Britannia Village, Ottawa
Neighbourhood
Village sign
Village Sign with Heritage Motif (top)
Heritage home
Semi-Circular, Inset Upper Balcony, 1908[1][2][3]
Village entrance
Village Entrance and the Trans Canada Trail
Village Map
Map of Britannia Village, Ottawa[lower-alpha 1][lower-alpha 2][lower-alpha 3]
Coordinates: 45°22′07.7″N 75°47′59.2″W / 45.368806°N 75.799778°W / 45.368806; -75.799778
CountryCanada
ProvinceOntario
CityOttawa
Government
  MPsAnita Vandenbeld
  MPPsJeremy Roberts
  CouncillorsTheresa Kavanagh
  Governing bodyBritannia Village Community Association
  PresidentKaren Patzer
Elevation
60 m (200 ft)
Population
  Total610
 Statistics Canada 2021 Census
Websitebvcaottawa.wordpress.com/Britannia

Britannia Village (est. 1818)[6][7] has a rich history and architecture, having been founded some eight years before Bytown (est. 1826),[8] the former name of the City of Ottawa. The history of the village is interwoven with the creation of the adjacent Britannia Amusement Park, today simply known as Britannia Park.

Geographically, the village is located on a broad peninsula and is largely defined by natural boundaries. According to the Ottawa Neighborhood Study,[9] the village is bordered by the Ottawa River to the North, Lac Deschênes and Britannia Park to the west, the Trans Canada Trail to the south, and Mud Lake[10] (Britannia Conservation Area[11]) to the east. Lac Deschênes is home to 4 sailing clubs including the Britannia Yacht Club which is located in the village. The village also borders on Britannia Beach, one of four beaches in Ottawa.[12] Britannia Road is the only road into and out of the village and the only access to the Britannia Water Purification Plant.[13]

The village has a total population of 610 people in 270 private households;[14] it is a sub-neighborhood of the Britannia area of Bay Ward, in the west end of Ottawa. The village has an active association (Britannia Village Community Association or BVCA)[15] and a community Facebook page (Friends of Britannia Village).[16]

History

The archaeological record from the early 1900s provides ample evidence of Indigenous peoples on the beaches of Lac Deschênes, and hence in and around the village; the evidence is largely in the form of indigenous beach workshops where the Algonquin Anishinaabe would chip out flint arrowheads or laboriously grind an edge into a stone tomahawk.[17]

Mill town (1826–1887)

In 1826, Captain John Le Breton,[18] a seriously-injured soldier in the War of 1812, first established a flour mill and then a successful lumber mill in the village, then part of the Nepean Township.[19] At the time, as part of the Ottawa River timber trade, logs were floated down the river in timber rafts (bundled logs) to get to the burgeoning construction market in Bytown (Ottawa), some 14km away. However, the Deschênes Rapids, with its vertical drop of about 9ft,[20] presented a formidable challenge. The timber rafts had to be disassembled, guided through the rapids one log at-a-time by 2 or 3 raftsmen, and subsequently reassembled.[21][22] By creating a mill at the head of the Deschênes Rapids, Le Breton was able to convince logging companies to cut their logs at his sawmill to avoid the cost of both reassembling the timber rafts and floating them to Bytown. LeBreton transported the cut lumber overland by horse and cart to Bytown along Richmond Rd that had been created a few years earlier.[6] Mill workers included labourers and carpenters, and most lived in the village.

The mill changed owners (Nelson G. Robinson, 1846; John McAmmond Jr., 1873),[23] eventually producing up to 100,000 boards per year (1860),[24] and also including a carding mill, carpenter shop and a forge.[25] In the process, a second sawmill was established in the village along the bay near the foot of Rowatt St.[26] The last owner of the mills (John C. Jamieson[27]) could not make the business profitable because of a stock market crash and competition from larger mills.[28] In 1887, rather than converting the mills into pulp and paper factories, which some of his competitors were doing, Jamieson chose to convert them into summer rental residences with ample storage space underneath for boats.[29] By 1875, a post office (48 Britannia Rd) had been established in the village on the basis of 25 residences.[30]

Summer-cottage resort (1887–1960)

Cottage-building in the village flourished at the beginning of this era because of the creation of a major amusement park adjacent to the village and the establishment of a boat club in 1887.[31] The main tourist attraction in the amusement park was a long, thin, wooden pier which was built on the rubble from a canal intended for generating power.

