Close X
Friday, October 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

City Of Kelowna, B.C., Takes Steps To Preserve 147-Year-Old Log House

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Dec, 2018 07:20 PM

    KELOWNA, B.C. — The city of Kelowna, B.C., is taking steps to preserve a 147-year-old log house built by one of the area's first European settlers after it was damaged in a fire earlier this year.


    In a close vote last week, the city decided to earmark $29,000 for the construction of a temporary roof to protect Fleming House from the elements.


    The city's website says Fleming House is a two-storey structure built from hand-hewn pine logs in 1871 by Frederick Brent. It says Brent also constructed the Grist Mill, which is the oldest Grist Mill in British Columbia.


    The site says the farmhouse is a rare structure from that era, because there was little construction during the recession. The house's squared logs are about 35 centimetres high and 17 centimetres thick, it says.


    The house and mill were bought and sold over the years, and in 1900 John Dilworth added milled siding and plaster walls. He also added the rear shed roofed storage area, the porch and veranda and two corbelled chimneys, it says.


    Soon after these modernizations in 1908, they were bought by William Fleming. The mill and house were relocated to Kelowna's Heritage Park in 2002, it says.


    Don Knox of the Central Okanagan Historical Society says it's essential to take care of these structures to preserve local heritage.


    The mill site itself is important because it was the first commercial enterprise in Kelowna, and is a good example of how things were done at that point, he said.


    "People would come from all over the area with their grain to be ground and so they would get together and socialize and visit and catch up and in most cases they hadn't seen each other in quite a while," he said.


    Over the summer, a fire from someone cooking by the side of the house "got away" and caught on to the house, Knox said. The house was burned quite severely, with the worst damage being to the siding and the interior, he said.


    The Central Okanagan Heritage Society recommended "to do the minimum necessary to mitigate current threats, and preserve the building for future restoration or rehabilitation," reads a Dec. 3 report to the Kelowna city council from the parks and building department.


    Putting a temporary roof will give the city more time to take more concrete approach to future heritage sites, it says.


    As the Okanagan Rail Trail becomes more popular, it says, pedestrian and cycling traffic adjacent to this site will increase, and interest in these buildings may also increase.


    "Hence there may be increased potential for future restoration works," it says, adding that Fleming House and the Grist Mill can be considered for other uses.


    The report also says that these buildings cannot be insured because they don't have fire suppressants, and until a fire hydrant is installed or other fire prevention measures are put in place, fire remains a risk to these heritage sites.


    Knox said the fire stripped the house of the additions and it went back to how it was originally built.


    It is also important to preserve structures such as Fleming House because Kelowna doesn't have any of the older quality homes that were originally here during the 1860s and 1870s, he said.


    "Quite a few of the older houses were torn down so we really don't have a lot left that gives us a sense of how things used to be," Knox said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Says Local Governments Can Regulate Pot Growth On Agricultural Land

    B.C. Says Local Governments Can Regulate Pot Growth On Agricultural Land
    Local and Indigenous governments in British Columbia will be permitted to prevent marijuana production in their communities on land that is part of the Agricultural Land Reserve, but with conditions.

    B.C. Says Local Governments Can Regulate Pot Growth On Agricultural Land

    B.C. Crown Says Officer Who Used Dog On 'Unpredictable' Suspect Had No Choice

    B.C. Crown Says Officer Who Used Dog On 'Unpredictable' Suspect Had No Choice
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's prosecution service says a police officer who deployed a service dog during an arrest was not charged with any offence because he had no other way to deal with an unpredictable suspect.

    B.C. Crown Says Officer Who Used Dog On 'Unpredictable' Suspect Had No Choice

    B.C. Real Estate Market Tips To Balance Amid New Mortgage Rules: Association

    B.C. Real Estate Market Tips To Balance Amid New Mortgage Rules: Association
    The British Columbia Real Estate Association says tighter mortgage rules and lower demand are bringing the provincial housing market into balance.

    B.C. Real Estate Market Tips To Balance Amid New Mortgage Rules: Association

    Parody Account Targeting Iqra Khalid’s ‘Muslim Heritage’ Closed After MP Complains To Twitter

    Parody Account Targeting Iqra Khalid’s ‘Muslim Heritage’ Closed After MP Complains To Twitter
    OTTAWA — A Twitter account billing itself as a parody of Liberal MP Iqra Khalid has been closed after she complained about references to her Muslim heritage and claims she supports Sharia law and the Islamic State militant group.

    Parody Account Targeting Iqra Khalid’s ‘Muslim Heritage’ Closed After MP Complains To Twitter

    Canada Post Mail Carrier Seen On Video Munching Pilfered Tomatoes

    Canada Post Mail Carrier Seen On Video Munching Pilfered Tomatoes
    MONTREAL — Canada Post says it has spoken to a Montreal mail carrier who can be seen on video on four separate days pilfering tomatoes from a hanging basket outside a home.

    Canada Post Mail Carrier Seen On Video Munching Pilfered Tomatoes

    Canada-U.S. Ferry Service Proposes Moving From Portland To Bar Harbor

    Canada-U.S. Ferry Service Proposes Moving From Portland To Bar Harbor
    An international ferry service that links Canada with the United States could move to a new port in Maine, a change that could see Nova Scotia paying for upgrades to an American town's ferry docking facilities.

    Canada-U.S. Ferry Service Proposes Moving From Portland To Bar Harbor