L 3-1. Heritage Report: Reasons for Heritage Designation. Julian Farm 4255 Castlemore Road

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L 3-1 Heritage Report: Reasons for Heritage Designation Julian Farm 4255 Castlemore Road May 2013 1

L 3-2 Profile of Subject Property Municipal Address 4255 Castlemore Road PIN Number N/A Roll Number 10-12-0-003-04600-0000 Legal Description CON 9 ND PT LOT 10 Ward Number 10 Property Name Current Owner Owner Concurrence Julian Farmhouse Vincenzo Bellissimo, Bruno Bellissimo, Antonio Bellissimo, Teresa Bellissimo, Lugina Martino, Leonardo Cali, Maria Cali, Domenico Mandarano, Teresa Mandarano Yes Current Zoning Residential; Open Space; Floodplain Current Use(s) Residential Construction Date Circa 1890 Notable Owners or Occupants Heritage Resources on Subject Property Relevant Council Resolutions Julian family Built Heritage; Cultural Heritage Landscape - Additional Information - 2

L 3-3 1. Current Situation: The property at 4255 Castlemore Road (Julian Farmhouse) is worthy of designation under Part IV of the Ontario Heritage Act for its cultural heritage value or interest. The property meets the criteria for designation prescribed by the Province of Ontario under the Ontario Heritage Act, Regulation 9/06 for the categories of design/physical value, historical/associative value, and contextual value. The property is located at the north east corner of the Bram East Block Plan Area 41-2, on lands assigned for single detached homes. The farmhouse is located on about 1 ¾ acres of table land (the Site) near the extreme northeast corner of the approximately 25 acre parcel, facing Castlemore Road. The Site will be divided into two lots, one of which will accommodate the existing heritage farmhouse (Lot 34), while the other (Lot 33) is for a new dwelling. The balance of the lots are 300 metres or more from the Site, and are separated by a valley corridor and are accessed through the existing road network connected to The Gore Road to the east. As a result, most of the new subdivision will not result in a heritage impact. 2. Description of Property The Julian Farmhouse is a one-and-a-half storey L-plan residence with a rambling kitchen tail. The exterior is brick, and suggestive of brick-over-frame construction. The property is located on the south side of Castlemore Road, between McVean Drive and The Gore Road. The landscape is characterized by large deciduous trees near the east lot line, to the rear, and to the southwest of the house. The lane is lined on both sides by closely planted lilac shrubs. 3. Statement of Cultural Heritage Value or Interest Design/Physical Value: The cultural heritage value of 4255 Castlemore Road is related to its design or physical value as a well-preserved Gabled-ell farmhouse with Gothic Revival influence. The Gabled Ell was a common house style from about 1880 to 1910. The gabled ell has a distinctive L shape, created by two intersecting roof gables a front gable and a side gable. The projecting front gable was off-centre and pointed toward the street. Porches were tucked into the spaced formed by the two legs of the ell. The ornamentation of Gabled Ell homes was usually minimal; however, decorative features from various architecture styles were also implemented. The Gabled-ell farmhouse was a simple and affordable style for the ordinary working man. 3

L 3-4 The front facade of Julian Farmhouse is characterized by an asymmetrical front gable and front verandah. The front entry is a single-leaf door, with transom window, in the front (north) wall at the corner of the ell. That wall is protected by a two-bay verandah with turned Victorian posts and a gingerbread lintel with ivy-leaf toothing below and stout barrel-like spindles above. There is a rear gable on the main body of the house, matching the front ell gable, but not projecting. There is also a square bay window towards the rear of the west wall of the main body of the house. The house is distinguished by its unelaborated monochrome brickwork. In addition, the fenestration is very simple, and there are large expanses of brick. The overall simplicity of the main body suggests that the bay window may not have been part of the original construction, but an early embellishment. The simplicity of the farmhouse may also be tied to George Julian s Primitve Methodist faith. In their English origins, the Primitive Methodists divided from the main body of Methodism somewhat on class lines. The Primitives felt that the church was becoming too concerned with joining the establishment that they had once turned away from. In the early days, they had a strong tendency toward personal simplicity and democratic values. While George Julian s design preferences cannot be confirmed, it is easy to imagine that the simplicity of his house may have reflected the simplicity of his faith. There is a long kitchen tail under a fore-and-aft gable roof. Its east wall is set back from the main east wall by about 1.5 metres, creating another ell. This embraces another two-bay porch with bracketed octagonal Victorian posts and a gingerbread lintel. This lintel has a simplified ivy-leaf toothing, and a moulded panel in place of the spindles found on the front porch. The side door is at the corner of this side ell, in an analogue to the front entry, and there is a Victorian gable above the door with a pointed-arch window. The west side of the kitchen tail has two projections. At the north end, against the main body, there is a brick extension under a continuation of the main roof slope of the kitchen tail, with a second floor shed dormer above. At the south end there is small shed-roofed frame extension which serves as a mud-room entrance. In keeping with the simplicity of the house, the fenestration is minimal. On the front elevation, the projecting gabled ell has a single central window on each floor, as does the gabled east wall of the main body of the house. Both the main front wall and the east wall of the kitchen tail have a single ground floor window some distance to the left of the door. There is a central window in the rear gable end of the main body. The rear elevation of the kitchen tail has a window offset to the left on the ground floor, and a pair 4

