Other Name(s)
n/a
Links and documents
Construction Date(s)
Listed on the Canadian Register:
2007/10/29
Statement of Significance
Description of Historic Place
Paddy Miller Heritage House (also referred to as Paddy’s House or Ingram/Miller House) is a two-storey, wooden structure with a rear-slanting roof. It is located at 42A Marine Drive, Southern Harbour, near the entrance of the community, and is currently operated as a museum by the Town of Southern Harbour. The municipal heritage designation is confined to the footprint of the building.
Heritage Value
Paddy Miller Heritage House has historic, cultural and aesthetic values in Southern Harbour.
Paddy Miller Heritage House has historic value as one of the oldest extant houses in Southern Harbour, and because of its connection to the Resettlement Programme administered by the Newfoundland Government in the 1960s to move residents from outlying communities into growth centres. The house was built around 1920 by Walter Ingram in Harbour Buffett, a small community on Long Island in inner Placentia Bay which signed up for resettlement. Fisherman Patrick (Paddy) Miller from Prowseton, another community participating in the Resettlement Programme, purchased and floated the house by barge to Southern Harbour, a relocation destination for more than 400 Placentia Bay residents, in 1967.
Paddy Miller Heritage House has cultural value given its current function as a museum in Southern Harbour, and because of its connection to the theme of 1960s resettlement. It is a theme that has registered strongly in the collective psyche of the province. The controversy over the "Fisheries Household Resettlement Programme" and its social and cultural fallout have been expressed through local art, theatre, music and literature, while contemporaneous resettlement photographs have become iconic images.
Paddy Miller Heritage House, itself, has become representative of the resettlement era. Its relocation from Harbour Buffett to Southern Harbour in 1966 was featured on the popular CBC local television show “Land and Sea” for an episode documenting resettlement. Nearly forty years later the show featured the house again when the Town of Southern Harbour moved it within the community to preserve it, and restored Paddy Miller’s House.
Paddy Miller Heritage House also has aesthetic value, in that the square, slant-roofed two-storey with felt roofing and wooden sheathing, windows and doors with quite plain trims is typical of a type of early to mid-twentieth century vernacular dwelling in rural Newfoundland.
Source: Motion 2004/19, Town of Southern Harbour Council Town Council Meeting Minutes of 2004/03/03
Character-Defining Elements
Exterior features related to the vernacular design of the building:
-two-storey, square form and dimensions;
-slanted roof with projecting eaves;
-felt roofing;
-wooden windows;
-wooden doors;
-original window and door openings and placement:
-and narrow clapboard sheathing.
Recognition
Jurisdiction
Newfoundland and Labrador
Recognition Authority
NL Municipality
Recognition Statute
Municipalities Act
Recognition Type
Municipal Heritage Building, Structure or Land
Recognition Date
2004/03/03
Historical Information
Significant Date(s)
n/a
Theme - Category and Type
- Peopling the Land
- Settlement
Function - Category and Type
Current
- Leisure
- Museum
Historic
- Residence
- Single Dwelling
Architect / Designer
n/a
Builder
Walter Ingram
Additional Information
Location of Supporting Documentation
Town of Southern Harbour, PO Box 10, Southern Harbour, NL, A0B 3H0
Cross-Reference to Collection
Fed/Prov/Terr Identifier
NL-3612
Status
Published
Related Places
n/a