Shoal Tower National Historic Site of Canada

Kingston, Ontario
General view of Shoal Tower National Historic Site of Canada. © Parks Canada Agency | Agence Parcs Canada, J. Butterill.
General view
© Parks Canada Agency | Agence Parcs Canada, J. Butterill.
General view of Shoal Tower National Historic Site of Canada. © Parks Canada Agency | Agence Parcs Canada, J. Butterill.Aerial view of Shoal Tower National Historic Site of Canada. © Parks Canada Agency | Agence Parcs Canada, J. Butterill.
Address : Kingston Harbour, Kingston, Ontario

Recognition Statute: Historic Sites and Monuments Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. H-4)
Designation Date: 1924-01-01
Dates:
  • 1846 to 1847 (Construction)

Event, Person, Organization:
  • R.E. Bonnycastle  (Architect)
  • Royal Engineers  (Architect)
Other Name(s):
  • Shoal Tower  (Designation Name)
Research Report Number: 1989-024; 1989-017; 2019-CED-SDC-01
DFRP Number: 09475 00

Plaque(s)


Existing plaque:  Confederation Park, Kingston, Ontario

British military engineers designed Shoal Tower and three other Martello towers built between 1846 and 1848 to strengthen the Kingston fortifications, as tensions with the United States threatened to escalate into war. Shoal Tower helped protect the Royal Naval Dockyard, which provided ships for the defence of Lake Ontario and the upper St. Lawrence. It featured massive round walls surrounded entirely by water, making it unique in British North America. Less than two decades after its construction, Shoal Tower became obsolete because of advancements in artillery. Today, it is one of the few remaining Martello towers in Canada.

Description of Historic Place

Shoal Tower National Historic Site of Canada is a circular stone defensive tower located on a shoal in the harbour, directly offshore from the site of the historic City Hall and the site of the former Market Battery in Kingston Ontario. From this location, the Shoal Tower had a commanding field of fire over Kingston’s commercial harbour and the entrance to the Rideau Canal. Official recognition refers to the tower itself plus the submerged rubble and cribbing associated with the tower’s construction.

Heritage Value

Shoal Tower was designated a national historic site of Canada as one of five non-contiguous components of Kingston Fortifications National Historic of Canada for its association with: Kingston’s 19th-century defensive system and the town’s military and naval significance; British defence of colonial Canada in the 19th century, and; the Great Lakes-Rideau Canal inland water transportation system.

The heritage value of this site lies in its relationship with the other four components of the Kingston Fortifications National Historic Site of Canada as illustrative of a system of defence. Shoal Tower was built by the British government from 1846 to 1847 as one of four Martello towers and the Market Battery, in order to reinforce Kingston’s existing defence system in response to the anticipated American threat during the Oregon Crisis.

Sources: Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada, Minutes, June, November 1989.

Character-Defining Elements

The key elements that contribute to the heritage character of this site include: the spatial relationship to the other components of Kingston’s historic fortification system, Fort Henry, Fort Frederick, Cathcart Martello Tower, and Murney Martello Tower; the unobstructed viewplanes of the harbour and the entrance to the Rideau Canal; the siting on a shoal in the harbour, directly off-shore from the former Market Battery; its squat, tubular massing under a conical roof; its symmetry, with circumference and height of equal proportion; the defensive design evident in the high entrance, smooth walls and sparse shuttered openings, bomb-proof construction with thick stone walls at the base, the tin-clad roof and the fireproof nature of its materials; its functional interior layout with central staircase giving access to the barrack quarters, the powder magazine and the food provision areas; the high level of engineering skill evident in the underwater construction with submerged rubble and cribbing supporting the tower.

Commemorative Intent

The Shoal Tower was designated a national historic site in 1924 because:

• it was constructed as part of the 1846 and 1848 additions to the Kingston fortifications, following the completion of the Rideau Canal in 1832 and the Oregon Crisis of 1845, in order to defend the city in the event of an attack from the United States, and;

• surrounded entirely by water, it is a unique example of its style in the country and one of the few remaining examples of a Martello tower remaining in Canada.

Source: HSMBC, SDC minutes, May 2019.