L 3-5 of narrow second floor windows symmetrically located in the gable end. There is a small horizontal window set under the eaves above the front entry, which is a later alteration. There is a small pointed-arch window above the side entry. All of the windows are 2 over-2 wood double hung windows, with the following exceptions: The side windows in the bay and the pointed-arch window above the side door are 1-over-1, the shed dormer windows on the west side of the kitchen tail are 4-over-2, and the later window over the front entry is an aluminum slider. All of the windows in brick, except for the aluminum slider, are under segmental arches. Except for the smaller openings noted, all of the masonry openings, both windows and doors, have a similar width. The interior features of Julian Farm also denote cultural heritage value. In the main body of the house, the casings on the door and window opening are wide Classical moulding with mitred corners. In the kitchen tail, the casings are Victorian fluted mouldings with corner block roundels. The doors and hardware, windows, trims, stairs and railing are all original and in excellent condition. The main body of the house sits on a fieldstone basement foundation. The western portion, under the projecting ell bay, is as originally built. The eastern portion has been underpinned in order to lower the basement floor by about 40cm. The kitchen tail sits on a concrete block basement foundation. It is likely that this was originally a fieldstone crawl space, and that the basement was a later insertion. Where visible, it appears that the ground floor framing of the main body of the house is in sawn timbers, and in the kitchen tail, top-cut round log joists are visible - some with bark intact. The building exterior is red clay brick. The lack of headers in the masonry strongly suggests that the construction is brick veneer over frame. Neither floor nor wall framing is visible in the upper floors, so no conclusions can be drawn as to the nature of the timbers. The evidence presents a bit of chronological mystery. The differing interior trim and ground floor framing of the main body of the house compared with the kitchen tail strongly suggest different times of construction. The 1877 Peel County Atlas shows a house and orchard at the location of this house, before it came into the hands of Julian family. It has been suggested that George Julian built a new house on this site for his son John around the time of his marriage in 1888, and that it may have incorporated all or part of the previous dwelling. Exactly what parts of the current building are oldest remains unknown. 5

L 3-6 Historical/Associative Value: The cultural heritage value of Julian Farm also lies in its association with prominent Brampton residents, particularly the Julian family. On April 13, 1828, Peter Fitzpatrick wrote from York to the Commissioner for the sale of Clergy Reserves stating his intent to purchase Lot 5, Concession 10, and Lot 10, Concession 9 in the Toronto Gore Township. On June 20, 1836, he was permitted to Purchase Lot 10, Concession 9, and is listed in the 1837 Toronto and Home District Directory as the owner of the subject property. On March 19, 1841, Fitzpatrick assigned the use of the southeast fifty acres to John Jones, another resident of the Toronto Gore. In 1845, Jones transferred the fifty acres to Patrick Dougherty who secured the Crown patent on July 4, 1846. Fitzpatrick received the Crown Patent for the remaining 150 acres on May 29, 1847. Although he sold the southeast quarter to Robert Lynn in 1844, the transaction was not registered until 1848, after the required Patent was received by Fitzpatrick. In 1851m Fitzpatrick sold one hundred acres, parts of the northeast quarter and west half of Lot 10, to George Jackson. Jackson bought the southwest quarter in 1856, but sold a one-acre parcel at the northwest of the property to John Murphy. The 1861 Census for Toronto Gore lists George Jackson as a farmer of Roman Catholic faith. Jackson, his wife, and eight children occupied a one storey log house on Lot 10 Concession 9. He is noted as a prominent sheep breeder in the Perkins Bull collection at the Region of Peel Archives. In 1871, Jackson sold one hundred acres of his land to Matthew Gowland, a Vaughan Township farmer. A dwelling and orchard are shown on Gowland s land in the 1877 map of the Toronto Gore. Gowland is listed on the 1871 Census as a farmer of Wesleyan Methodist faith and English ancestry. On December 18, 1883, Matthew and Elizabeth Gowland sold 100 acres of lot 10 to George Julian for $5,100. The amount suggests that there was a dwelling and farmland on the property. Prior to purchasing the home, George Julian had rented two hundred acres of Lot 8, Concession 10, since 1864. He is listed in the 1881 Census as a farmer of Primitive Methodist faith and English ancestry. He had a wife, Ann, and seven children: Francis, John George, Alfred, Mary Ann, Joseph, Jane, and Elizabeth. George and Ann s son, John George Julian, married Elizabeth Gee of Markham Township on December 26, 1888. In 1897, George and Ann Julian sold 100 acres of the 6