Engineering feats

Following the invention of dynamite in 1867, the Metropolitan Electric Co. excavated a canal (14 ft deep × 150 ft wide × 2,000 ft long)[32] on the north shore of the village to generate electricity (see photo gallery on Britannia Yacht Club below). The Hull Electric Company had already successfully used the Deschênes Rapids to generate electricity on the other side of the Ottawa River.[33] Between 1898 and 1901, Metropolitan Electric employed up to 500 workers and spent nearly half a million dollars[34] (about $17M in 2022 dollars). Unfortunately, the company ran out of money and the project was abandoned before the powerhouse could be installed.[35] Most of the rubble from the excavation was piled alongside the canal; on the north side, this resulted in the formation of a thin island that is easily visible when standing on the shore of the river at the Britannia Water Purification Plant. Rubble piled on the south side resulted in a large breakwater that now has a hiking trail on top of it. Photographs and a timeline for the construction of the Metropolitan Electric canal are available.[36][37]

Even though the hydroelectric project failed, its' byproducts served two useful purposes. First, large boulders from the excavated canal were used as the foundation for the wooden Britannia Pier.[38] In February, 1900, men cut a huge hole in the ice to the bottom of Lac Deschênes in the shape/dimensions of the pier (i.e. 30 ft by 1,050ft, later extended to 1,450ft[38]); large boulders were then carted by 25 teams of horses from the south shore of the Metropolitan Electric canal and dumped/layered into the hole. The top of the layered stones was covered with concrete and the wooden pier was built on top.[39] Secondly, some 50 years later, the Britannia Yacht Club (Thomas Fuller, Reginald Bruce, and many volunteers recruited by the Ladies Auxiliary) used the excavated canal to create two protected harbours for mooring some 250 boats. This was accomplished in two phases from 1950 to 1969 by damming the canal, annexing two small islands plus Britannia Island just north of the canal, joining them all to their property, digging out the harbours, and building about one mile of harbour walls, all with an enormous amount of fill/concrete.[40]

Britannia Amusement Park

Colourized photo of Britannia Pier and beaches. The pier was built on boulders from the failed Metropolitan Electric canal. The large beach in the foreground has since been replaced by grass (see notes on village map) (1900).
Colourized postcard illustrating throngs on the wooden, electrified Britannia Pier. Modesty was emphasized with day dresses covering the body and long sleeves covering the arms (1908).

In 1900, the Ottawa Electric Railway (OER) company opened an 18-acre amusement park which was expanded to 53 acres in 1904;[41] the firm purchased the land from Britannia Village landowners.[42] Like other transportation companies of the era, OER electric trolleys were busy during the workweek but under utilized during the weekend. In an era without cars, the OER built the park as a fresh-air, weekend escape from polluted Bytown, thereby increasing their trolley use and income.[38] The park was also serviced by a Canadian Pacific Railway line.

The park became one of Canada's top tourist attractions at the time,[38] and facilitated a rapid residential housing/cottage boom in the village.[43][44] In 1890, 1900 and 1910, the combined number of cottages and permanent residences in the village was 38, 83 and 166, respectively.[45] During this era, the village also became quite fashionable when several prominent Ottawa figures began to reside there.[6] The park had a reputation as the People's Playground.[46]

Over time, the park facilities included the trolley station, a tall footbridge over the CPR railway tracks, 65 dressing rooms for swimmers in 2 pavilions, a merry-go-round, a miniature train, donkey rides, a 700-person auditorium (Lakeside Gardens), the wooden Britannia Pier complete with a wharf and three-story boating clubhouse, and a summer hotel at the intersection of Bradford and Rowatt.[48][43][38] Moonlight excursions on the G.B. Greene, a 255 tonne/250 passenger riverboat were in high demand.[49] Easily-accessible electric trolley service from Ottawa to Britannia Park at 7 cents a ride brought thousands of tourists per day[9] during the summer months.[50] Lakeside Gardens featured Sunday night concerts, drama night, films and dancing on Fridays and Saturdays supervised by the Kiwanis Club. As many as 8,000 per season attended these dances.[51] Society's fascination with trains and trolleys during this era was evidenced by three separate rail systems operating in the park, whereas today there are none.

