Cummings House
334 Beach Avenue, Kelowna, Colombie-Britannique, V1Y, Canada
Reconnu formellement en:
2000/03/20
Autre nom(s)
s/o
Liens et documents
s/o
Date(s) de construction
1924/01/01
Inscrit au répertoire canadien:
2009/03/08
Énoncé d'importance
Description du lieu patrimonial
The historic place is the one-and-one-half-storey Cummings House built in 1924 and located at 334 Beach Avenue in the Abbott Street Heritage Conservation Area in Kelowna's South Central neighbourhood.
Valeur patrimoniale
The Cummings House is valued as a good example of a cottage-scaled dwelling built in Kelowna's second phase of civic development, which followed the First World War. It is also valued for its association with a series of interesting occupants, including a longstanding City alderman.
This house was built in 1924 by G.T. Pearcey for J. Cummings. The identity of this Cummings is uncertain. Robert Cummings, listed in directories of the 1920s as a lineman for Okanagan Telephone Company, may be connected. A 'J. Cummings' is in the telephone directories from 1929 through 1935, at various addresses on Elliot Avenue and in East Kelowna and Okanagan Mission. A 'John Cummings' died at Kelowna, aged 91, in 1972.
About 1939 this house was owned by Florence M. Wilson and V.H. Wilson. Florence Wilson was a library worker, who appears to have moved in 1941, but retained ownership of the house. By 1948, the occupants were George H. Wilson and Winifred Wilson, presumably of the same family. George was then employed as a fruit fieldman, having during the 1930s and early 1940s been a printer for the Kelowna Courier.
In 1952, this house was bought by Edward Raymond Pelly (1890-1963) and Dorothy J.E. Pelly. Edward was a clerk at the Bank of Montreal. Born in Manitoba, he entered the employment of the Bank of Montreal in Armstrong in 1907. He worked at many of the Bank's branches in British Columbia and the prairie provinces until 1952, when he and his family moved to Kelowna and later retired.
In the early 1970s the house was owned by Syd Hodge, a long-time Kelowna alderman.
The house has value for its unusual design, rectangular in form and covered by a hipped roof with broad eaves. It bears some resemblance to the Colonial Bungalow house-type, a form that came to North America from India and southeast Asia in the late nineteenth century.
The house is a valued heritage resource in the Abbott Street Heritage Conservation Area, which was established by the City of Kelowna in 1998. This important area is valued for its strong heritage image that reflects an early growth period in the new City of Kelowna.
Source: City of Kelowna Planning Department
Éléments caractéristiques
The character-defining elements of the Cummings House include its:
- residential form, scale and massing, expressed by the one-and-one-half-storey height
- medium-pitch hipped roof with broad eaves, with two dormers on street elevation
- shingle-clad walls
- corbelled brick chimneys
- six-pane wood casement windows in the dormers, and twelve-pane fixed wood windows, with plain trim
- large site with mature landscaping throughout, including extensive lawns
Reconnaissance
Juridiction
Colombie-Britannique
Autorité de reconnaissance
Administrations locales (C.-B.)
Loi habilitante
Local Government Act, art.954
Type de reconnaissance
Répertoire du patrimoine communautaire
Date de reconnaissance
2000/03/20
Données sur l'histoire
Date(s) importantes
1998/01/01 à 1998/01/01
Thème - catégorie et type
- Un territoire à peupler
- Les établissements
Catégorie de fonction / Type de fonction
Actuelle
Historique
- Résidence
- Logement unifamilial
Architecte / Concepteur
s/o
Constructeur
G.T. Pearcey
Informations supplémentaires
Emplacement de la documentation
City of Kelowna Planning Department
Réfère à une collection
Identificateur féd./prov./terr.
DlQu-148
Statut
Édité
Inscriptions associées
s/o