Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

NL

Heritage home restoration project uncovers a piece of lost St. John's history

When a St. John's heritage home owner found out that a part of history might be lying beneath the ground in his backyard, he called Era Nova Archaeological Services to rediscover a lost piece of local history.

140-year-old Pleasant Street house a time capsule of a different era

A man stands in the front yard of a house, next to Registered Heritage Structure sign on a black fence.
Tyler Stapleton bought the Simms Heritage House in 2015. Since then, Stapleton has been restoring it to how it would have looked when Henry V. Simms lived there. (Julia Israel/CBC)

A 2-storey Second Empire-style house towers over Pleasant Street in the west end ofSt. John's. The fully detached structure is set back from the road withbroad bay windows drawing the south-facing sunlight into each floor.

From its vantage point, this house has witnessed 142 years of St. John's evolution. Built in 1882, this house survived the Great Fire and several others. It watched as the city's first and last electric streetcar came and went. It looked on as iron steamers replaced wooden-hulled sailing ships in the harbour.

Tyler Stapleton, 31, has a timeless quality to him. A soft-spoken man from just outside St. John's, his passion for heritage and urban planning seems fitting. A ship navigationofficer by trade, he has volunteered for the Newfoundland and Labrador Historic Trust since 2015. That was also the year he met his match, and bought it: the Simms House.

"It was all covered in vinyl siding and a lot of the details were stripped off, but I kind of see what could be," said Stapleton, who has been working at this restoration project for the last nine years.

Nothing makes a local historian like embarking on a heritage restoration project. Stapleton has spent immeasurable time over the years poring over old city maps, photo archives,and 100-year-old newspaper clippings in order to replicate the structure's 19th-century characteristics the best he can.

An archival image of a tall Southcott Style home with big windows and a grassy front lawn, with the two-story cooperage peaking out from behind the house.
The backyard cooperage just makes it into the frame of this photo of the Simms Heritage House. (Submitted by Tyler Stapleton)

Until now, his focus had been on the structure itself:ripping up floorboards, rebuilding its stone foundation, painting the siding a lavish dark red. It was not until recently that he decided tosolveanother mystery.

"Doing some research and looking at old maps and insurance atlases and things, I learned that there was a cooperage, a two-storey cooperage here," Stapleton said.

WATCH | This man discovered a wooden barrel workshop in his backyard:

This St. Johns mans house is a community archaeology mystery

7 days ago
Duration 4:38
Tyler Stapleton is a heritage buff. While restoring his house on Pleasant Street in St. Johns, he learned the backyard held the greatest historical discoveries and the CBCs Julia Israel and Jeremy Eaton were there to see the work and artifacts first-hand.

A cooperage is a workshop where wooden barrels are made. Used for the storage and transportation of one of the province's main exports, saltfish, the coopering industry was central to the livelihoods of many Newfoundlanders until well into the mid-1900s.

The Simmscooperage would have represented a mid-sized operation in St. John's industrial west end.

"There's still some mysteries here to figure out," he said, for there was nothing but grass in his empty backyard when he moved in.

"Was the building taken apart and dismantled or did it just rot and collapse?"

To uncover this hidden story, Stapleton needed help.

Tracing family lines in the sand

He decided to find out what he could about the home's most notable owner, Henry V. Simms.

Henry V. Simms bought the Pleasant Street home in 1902. He was a cooper or barrel-maker by trade and a vocal member of the Prohibition Canvassing Committee in St. John's. Generations of the familylivedunder this mansard roof thereafter.

One day Stapleton posted a picture of Henry V. Simms's gravesite that he managed to trackdown in the Belvedere Roman Catholic Cemetery.

And who he met next couldn't have been a better fit.

Two men work in a dark wooden workshop, making large wooden barrels. One man is caught in motion while hammering a barrel.
Coopers were tradespeople skilled in making wooden barrels. In a port city like St. John's, it was a main industry until its decline in the 1960s. (Submitted by Tyler Stapleton)

"My great-grandfather grew up here, and then my grandfather grew up across the street," said Elsa Simms."Then I even lived across the street for a little bit with my dad when I was very little."

Simms reached out to Stapleton when she saw his photo online. Not only can she trace her direct connection to this house, she also happens to be a community archeologist.

