St. Anne's Chapel of Ease National Historic Site of Canada
Fredericton, New Brunswick
General view of the place
(© Parks Canada Agency/Agence Parcs Canada, 1995.)
Address :
201 Westmorland Street, Fredericton, New Brunswick
Recognition Statute:
Historic Sites and Monuments Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. H-4)
Designation Date:
1989-06-22
Dates:
-
1846 to 1847
(Construction)
Event, Person, Organization:
-
John Medley
(Person)
-
Frank Wills
(Architect)
Other Name(s):
-
St. Anne's Chapel of Ease
(Designation Name)
Research Report Number:
1989-SUC JUN
Plaque(s)
Existing plaque: 201 Westmorland Street, Fredericton, New Brunswick
In the design of this chapel, built in 1846-1847, English architect Frank Wills has given Canada one of its best and earliest examples of Gothic Revival religious architecture based on principles of the Ecclesiological Society. This influential Anglican reform group advocated a close adherence to medieval precedents, well expressed here in the simple plan, the bellcote, the buttresses, and the lancet windows, all reminiscent of small 13th-century English country churches. Commissioned by Bishop John Medley, the chapel served as a model for other Anglican churches in the Diocese of Fredericton.
Description of Historic Place
St. Anne’s Chapel of Ease is a small, elegant, stone church built in 1846-7 in the Ecclesiological Gothic Revival style. It is centrally located within the city of Fredericton, New Brunswick, in a historic residential neighbourhood. The formal recognition is confined to the footprint of the chapel at the time of designation, and does not include the adjoining Christ Church Parish Church built 1962.
Heritage Value
St. Anne’s Chapel of Ease was designated a national historic site in 1989 because it is a significant example of Gothic Revival religious architecture based on the principles of the Ecclesiological Society.
St. Anne’s Chapel of Ease reflects the early adoption of the principles of the Ecclesiological Society, an Anglican organization of English origin that promoted the use of medieval Gothic style church architecture as a model for parish churches of the 19th century. The Bishop of New Brunswick, John Medley, actively promoted the style in the design and construction of churches in Atlantic Canada beginning with his appointment as Bishop 1845. St. Anne’s Chapel of Ease, constructed at the same time as Fredericton’s Christ Church Cathedral, served as a model for the principles Medley espoused. The fine stained glass lancet windows were created by two firms: Beers of Exeter and Warrington of London.
Source: Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada, Minute, November 1989.
Character-Defining Elements
Key elements which relate to the heritage value of St. Anne’s Chapel of Ease include: its consistency with Ecclesiological principles for small parish churches, notably its simple rectangular form with a steep gable roof surmounted by an open belfry over the entry, its interior layout with nave and a narrower chancel of lesser height to the east, its almost complete lack of sculpted ornamentation, its enclosed entrance porch, its solid, enclosed massing with buttresses and lancet windows; its richly-textured sandstone exterior; Its finely wrought interior with carved butternut woodwork including the pulpit, lectern, rood screen, choir stalls, communion rail, altar and sedelia, and the imported multicoloured Minton encaustic tiles ornamenting the floor and the chancel; its stained glass windows.