photo of what I believe to be Abraham Sparks (LAC MIKAN 3451849). Labelled only in the Topley Studio archive as "A.G. Sparks". |
1874 seems to be the milestone date for a lot of key pieces of info related to the house... It was in late 1874 that the City Engineer's Office decided on the official numbering for houses in Ottawa, and thus Abraham Sparks Jr.'s house was given the number 388 Albert Street, the same civic address is maintains today. (Read more on the history of house numbering in Ottawa at: https://kitchissippimuseum.blogspot.com/2017/01/the-history-of-civic-addressing-in-west.html)
The 1878 fire insurance plan for Ottawa shows the house and the handful of others on the block between Bay and Sally (later renamed Lyon):
The 2-storey wood double at 382-384 Albert was built on the Sparks' lot and would also have been built by Abraham Sparks Jr. sometime between 1875-1878, to rent to tenants as a source of income. Impressively, this double stood until the 1950s, when it was likely the Urban Renewal Project that got rid of what was likely a decrepit old building at the time. Unfortunately I was not able to find a photo of either original 388 Albert Street house, nor the 382-384 double, though I'm sure the city archives must have some hidden somewhere, I just have never put too much time in researching properties outside of the Kitchissippi area!
1883 fire insurance plan updated to 1901. Original 388 Albert Street house still shown. |
* * *
The "old" 388 Albert Street was demolished sometime around 1906. Abraham Sparks Jr. had built a three-unit brick row house at 334-336-338 Slater Street (just east of Lyon) in 1902, and so he and his family moved into the unit at 338 Slater at this time. The family would later operate the building as a large boarding house.
Abraham then built the "new" 388 Albert Street, likely in 1907 (by virtue of a $1,000 mortgage he took out against the property on December 11, 1906). The new house was brick veneered, larger than the previous house, and set further back from Albert Street. Plus it was 2 1/2 storeys, versus the original 1 1/2 storey (which at one point had been modified to 2 storeys).
(July 12/19: Additional research indicates that the date of the demolishing of the old house and construction of the new house may have been in 1903-1904; the house sat vacant for all of 1902 and 1903, and then the address was listed with a tenant in 1904 - likely the 'new' house. The December 1906 mortgage would more likely indicate the work happened then, but since Sparks owned multiple properties and was constantly building and selling, it's not impossible the 1906 mortgage was just his way of borrowing money for some other project. Unfortunately I'm not sure we'll ever be able to turn back the clock to know the exact date when the house was built, but it definitely is at least within the range of 1903-1907).
The Sparks remained at 338 Slater for the next 10 years, and rented out the new 388 Albert to tenants.
The first occupant of the new 388 Albert Street was Mrs. Mary Anne Heney (formerly McCourt), who would have been in her early 70s. Born in Dungannon, County Tyrone, Ireland, she had spent most of her adult life in Stonecliffe, Ontario, halfway between Chalk River and Mattawa, but ended up in Ottawa sometime after losing her husband Thomas Heney in 1892.
The important Ottawa connections continue, as Thomas Heney was brother of Chevalier John Heney, one of Ottawa's most well-known citizens of the 19th century, and the patriarch of the well-known Heney family in Ottawa (though unrelated to the John Heney who had a history on Richmond Road in Kitchissippi).
Mary Heney lived at 388 Albert with her adult children George and Annie from 1907 until her death at home on September 18th, 1911. Other tenants moved in to the house over the next few years: William J. Phillips (1912-1914), Superintendent of agents with the Union Life Assurance Company; and George M. Donaldson (1915). The house was advertised for rent in March of 1916 (oddly as a "cottage"!) but remained vacant through the summer.
By the fall of 1916, it appears the Sparks family decided to move in to the house at 388 Albert. Abraham Sparks Jr. had retired from contracting in 1912, and so he and his wife Mary were to enjoy their retirement years living with their daughter Ada and her husband William H. Smyth, who had three young children, with a fourth on the way. The Smyths would remain here into the 1950s.
