Placentia Area Historical Society

Identificatie

Bestandsidentificatie

NL0041

Geauthoriseerde naam

Placentia Area Historical Society

Parallelle vormen van de naam

    Aandere naamsvormen

      Soort

      • Gemeenschap

      Contact

      Tom O'Keefe

      Soort

      adres

      Adres

      48 Orcan Drive

      Locality

      Placentia

      Region

      Newfoundland and Labrador

      Landnaam

      Canada

      Postcode

      A0B 2Y0

      Telefoon

      709-227-5568 (Seasonal)

      Fax

      E-mail

      Aantekening

      PO Box 233

      Beschrijving

      Geschiedenis

      Geografische en culturele context

      Mandaat/bronnen van bevoegdheid

      Organisatie structuur

      Records management and collecting policies

      The O’Reilly House Museum is aware of its responsibility to preserve and protect the collection and will endeavour to do this by following the standards established by the ABCs of Collection Care and the “Rules for Archival Description (RAD).”

      The complete collections policy can be found here: http://www.placentiahistory.ca/attachments/065_PAHS%20-%20Collections%20Management%20Policy.pdf

      Gebouwen

      The O’Reilly House Museum was restored by the Placentia Area Historical Society and opened to the public in 1989. It was subsequently designated a Registered Heritage Structure on the 24th April, 1999 by the Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador.

      Originally called “Brefery House,” this Balustrade Queen Anne Victorian house was built in 1902 by W.J. Ellis for the William O’Reilly family of Placentia. William O’Reilly was the Magistrate from 1897 to 1923. After he completed his tenure, the O’Reilly House served as home to the Magistrates of Placentia until the 1970s.

      The O’Reilly House Museum captures the trappings of life and the wealth of the owners. Whether it is the stained glass that decorates the entrance on the ground floor, the finely detailed and intricately hand-trowelled mouldings in the parlour or the dental detail notched into the main staircase, the house imparts this richness.

      On the ground floor, the parlour and dining room also offer a taste of the life enjoyed by William O’Reilly and his family. Both rooms contain fireplaces, an attribute of the wealth and status of Magistrate O’Reilly. Similarly, the master bedroom and some of the other rooms on the top floor contain fireplaces. In less affluent homes, heating by virtue of the oven was restricted to the kitchen, often the warmest room in the house.

      In this light, towards the rear of the house on the ground floor, a part of daily life is reflected in the kitchen and pantry. In these rooms, the food and meals that eventually decorated the dining room table were prepared. A narrow and unadorned stairway connects the kitchen to the maid’s quarters on the top floor. Its plainness typifies an aspect of life that did not require the embellishment characteristic in the other parts of the home.

      Collectively, the features of the O’Reilly House Museum convey the time when this home was built, in addition to a fragment of the life led by those who lived and worked within its walls.

      Bestanden

      Toegangen, gidsen en publicaties

      Toegang

      Openingstijden

      Raadpleegvoorwaarden en -eisen

      Toegankelijkheid

      dienstverlening

      onderzoeksdienstverlening

      reproduktiedienstverlening

      Publiekruimten

      Beheer

      Identificatie van de beschrijving

      Identificatiecode van de instelling

      Toegepaste regels en/of conventies

      Status

      Klad

      Niveau van detaillering

      Minimaal

      Datering van aanmaak, herziening of verwijdering

      Created - April 10, 2013

      Taal (talen)

      • Engels

      Schrift(en)

        Onderhoudsaantekeningen

        Trefwoorden

        Access Points