123 Frederick Street - Parr Division
The Charlotte County Gaol is one of the province’s oldest surviving gaols. Built in 1832 from massive granite blocks shipped by scow from a quarry in Deer Isle, Maine, it speaks to the heavy-handedness of 19th century justice. Built adjacent to the Charlotte County Court House (1839-40), this functional Georgian style building is an imposing structure that has remained relatively unaltered over time.
The building has an imposing setting at the top of the sloped public square adjacent to the Charlotte County Court House.
The character-defining elements include:
The structural elements are represented through:
The interior characteristics throughout the building include:
Architectural Style: Georgian
Sources: Department of Wellness, Culture and Sport, Heritage Branch
The building has an imposing setting at the top of the sloped public square adjacent to the Charlotte County Court House.
The character-defining elements include:
- simple rectangular massing with unadorned and ordered stonework;
- simple squared window openings on the long side with iron security bars;
- a low hip roof with small unadorned eave and cor- nice, and the pair of central chimneys;
- a slight asymmetry within the principal façade revealing the functional uses within.
The structural elements are represented through:
- uncoursed rubble stone foundation comprised of sandstone & shale;
- granite lintel above the main entry door, with the carved date “1832” inscribed;
- fenestration on the southern office facade, with a pair of 2 over 2 double-hung wood-frame windows on each floor (unlikely to be original windows), including cut granite sills and partial remnants of original shutter hardware;
- walls built of split-faced coursed granite ashlars in a running bond, with a continuous stone belt course at the exterior second floor level;
- cell wing corridor floors built of 2.46 meters long interlocking tapered granite slabs with a split-faced surface;
- floor structure of wood beam and planks in the office/entry section.
The interior characteristics throughout the building include:
- the interior first floor layout; - with the gaol area comprised of 10 similar-sized stone walled cells on the main floor, with two rows of 5 cells on either side of the central 2.46 meters wide corridor;
- the detention area which is connected to a two-room office/entry area occupying one-quarter of the total floor area;
- original cell area hinged iron doors and hardware
- the ten exterior wall loopholes on the main floor which allow small amounts of ventilation and natural light in each cell;
- original cast iron prisoners’ bed frames in cells;
- Georgian style painted wood railing and stair connecting the two office floors;
- fireplaces and wood mantles supported by a large arched brick and stone structure in the basement; - simple wooden door on the rear façade which once led to an adjoining wood-frame jailer’s quarters including a robust original lockset and hinge hardware;
- the second floor layout similar to the first, with the notable exception of the prison wing being a single large secured room rather than individual cells.
Architectural Style: Georgian
Sources: Department of Wellness, Culture and Sport, Heritage Branch