Abraham Sparks meanwhile lived to a great old age of 81, passing away at 1:30 a.m. the morning of October 30th, 1933. Along with being a top builder in Ottawa, he was a member of Christ Church Cathedral for 75 years (from 1858 to 1933), a close friend of Sir Charles Tupper (who holds the distinction of being Prime Minister of Canada for the shortest period, 10 weeks in 1896), and Abraham was also a member of No. 2 Battalion of the Ottawa Volunteer Fire Brigade, before the Ottawa Fire Department was established. He was also notably the last surviving nephew of Nicholas Sparks, at the time of his death.
In 1927, he shared his early memories of downtown Ottawa for the history page in the Citizen:
The "old" 388 Albert Street was demolished sometime around 1906. Abraham Sparks Jr. had built a three-unit brick row house at 334-336-338 Slater Street (just east of Lyon) in 1902, and so he and his family moved into the unit at 338 Slater at this time. The family would later operate the building as a large boarding house.
Abraham then built the "new" 388 Albert Street, likely in 1907 (by virtue of a $1,000 mortgage he took out against the property on December 11, 1906). The new house was brick veneered, larger than the previous house, and set further back from Albert Street. Plus it was 2 1/2 storeys, versus the original 1 1/2 storey (which at one point had been modified to 2 storeys).
(July 12/19: Additional research indicates that the date of the demolishing of the old house and construction of the new house may have been in 1903-1904; the house sat vacant for all of 1902 and 1903, and then the address was listed with a tenant in 1904 - likely the 'new' house. The December 1906 mortgage would more likely indicate the work happened then, but since Sparks owned multiple properties and was constantly building and selling, it's not impossible the 1906 mortgage was just his way of borrowing money for some other project. Unfortunately I'm not sure we'll ever be able to turn back the clock to know the exact date when the house was built, but it definitely is at least within the range of 1903-1907).
The Sparks remained at 338 Slater for the next 10 years, and rented out the new 388 Albert to tenants.
The first occupant of the new 388 Albert Street was Mrs. Mary Anne Heney (formerly McCourt), who would have been in her early 70s. Born in Dungannon, County Tyrone, Ireland, she had spent most of her adult life in Stonecliffe, Ontario, halfway between Chalk River and Mattawa, but ended up in Ottawa sometime after losing her husband Thomas Heney in 1892.
The important Ottawa connections continue, as Thomas Heney was brother of Chevalier John Heney, one of Ottawa's most well-known citizens of the 19th century, and the patriarch of the well-known Heney family in Ottawa (though unrelated to the John Heney who had a history on Richmond Road in Kitchissippi).
Mary Heney lived at 388 Albert with her adult children George and Annie from 1907 until her death at home on September 18th, 1911. Other tenants moved in to the house over the next few years: William J. Phillips (1912-1914), Superintendent of agents with the Union Life Assurance Company; and George M. Donaldson (1915). The house was advertised for rent in March of 1916 (oddly as a "cottage"!) but remained vacant through the summer.
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March 18 1916 - "Cottage"! |
By the fall of 1916, it appears the Sparks family decided to move in to the house at 388 Albert. Abraham Sparks Jr. had retired from contracting in 1912, and so he and his wife Mary were to enjoy their retirement years living with their daughter Ada and her husband William H. Smyth, who had three young children, with a fourth on the way. The Smyths would remain here into the 1950s.
Abraham Sparks meanwhile lived to a great old age of 81, passing away at 1:30 a.m. the morning of October 30th, 1933. Along with being a top builder in Ottawa, he was a member of Christ Church Cathedral for 75 years (from 1858 to 1933), a close friend of Sir Charles Tupper (who holds the distinction of being Prime Minister of Canada for the shortest period, 10 weeks in 1896), and Abraham was also a member of No. 2 Battalion of the Ottawa Volunteer Fire Brigade, before the Ottawa Fire Department was established. He was also notably the last surviving nephew of Nicholas Sparks, at the time of his death.
In 1927, he shared his early memories of downtown Ottawa for the history page in the Citizen:
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Ottawa Citizen February 5, 1927 Abraham Sparks shared memories for the weekly history page. |
Ada's husband William Smyth died in 1927 at the age of 42, leaving his widow with six children, the youngest only 11 months old. After Abraham died, his widow Mary Jane survived him until she passed in 1938. Ada continued to live in the house raising her family, until her own passing in February of 1953.