The slow demise of the "electric park" began when the G.B. Greene riverboat and the boat clubhouse on Britannia Pier burned in 1916 and 1918, respectively.[38] The demise accelerated in the mid-1940s when widespread availability of automobiles allowed people to reach other entertainment destinations.[43] The park was annexed by the City of Ottawa in 1951,[43] and by 1955, much of its' original infrastructure, including the long pier and Lakeside Gardens, had either rotted, burned or been demolished.[38] The trolley line to the park was decommissioned in 1959.[38] The train track was removed in 1967 and replaced in the early 70s by a bicycle path (i.e. the Trans Canada Trail).[52] In a bygone era lasting some 60 years, the park had been the playground of eastern Ontario.[53] Today, the park is simply known as Britannia Park, whereas the Britannia Amusement Park is listed in Closed Canadian Parks[54] as one of 9 closed amusement parks that were built or nurtured by transportation companies.[55]

Commuter town (1960–2000)

During this era, Britannia, and by association the village, garnered a reputation of being a commuter town. Although the village had been established in 1818, it was only annexed by the City of Ottawa in 1950,[43] and therefore, did not receive city services until after that date. Even though the installation of sewers in Ottawa had begun in 1875,[56] Britannia was only serviced in 1960; at that time, Britannia was notorious at Ottawa City Hall for sporting most of Ottawa's remaining 185 outhouses.[57] Prior to the installation of water mains in the village, water had been provided for park facilities and for some paying village residences by two water towers, one installed privately by Gerald Jamieson (son of John Jamieson), and by wells and rain barrels.[58] In 1959, a City of Ottawa survey showed that nearly half of the dwellings in the village were deemed to be in poor or very poor condition.[59]

The long delay in the installation of sewers and water soiled the reputation of Britannia, including the village, and lowered land/house prices and taxes. This reduced living costs in the village and made it attractive to families that couldn't afford to live in Ottawa. Cheap fares on the trolley and later buses, allowed workers to readily commute from the village to Ottawa for work.

Revitalization (since 2000)

Flood proofing

From 2007 to 2018, the Britannia Village Community Association worked with the City of Ottawa and the Rideau Valley Conservation Authority to reduce the risk of flooding in the village.[60] This involved the construction of berms, gates and a pump station designed to regulatory standards for flood proofing in Eastern Ontario (i.e. 1 in 100-year flood event[61][62]). Even in the case of an extreme climate change event, flood plain maps (i.e. 1 in 350-year flood event[63]) show that many residences in the village would not get floodwaters on their property.

Gentrification

Since about 2000, rapid gentrification has resulted in considerable renovation, demolition and construction of many elaborate residences in the village.

Heritage buildings and architectural style

Heritage home built in 1907 showing large turret with conical roof, and large wrap-around verandah (On Heritage Register)
Heritage home built in 1895 showing 7-sided second storey porch with conical roof (Protected by Bylaw 237-95[1])

The village exhibits a large diversity of architectural styles since residences were built in a variety of eras; it was not developed as a planned community but rather as a cottage district which grew and developed over time.[64] "Historic" Britannia Village is well represented by 31 buildings that the City of Ottawa has deemed to have heritage status,[65] a designation applied to buildings of significant cultural heritage value; by comparison, Lincoln Heights and Belltown, which border the village, have a total of three combined. These heritage houses, often in vernacular architecture, usually have brick or wood siding including board-and-battan, clapboard or shiplap, and most were constructed in the late 1800s (14) and in the first decade of the 1900s (14).[65] Many exhibit Queen Anne style architecture characterized by eclecticism, asymmetry, contrast and even excess.

