PRESERVING HERITAGE
Angus Orford and Karen Rose receive City of Charlottetown’s highest heritage honour
City of Charlottetown presents recognition awards to individuals and groups
More than a century of history emanates from Angus Orford and Karen Rose’s home on Prince Street.
The couple purchased the home in 2003 when it was, at the time, divided into four apartment units.
They eventually went to Ontario to work for nine years before returning home, deciding to live downtown, and returning their house at 96 Prince St. to its former glory.
The plan was always to keep the best historical features of the home, which was originally constructed in 1879 and is known as the Houle House.
The home was originally owned by H.H. Houle, the track master of the P.E.I. railway, who planned the house with architects David Stirling and William Critchlow Harris.
“It’s been a labour of love over the last few years,’’ Orford says.
“A project like this, you don’t do it all at once, but you get a lot of intrinsic enjoyment out of it.’’
On Tuesday, the City of Charlottetown handed out its heritage awards, the most prestigious being the Catherine G. Hennessey Award, which went to Orford and Rose.
The couple also won a heritage award for their
efforts last year.
The awards honour people and organizations in the community who have worked hard to preserve and celebrate municipal heritage.
“Karen had come up with some absolutely brilliant ideas, modernizing the inside of the house and maintaining and preserving the historical significance of it,’’ says Orford.
The old cast iron radiators were removed, sandblasted and re-painted.
They also had the exterior brick work cleaned and repointed and they’re changing out all the windows, basically bringing out all the significant high Victorian architecture.
“This particular property is 140 years (old), and it is going to be around a lot longer than any of us are going to be. We’ve been able to enjoy making it a very attractive living space.’’ Angus Orford
Although the city’s heritage designation refers to the building’s exterior, Orford and Rose have been able to keep many of the heritage aspects inside the house while also improving energy efficiency.
For example, a painted ceiling in the ground-floor living room is said to have been painted by a classmate of well-known artist Robert Harris.
“This particular property is 140 years (old), and it is going to be around a lot longer than any of us are going to be,’’ Orford says.
“We’ve been able to enjoy making it a very attractive living space.’’
Paul Coles, who renovates homes for a living, also received a heritage award on Tuesday for the renovation of his property at 2-6 Hillsborough St.
“I bought probably the worst looking building in the city,’’ Coles laughed before noting that fixing up a home in the 500 Lots Area is a careful balancing act between returning a building to its former glory without making it look too modern and out of place.
As part of the heritage awards, the city also rolled out an exhibit called “Heat, Lights and the Devil Wagon: The History of Energy and Innovation in Charlottetown’’.
The pop-up exhibit will be featured in the storefront windows of the planning and heritage department at 223 Queen St.
Historic images from the city’s collection and artifacts from the P.E.I. Museum and individual donors will be on exhibit in the space until March 26.
Excerpts from the exhibit are also available on the city’s Facebook page and Twitter feed.