* * *
388 Albert left left the Sparks family for the first time, well, ever in 1954, when Ada's heirs (son Charles and daughter Vera), sold 388 Albert to Harry Benovoy for $16,000.
Benovoy and his family lived upstairs, but converted the ground floor of the house to commercial.
The first business to move into the ground floor was the Uniform Cap Manufacturing Company, who had relocated from their location at the corner of Bank and Albert. Unfortunately I can't find a good ad for them while at 388 Albert, but here is an ad from their Bank Street location from just a few months prior to their move up Albert:
Uniform Cap remained in the house until the mid-60s. In 1965, the property was sold to Bruno Kaczmark for $26,000, who maintained ownership (his widow Irene took over in 1981) until at least 2009, when City records noted that acquiring the property from them would be a requirement for a potential new central library location that was considered for the block. So I can't speak to its current/recent ownership.
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1937 view of Albert looking west from Bank Street. Again another block too far to the east, but included to show what Albert looked like pre-WWII. (LAC MIKAN 3325995) |
* * *
388 Albert left left the Sparks family for the first time, well, ever in 1954, when Ada's heirs (son Charles and daughter Vera), sold 388 Albert to Harry Benovoy for $16,000.
Benovoy and his family lived upstairs, but converted the ground floor of the house to commercial.
The first business to move into the ground floor was the Uniform Cap Manufacturing Company, who had relocated from their location at the corner of Bank and Albert. Unfortunately I can't find a good ad for them while at 388 Albert, but here is an ad from their Bank Street location from just a few months prior to their move up Albert:
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Ottawa Citizen March 19, 1954 |
Uniform Cap remained in the house until the mid-60s. In 1965, the property was sold to Bruno Kaczmark for $26,000, who maintained ownership (his widow Irene took over in 1981) until at least 2009, when City records noted that acquiring the property from them would be a requirement for a potential new central library location that was considered for the block. So I can't speak to its current/recent ownership.
But from the 60s onwards it went through a variety of different stores and uses. Elgin Shoe Service moved in from 1968 to about 1975, then became Bruno Shoe Service at some point, until the very late 1980s.
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March 10, 1973 |
It was converted to a restaurant in 1990, when it was Frank's Cafe, then Le Maroc, then Andrew's Cafe (operated by Andrew Coghlin) around the turn of the millennium.
Scone Witch opened in September of 2004 by Heather Matthews, who had operated Domus in Ottawa from 1970 to 1988. Scone Witch moved in 2014 to Elgin and has since also opened in at least two other locations. As mentioned at the top, Good Eats moved in recently, but is no longer there.
May 2012 view of Scone Witch and the old R.A. Hydeclarke building (former CS Coop and Alterna Bank) which was demolished in 2016. |
As with any property downtown, so much history... I love all the historical connections this place have, and the impressive fact that it has survived longer than all others in the area. And who would have thought that the house would have been built by Nicholas Sparks' nephew??
Friday, June 7, 2019
The Kitchissippi Museum - Pop-Up Museum & Dispay - St. Vincent de Paul's - starts today!
As part of the ongoing events for Wellington Village's 100th Anniversary, I am really excited to announce that later today (Friday June 7th), and for the next two weeks, the huge front window display at St. Vincent de Paul at 1273 Wellington Street West will be populated by items from the Kitchissippi Museum!
I pulled together a ton of stuff from my collection, some of which I've used in the past when I've set up ad hoc booths/kiosks at events like Westfest, Westboro Fuse, Tastes of Wellington West and Heritage Day. But this is the first time I've ever been able to get a monster display set up for a longer period of time! So I am really excited that this is going to run for the next two weeks.
I've included mostly Wellington Village/area related items, but also have included a ton of Ottawa history related items too (to help fill it up, of course!). Some of the highlights of the window are:
* A moving slideshow of photos from Wellington Village's history
* A few artifacts from our railway and streetcar past, from the old Ottawa West trainyards at Bayview
* A fire alarm box which was located for 30 years at the corner of Woodroffe and Carling Avenue (as many would have throughout Wellington Village from the 1920s until they were all removed in 1970).