During the 1960s and 1970s, the main architectural style of new housing was the flat-roofed duplex and some row housing.[66] Many village duplexes were originally built in areas that were subsequently re-zoned to R10[67][68] (detached dwelling residential area) with the intent of preserving the heritage of the neighborhood. The City of Ottawa has not yet made available changes in building regulations resulting from Bill 23 (More Homes Built Faster Act, 2022, Legislative Assembly of Ontario).[69]

Addresses of buildings with heritage status

The village has two types of heritage buildings that are protected under the Ontario Heritage Act:

A) Protected by "Individual Designation under Part IV of the Ontario Heritage Act (Ontario Regulation 9/06)".[70] Alterations, additions or partial demolition of these properties require a heritage permit from the City of Ottawa.[71] The following buildings are protected individually by Bylaws# 20-97, 169-94, 09-94, 20-97, 237-95, 20-97 and 196-01, respectively.[1]

  • Bradford St: 66 (Rowatt House) and 84 (Arbour House)
  • Britannia Rd: 48 (1st post office), 127 (William Murphy House), 154, 175 (a Murphy Brothers' Cottage) and 181 (St. Stephen's Anglican Church)

B) Interim Protection under Section 27 (1.2) of the Ontario Heritage Act.[65] There are no restrictions on alterations to properties listed on the Heritage Register. Owners must provide the City of Ottawa with 60 days' notice of intent to demolish or remove a building.[71]

  • Britannia Rd: 63, 73, 90, 141, 190-192, 195, 220, 229, 230, 236, 240, 238A-238B
  • Bradford St: 54, 64, 119, 155, 195, 205
  • Cassels St: 2777 (Britannia Yacht Club), 2780
  • Kirby Rd: 95
  • Rowatt St: 2748, 2764 (Jamieson House), 2775

Heritage attributes in modern residences

The BVCA, architects like John Riordan,[72] and previously the Britannia Village Advocacy[73] (1996), have tried to preserve the eclectic character of the village by encouraging the incorporation of heritage attributes into new structures and renovations, as shown below.

The most iconic village heritage attribute featured in several village residences is probably the semi-circular, inset upper balcony[2] which is also featured on the top of the Britannia Village sign. Although this heritage attribute is relatively uncommon, it does exist elsewhere.[77] The City of Ottawa heritage plaque at 175 Britannia Road describes this architectural style as a Murphy Brothers' Cottage. Access to fresh air through the incorporation of verandas and balconies featured prominently in late 1800 and early 1900 architecture.

Character

View of the village from Britannia Beach

The village is at the centre of a recreational hub with boating at the Britannia Yacht Club, hiking in Mud Lake[10], cycling on the Trans Canada Trail, and volleyball, swimming, kitesurfing, fishing and picnicking at Britannia Beach and Park. Consequently, many villagers are focused on the outdoors. In the winter, villagers are increasingly using the recently-created (2019) Britannia Winter Trail[78] for cross-country skiing, walking and winter biking. Bird watching is also popular in the village because adjacent Mud Lake is in a major migratory corridor that is recognized as one of the most popular urban sites for bird watching in Canada.[10] Village events include the Britannia Village Community Arts Crawl[79] celebrating local artists and musicians, a fall fundraising/social event, garage sale, Jane's Walk of the historic area and regular house potluck dinners.

Notables in the community

Notes

  1. The map was photographed in 1968 from an altitude of approximately 2,400 meters. The current village boundaries are the same as they were in 1968.
  2. In 1900, the beach was on both sides of Britannia Pier. During the 1960s, Britannia Park was expanded through land reclamation[4] on both the east and west side of the pier; in the process, the beach on the west side was obliterated and replaced with grass. On the map, the retaining wall on the left side of the pier shows the extent of the reclamation.
  3. The original Britannia Pier (30 ft wide) built in 1900 was widened by the City of Ottawa to approximately 260 ft in the 1950/60s. The original, T-shaped pier can be seen on the map embedded on the left side of the widened pier. During the 70s, a beach and three breakwaters were added to the end of the pier. Consult the GeoOttawa aerial photo timeline slider[5] for more detailed photos of this development.
  4. Multiple drilling rigs were used to drill holes that were subsequently filled with an explosive and a detonator. After detonation, stone rubble was moved to either the north or south side of the canal.