L 3-7 lot to John George. A condition of sale was the payment of annuities of $150 annually to George and $75 to Ann for the term of their natural lives. The 1891 Census of Toronto Gore Township shows that John Julian and Elizabeth Julian lived in the brick, one-and-a-half storey house, likely the subject house, with their daughter, Jessie, and two domestics, Margaret Gee and Mandy Cunningham. Census data from 1901 shows John and Elizabeth as having four children: Jessie, Margaret, Clara, Fannel, and John. The 1911 Census lists John G. Julian as a widower, and living in a household with seven children on Lot 10, Concession 9. Elizabeth Julian died in December 1908. On November 12, 1912, John Julian remarried Marjorie Shaw. Marjorie was an active member in the community as a President of the Castlemore Institute, 1917-1917, a life member of the Red Cross, and a member of Ebenezer Church. John Julian was also a prominent community member. He was a member of the Toronto Gore Council from 1908-1912, and later became a Road Superintendent. During his stay on the farm, John Julian built the kitchens and pantry to the house, and installed a bathroom and hydro in 1931. On July 1, 1937, John Julian Marjory sold the subject property to John s son, Francis Julian. By 1957, Francis and his wife Josephine had three children: Frank, Jack, and Mac. According to Josephine Julian, all the female descendents of the Julian clan married farmers; while the males became farmers, with the exception of Fannel T. Julian who served oversee in World War I. After the war, he returned to finish school at the University of Toronto and eventually became a civil engineer in Woodstock, Ontario. For a number of years, the farm was known as Walnut Crescent, likely due to the presence of twin walnut trees that were later cut down. Around 1920, the name was changed to Lilac Lane, which, according to Josephine Julian, was a name very fitting if you should visit the farm in lilac time. In 1969, the occupancy of the residence by the Julian family came to a close when the property was sold to Moira Winton. The purchase price of one dollar suggests that this transfer was a result of a family relationship or personal agreement. Contextual Value: The contextual value of Julian Farm is related to contextual value as it maintains, supports, and reflects the agricultural character of the former Toronto Gore Township. 7

L 3-8 Julian Farm is directly associated with the long agricultural history of Brampton and the former Toronto Gore Early examples of farmhouses in the Toronto Gore were of log construction, with a few examples of brick, frame, and stone construction. A Census Return (1861) reveals an increase in the number of brick farmhouses. The change to more substantial and permanent residences marks a movement towards prosperous farmsteads created by an economic boom at that time. The contextual value is also observed in the visual links to the Humber River valley, which has retained its visual character while undergoing a change of use, and additionally it has value as a landmark on Castlemore Road, in the visual presence of the house and the visual prominence of the extensive farmstead planting of deciduous and coniferous trees, and the lilac hedging bordering the entrance lane. 4. Description of Heritage Attributes To ensure that the cultural heritage value of this property is conserved, certain heritage attributes that contribute to its value have been identified specifically and they include: Gabled Ell style Monochromatic brickwork Minimal ornamentation Simple fenestration 2-over-2 double hung windows with brick voussoirs and stone sills 4-over-2 windows on kitchen tail Small pointed-arch window above the side entry Single-leaf door with transom window Verandah with turned Victorian posts and gingerbread lintel with ivy-leaf toothing and stout barrel-like spindles Square bay window Long kitchen tail Side porch below pointed arch window with bracketed octagonal Victorian posts and a gingerbread lintel Chimneys Fieldstone foundation Wide classical mouldings with mitred corners on interior door casings and window openings Victorian fluted mouldings with corner block roundels in the in the kitchen tail Original doors and hardware, trim, stairs, and railing Deep and dense planting around the house (e.g. deciduous and coniferous trees; lilac shrubs) 8