* Huge 24x36 photos of the neighbourhood, including some rare aerial/oblique shots, and one really cool low-elevation oblique photo of downtown Ottawa from 1926 never before seen
* Other items from local businesses and industry, including a stove cover from Beach Foundry
* Some rare Ottawa history items, including old phone books from the 1930s, Super Ex and Winter Carnival programs, Ottawa Auditorium programs, advertising items, a receipt from the mid-1800s, and more
* A newspaper article from London, England from 1859 illustrating the "proposed" Parliament Buildings in Ottawa
* Nepean/Fisher Park/Champlain Park yearbooks from the 1950s.
* Lots more
It's a big chunk of my collection, and I'm happy to share it for the next two weeks, and hope that people passing by the window will enjoy viewing some of the items!
Sadly none of the collection will be part of the usual St. Vincent's auction (I'm sure the staff will be tired of asking that question by two weeks from now!), but I know that there will be 3 canvas prints donated by local business CanvasPop on Hamilton Avenue North that will be in the window as well, and those prints will be auctioned at the big event at Thyme & Again on Saturday the 22nd. There will also be some other new local products/swag on demo in the window courtesy of the BIA, and I think some prints from Andrew King as well. All that to say...well worth making the time to stop by and have a look!
I believe it launches at 6 p.m. tonight (Friday) so I'm excited to see it myself. By the time you read this.. it probably will already be in full swing!
St. Vincent de Paul is at 1273 Wellington Street West https://goo.gl/maps/kNJnjFK3E1pxfZmQ7
I pulled together a ton of stuff from my collection, some of which I've used in the past when I've set up ad hoc booths/kiosks at events like Westfest, Westboro Fuse, Tastes of Wellington West and Heritage Day. But this is the first time I've ever been able to get a monster display set up for a longer period of time! So I am really excited that this is going to run for the next two weeks.
I've included mostly Wellington Village/area related items, but also have included a ton of Ottawa history related items too (to help fill it up, of course!). Some of the highlights of the window are:
* A moving slideshow of photos from Wellington Village's history
* A few artifacts from our railway and streetcar past, from the old Ottawa West trainyards at Bayview
* A fire alarm box which was located for 30 years at the corner of Woodroffe and Carling Avenue (as many would have throughout Wellington Village from the 1920s until they were all removed in 1970).
* Huge 24x36 photos of the neighbourhood, including some rare aerial/oblique shots, and one really cool low-elevation oblique photo of downtown Ottawa from 1926 never before seen
* Other items from local businesses and industry, including a stove cover from Beach Foundry
* Some rare Ottawa history items, including old phone books from the 1930s, Super Ex and Winter Carnival programs, Ottawa Auditorium programs, advertising items, a receipt from the mid-1800s, and more
* A newspaper article from London, England from 1859 illustrating the "proposed" Parliament Buildings in Ottawa
* Nepean/Fisher Park/Champlain Park yearbooks from the 1950s.
* Lots more
It's a big chunk of my collection, and I'm happy to share it for the next two weeks, and hope that people passing by the window will enjoy viewing some of the items!
Sadly none of the collection will be part of the usual St. Vincent's auction (I'm sure the staff will be tired of asking that question by two weeks from now!), but I know that there will be 3 canvas prints donated by local business CanvasPop on Hamilton Avenue North that will be in the window as well, and those prints will be auctioned at the big event at Thyme & Again on Saturday the 22nd. There will also be some other new local products/swag on demo in the window courtesy of the BIA, and I think some prints from Andrew King as well. All that to say...well worth making the time to stop by and have a look!
I believe it launches at 6 p.m. tonight (Friday) so I'm excited to see it myself. By the time you read this.. it probably will already be in full swing!
St. Vincent de Paul is at 1273 Wellington Street West https://goo.gl/maps/kNJnjFK3E1pxfZmQ7
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The building today (Source: CTV News) |
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