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Ontario Heritage Act Register". Province of Ontario. Retrieved 13 June 2022.
  2. 1 2 3 Horwitz & Horwitz 1996, p. 11.
  3. "Individually-designated heritage properties in Ottawa" (PDF). City of Ottawa. Retrieved 16 November 2023.
  4. Arnott, W.M. (3 November 1960). "City's land reclamation program nets 100 acres (page 10)". Ottawa Citizen. Retrieved 20 August 2023.
  5. 1 2 "GeoOttawa Aerial Photos Timeline Slider". City of Ottawa. Retrieved 15 July 2023.
  6. 1 2 3 Wilson, E (10 May 1934). "Quiet old Village of Britannia was busy place half a century ago". The Evening Citizen. Retrieved 25 May 2022.
  7. Taylor & Kennedy 2017, p. 21: “Col. Joseph Bouchette, British Dominions of North America, Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown and Green, volume 1 (London, 1832).”
  8. "The Corporation of Bytown". The Historical Society of Ottawa. 2021. Retrieved 25 November 2022.
  9. 1 2 "Britannia Village". Ottawa Neighbourhood Study. University of Ottawa. Retrieved 27 April 2022.
  10. 1 2 3 "Mud Lake". National Capital Commission. Government of Canada. Retrieved 27 April 2022.
  11. "Conservation Areas in Ottawa". City of Ottawa. Retrieved 1 January 2024.
  12. "Swim and sunbathe at Ottawa's sandy beaches". Ottawa Tourism and Convention Authority. Government of Ontario. 30 June 2021. Retrieved 28 April 2022.
  13. "Britannia Water Purification Plant – Annual Report 2020" (PDF). City of Ottawa. Retrieved 27 April 2022.
  14. Complements of Statistics Canada (Custom Services – Central Region) who geocoded the village geography against their geographic database and then used an automated tool to provide the 2021 census data.
  15. "Britannia Village Community Association". Retrieved 27 April 2022.
  16. "Friends of Britannia Village". Facebook. Retrieved 27 April 2022.
  17. "Sowter, TWE (1900). "Archeology of Lake Deschênes". The Ottawa Naturalist. Vol. X111, No. 10: 225-238".
  18. 1 2 Roberts, D (1988). "Le Breton, John". Dictionary of Canadian Biography. University of Toronto. Retrieved 11 May 2022.
  19. Taylor & Kennedy 2017, p. 9, 21, 28.
  20. Small, Henry Beaumont (1866). "The Canadian Handbook and Tourists' Guide". M. Longmoore, Montreal. p. 106. Retrieved 5 July 2023.
  21. Taylor & Kennedy 2017, p. 8, 9.
  22. Mika, Nick; Mika, Helma (1982). Bytown: The Early Days of Ottawa. Mika Publishing Company. p. 120. ISBN 0-919303-60-9.
  23. Taylor & Kennedy 2017, p. 21, 38.
  24. Taylor & Kennedy 2017, p. 13: "Public Archives of Canada, Census of the Canadas, 1860-61, Nepean Township (Reel C-1013), Enumeration District 3, pg. 11."
  25. Taylor & Kennedy 2017, p. 28, 33.
  26. Taylor & Kennedy 2017, p. 12.
  27. "John Cameron Jamieson Obituary". Retrieved 2012-07-03.
  28. Taylor & Kennedy 2017, p. 41.
  29. Taylor & Kennedy 2017, p. 41,42.
  30. Taylor & Kennedy 2017, p. 40.
  31. Taylor & Kennedy 2017, p. 43.
  32. Taylor & Kennedy 2017, p. 61.
  33. "Bistro 1908, Formerly the Hull Electric Company". Canadian Museum of History. Government of Canada. Retrieved 10 October 2023.
  34. Taylor & Kennedy 2017, p. 107, 108.
  35. Taylor & Kennedy 2017, p. 61, 62.
  36. "Photographs of the Construction of the Britannia Power Canal". Flickr. Colin Churcher. 30 June 2021. Retrieved 11 July 2022.
  37. "Timeline of the Construction of the Britannia Power Canal" (PDF). Flickr. Colin Churcher. 30 June 2021. Retrieved 11 July 2022.