L 3-9 5. Alteration History The following are the known alterations to the subject property: Original front verandah has been modified by having the original wood deck replaced by a stone patio Evidence of roof re-working on the side verandah; wood porch deck has been replaced with a concrete pad Chimneys have been rebuilt Small mud-room at south west corner of kitchen tail appears to be a recent addition Fascia, soffits and windowsills have been covered by modern prefinished metal material Modern rainware and shingles have been installed 6. Archaeological Potential The subject property has archaeological potential. An archaeological assessment is recommended in advance of any major soil disturbance occurs on this property. 7. Policy Framework In the context of land use planning, the Provincial Policy Statement (PPS) states that the wise use and management of Ontario s cultural heritage resources is a key provincial interest. The relevant policy statement in the PPS is Section 2.6.1, which states that significant built heritage resources and significant cultural heritage landscapes shall be conserved. Section 2.6.1 is linked to Section 3 of the Ontario Planning Act which stipulates that land use planning decisions by municipalities shall be consistent with the Provincial Policy Statements. The policy is also integrated with the Ontario Heritage Act. This piece of legislation grants municipalities powers to preserve locally significant cultural heritage resources through heritage designation. Decisions as to whether a property should be designated heritage or not is based solely on its inherent cultural heritage value or interest. 9

L 3-10 City Council prefers to designate heritage properties with the support of property owners. However, Council will designate a property proactively, without the concurrence of a property owner as required The relevant Brampton Official Plan policies are as follows: Section 4.9.1.3: All significant heritage resources shall be designated as being of cultural heritage value or interest in accordance with the Ontario Heritage Act to help ensure effective protection and their continuing maintenance, conservation and restoration. Section 4.9.1.5: Priority will be given to designating all heritage cemeteries and all Class A heritage resources in the Cultural Heritage Resources Register under the Ontario Heritage Act. Section 4.9.1.6: The City will give immediate consideration to the designation of any heritage resource under the Ontario Heritage Act if that resource is threatened with demolition, significant alterations or other potentially adverse impacts. The Bram East Secondary Plan also supports the conservation of significant cultural heritage resources. Policy 5.3.2 states that cultural heritage resources should be retained and conserved in situ, and respectfully integrated into the surrounding land use. These principles are also guided by recognized best practices in the field of heritage conservation. 8. References Architectural of Southern Indiana: The Gabled-Ell. August 2011. http://housesandbooks.wordpress.com/2011/08/29/architecture-of-southernindiana-the-gable-ell/ Carter, P. H. & P. Oberst. Heritage Impact Assessment: John Julian Farmstead, 4255 Castlemore Road, Brampton, ON. March 2013. Labine, C. & P. Poore. The Comfortable House: Post Victorian Domestic Architecture. The Old House Journal, January 1982. 10

L 3-11 Murdoch, S. Heritage Impact Assessment: John Julian Farmstead, 4255 Castlemore Road, City of Brampton. November 2009. 11

L 3-12 9. Appendix Figure 1: Map off 4255 Castlemore Road with the Julian Farmhouse located in the northeast corner (Source: Brampton Maps) 12

L 3-13 Figure 2: Aerial view of Julian Farmhouse (Source: Brampton Maps) Figure 3: Bird s eye view of Julian Farmhouse looking south (Source: Bing Maps) 13

L 3-14 Figure 4: Plan of the Parcel for 4255 Castlemore Rd; the John Julian Farmhouse is located on Lot 34 at the upper right hand corner of the parcel. Lot 33, adjacent, will hold a new dwelling (Source: Candevcon Ltd). 14

L 3-15 Figure 5: Julian farmhouse c. 1915 (Source: PAMA/Region of Peel Archives) Figure 6: John G. Julian farmhouse, north facade at east corner, c.1915 (Source: PAMA/Region of Peel Archives) 15

L 3-16 Figure 7: East facade in 1957 (Source: PAMA/Region of Peel Archives) Figure 8: Asymmetrical front facade with font gable, monochromatic brickwork, 2-over-2 double hung windows, and verandah with turned Victorian posts and gingerbread lintel with ivy-leaf toothing and stout barrel-like spindles 16

L 3-17 Figure 9: Kitchen tail and side porch with gabled arched window above Figure 10: Southwest view; additions to the kitchen tail and the bay window on the west wall of the main body are visible. 17

L 3-18 Figure 11: Front porch with stout spindles in the lintel trim that are absent on the side porch; the fieldstone foundation is also visible. Figure 12: Monochrome running bond masonry and brick voussiors. 18

L 3-19 Figure 12: Square bay window at rear of west wall of the main body. Figure 13: Door casing is fluted with corner-block roundels in the kitchen tail, while casings in the main body of the house are mitred Classical mouldings. 19

L 3-20 Figure 14: View of the house from the lane entrance; the viewscape is restricted by the abundant planting, but the house is very present in the head on view. Figure 15: View from the east on Castlemore Road, looking over rear yard of the adjoining property; the house is visible on the left. 20

L 3-21 Figure 16: View from the west on Castlemore Road, looking over the Humber Valley; the house is visible on the right. 21