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Fishermen's Union Trading Company Premises Registered Heritage Structure

Seldom-Little Seldom, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada

Formally Recognized: 2009/10/24

View of the main building at Fishermen's Union Trading Company Premises, Seldom, NL.; HFNL 2009
Fishermen's Union Trading Company Premises, Seldom
View of the main building at Fishermen's Union Trading Company Premises, Seldom, NL.; HFNL 2009
Fishermen's Union Trading Company Premises, Seldom
View of a building at Fishermen's Union Trading Company Premises, Seldom, NL.; HFNL 2009
Fishermen's Union Trading Company Premises, Seldom

Other Name(s)

n/a

Links and documents

Construction Date(s)

1912/01/01

Listed on the Canadian Register: 2010/02/11

Statement of Significance

Description of Historic Place

The Fishermen’s Union Trading Company Ltd. Store is a two-storey, low pitch gable roof fisheries/mercantile building located at the shoreline, in close proximity with other, related structures, in the community of Seldom. The designation is confined to the footprint of the building.

Heritage Value

The Fishermen’s Union Trading Company Ltd. Store has been designated for its aesthetic and historic values.

The Fishermen’s Union Trading Company Ltd. Store (FUT) is aesthetically valuable because it is a good example of an early-twentieth-century fisheries/mercantile building. Built of wood, this large store has a main facade on both land and water sides, revealing its purpose as a fisheries building and a mercantile building. The water side has large multi-paned windows and a door on the second floor and smaller windows with a double door on the ground level. This suggests the fisheries-type activities which may have made use of the building, accessing this side for trade. The land facade is nearly identical to the other, without the second floor door. Access to this would have been primarily for the retail store; the second floor was occupied by the Fishermen’s Union Trading Company Ltd. The building is sheathed in narrow wood clapboard with wide wood cornerboards, and had plain wide window trim and utilitarian-style plank doors with strap hinges. On one side a protruding bay window extends from the eave, creating an unusual dormer window in the FUT office.

The Fishermen’s Union Trading Company Ltd. Store is also aesthetically valuable for its position on the landscape, adding to the cultural value of the shoreline. This building is sited next to several other related historic buildings including a Cod Liver Oil Factory and a salting shed, as well as a modern marina which accepts yachts and sailboats from around the world.

The Fishermen’s Union Trading Company Ltd. Store is historically valuable for its associations with Sir. William F. Coaker, founder of the Fishermen’s Protective Union (1908) as a reaction to the deplorable conditions of fishermen at that time. Coaker rebelled against the powerlessness fishermen had against the merchant truck system of credit which saw fishermen in considerable debt to merchants and an endless cycle of credit/debt between them. Coaker’s Fishermen’s Protective Union gave power back to fishermen when they railed against this type of trade. Coaker’s idea cumulated in trade unions developing in communities across Newfoundland, including the creation of the Fishermen’s Union Trading Company Ltd. Stores. The store in Seldom was the fourth branch store opened, begun in 1913. Its purpose was to provide a cooperative for fishermen. It operated on a barter system basis where customers would receive winter provisions in exchange for their summer’s catch of fish. The Trading Company in Seldom closed in 1978, but the building was reused, and eventually, by 1997 was restored as the Fogo Island Marin Information Centre and along with four other buildings is a popular tourist attraction.

Source: Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador, Meeting held October 24, 2009, Minutes #64.

Character-Defining Elements

All those elements of the fisheries-related type structure, including:
-wooden construction;
-narrow wood clapboard;
-wide, flat corner boards and window and door mouldings;
-wooden windows, their sizes, shapes, locations and number of existing panes;
-wooden plank doors with strap hinges;
-low-pitch gable roof;
-dormer window shaped like a three-sided bay;
-location on the shore with surrounding, related buildings;
-entrances located on the land side and water side;
-large “FU Trading Co. Ltd.” sign bands located under the eaves on both main facades; and
-all original interior features which relate to the Fishermen’s Protective Union and its trading operations, such as the original store with shelves, main counter, signage, etc.

Recognition

Jurisdiction

Newfoundland and Labrador

Recognition Authority

Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador

Recognition Statute

Historic Resources Act

Recognition Type

Registered Heritage Structure

Recognition Date

2009/10/24

Historical Information

Significant Date(s)

n/a

Theme - Category and Type

Developing Economies
Trade and Commerce

Function - Category and Type

Current

Leisure
Museum

Historic

Commerce / Commercial Services
Shop or Wholesale Establishment

Architect / Designer

n/a

Builder

n/a

Additional Information

Location of Supporting Documentation

Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador
1 Springdale Street
St. John's, NL A1C 5V5

Cross-Reference to Collection

Fed/Prov/Terr Identifier

NL-4510

Status

Published

Related Places

n/a

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