  38. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Powell, J. "Britannia-on-the-Bay, May 24, 1990". The Historical Society of Ottawa. Retrieved 6 May 2022.
  39. "Going ahead fast. The work on the big pier at Britannia Bay". The Ottawa Journal. February 23, 1900. Retrieved February 20, 2023.
  40. Britannia Yacht Club: A History of Water, Place and People, 1887 – 2012. Ottawa: Britannia Yacht Club. 2013. p. 25 – 31.
  41. Taylor & Kennedy 2017, p. 344.
  42. Taylor & Kennedy 2017, p. 60, 61.
  43. 1 2 3 4 5 Horwitz & Horwitz 1996, p. 4.
  44. Taylor & Kennedy 2017, p. 127.
  45. Taylor & Kennedy 2017, p. 127, 129, 421: "Assessment Rolls, Nepean Township, 1880 - 1940. Ottawa City Directory 1950/1960."
  46. "Britannia the People's Playground". Worker's History Museum. Retrieved 11 October 2022.
  47. Taylor & Kennedy 2017, p. 349.
  48. Taylor & Kennedy 2017, p. 46.
  49. Taylor & Kennedy 2017, p. 366.
  50. Taylor & Kennedy 2017, p. 346.
  51. Taylor & Kennedy 2017, p. 355.
  52. Taylor & Kennedy 2017, p. 326.
  53. Taylor & Kennedy 2017, p. 360.
  54. "Britannia Amusement Park". Closed Canadian Parks. Chebucto Community Net. Retrieved 4 September 2023.
  55. "Closed parks built or nurtured by transportation companies". Chebucto Community Net. Retrieved 6 September 2023.
  56. Duffy, A (12 July 2020). "The Good Sewer: Why Ottawa's $232-million sewage storage tunnel is both an engineering marvel and an act of contrition". Ottawa Citizen. Retrieved 20 May 2022.
  57. Taylor & Kennedy 2017, p. 284.
  58. Taylor & Kennedy 2017, p. 176, 282.
  59. Ottawa Dept. of Public Works (August 1963). Proposals for Urban Renewal (Report). City of Ottawa. p. 75-76.
  60. "Flood proofing". Britannia Village Community Association. 21 February 2018. Retrieved 1 May 2022.
  61. "Flood plain mapping - regulatory context". City of Ottawa. Retrieved 1 May 2022.
  62. "1 in 100-year interactive flood plain map with area-specific provisions". City of Ottawa. 3 April 2023. Retrieved 19 May 2023.
  63. "1 in 350-year interactive flood plain map". City of Ottawa. 15 December 2022. Retrieved 11 June 2023.
  64. Horwitz & Horwitz 1996, p. 18.
  65. 1 2 3 4 "Heritage Register". City of Ottawa. Retrieved 9 May 2022.
  66. Ottawa Dept. of Public Works, Planning Branch (August 1967). Urban Renewal (Report). City of Ottawa. p. 147, 151.
  67. "Description of residential zones" (PDF). City of Ottawa. Retrieved 22 June 2022.
  68. "Mapping of residential zones". City of Ottawa. Retrieved 22 June 2022.
  69. Clark, Steve (2022). "More Homes Built Faster Act". Government of Ontario. Retrieved 10 May 2023.
  70. "Individual Designation under Part IV of the Ontario Heritage Act". City of Ottawa. Retrieved 19 June 2022.
  71. 1 2 "Changes to heritage properties". City of Ottawa. Retrieved 19 June 2022.
  72. 1 2 3 4 5 Rachlis, L (18 July 2020). "Charming Cottages: Well-loved Britannia Homes Reflect Early History". Ottawa Citizen. Retrieved 8 May 2022.
  73. Horwitz & Horwitz 1996, p. 1.
  74. Horwitz & Horwitz 1996, p. 14.
  75. Horwitz & Horwitz 1996, p. 12.
  76. Horwitz & Horwitz 1996, p. 13, 14.
  77. "Queen Anne Architecture: History and Style". Study.com. Retrieved 7 January 2023.
  78. "Britannia Winter Trail". Retrieved 16 June 2022.
  79. "Britannia Village community arts crawl". Facebook. Retrieved 22 June 2022.

Sources

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.