Simms co-founded Era Nova Archaeological Services with fellow PhD students ZoHelleiner and Pier-Ann Milliard in May. Based in St. John's, the new cultural resource management is well situated in a province that so highly prizes its heritage.

Embarking on the mystery of Stapleton's backyard cooperage is their first project on the books.

"This is the closest community archaeology can get to your family archaeology," Simms said.

The project has sentimental meaning to many Simms family members, some of whom have come to help digon site while others look out for Simms's updates in the family heritage group on social media.

Every so often, Simms kept finding artifacts that remind her of her family. "We found it really cool belt buckle mypop has a belt buckle collection," she explained.

Even a salvaged leg of a stove has meaning to her grandfather, who said he knew where the stove was in the structure. "That's just a tangible connection to my family who used and wore those objects," said Simms.

Three people stand arm in arm in a dirt pit the same height as they are, one holding a trowel.
From left, Zo Helleiner, Pier-Ann Milliard and Elsa Simms founded cultural resource management company Era Nova in May. (Julia Israel/CBC)

For the last six weeks, the sounds of metal shovels plunging into dirt and picking at rock have emerged from behind the Simms House. A six-foot hole in the backyard's grassy slope exposes the side walls and foundation of a collapsed cooperage.

Era Nova's goal is to excavate as much as they can of the old workshop, collecting anything they find in the soil that could expose layers of this lost piece of St. John's history.

"We think that this building collapsed in the late '60s," says ZoHelleiner. "But the building itself was probably built in 1899 as stables and then was used as a cooperage from 1902 onwards."

If the cooperage collapsed in the 1960s, this means that Henry V. Simms and his son made barrels out of this backyard past the height of the industry in St. John's. "So they were keeping the trade alive," Helleiner said.

A square hole in the ground surrounded by grass is marked by a sign that reads,
The team digs a test pit over what they estimate was an entry point to the cooperage before its collapse in the 1960s. (Julia Israel/CBC)

Besides belt buckles and stove legs, they've found a lot of dirty loot. "Exposing trash is part of what archaeologists do, just depends how old the trash is," Helleiner said. They will only know so much until the salvaged artifacts are sent to The Rooms for further study. But anything, including broken glass, old socks and plastic dollarms to ceramic pipes from the 1960s, is valuable to uncovering stories hidden beneath the ground.

"A really funny thing is that my great-great-great-grandfather was a prohibitionist, but we are finding an awful lot of alcohol bottles," Simms laughs.

And in this particular case, one man's trash is certainly another man's treasure.

Looking back at what lies ahead

The team is lucky to have connected with Stapleton. "Clients like Tyler, it's not mandatory for them to consult us if they want to do any sort of work that would involve archaeologists," said Pier-Ann Millard.

Except for some areas of the province like the southern coast of Labrador, the need for archaeologists on the scene during projects like these is determined case by case.

As for the exposed cooperage foundation, Stapleton has plans to rebuild a workshop modelled after the one that sheltered Henry V. Simms and his son as they painstakinglyworked from dawn until dusk for years.

"A lot of people can see heritage as a negative point," Stapleton said. "But development and heritage can co-exist perfectly fine, and it can also really help."

In a wooden box lie old leather from a shoe, broken pieces of ceramic, a ceramic pipe, a broken glass bottle and a keyhole cover.
The Era Nova team has found plenty of artifacts in the ground like glass bottles, old shoe leather and a ceramic pipe. (Julia Israel/CBC)

Building a two-storey backyard dwelling is not permitted under the city'sheight regulations for new developments, but restoration plans for registered heritage structures are excluded from the rule.

And with the city's new Housing Accelerator Fund, which supports homeowners building additional housing units on their own property, Stapleton sees evergreen opportunities for this project.

"Down the road when I'm finished with the workshop, when someone else wants to be a caretaker of this house maybe someone could live in this building," he says.

When Stapleton brings heritage and urban planning together, he feels he's accomplished a goal.

"That's the adaptive reuse of heritage that's really, really interesting," he said.

"You always have to look ahead."

Download ourfree CBC News appto sign up for push alerts for CBC Newfoundland and Labrador.Click here to visit our landing page.

Add some good to your morning and evening.

Subscribe to our daily newsletter for the top stories in Newfoundland and Labrador.

...

The next issue of CBC Newfoundland and Labrador newsletter will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in theSubscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.