Bethune Memorial House National Historic Site of Canada

Gravenhurst, Ontario
General view of Bethune Memorial House showing the simple L-shaped asymmetrical massing and modest scale of the house, 1995. © Parks Canada Agency / Agence Parcs Canada, B. Morin, 1995.
General view
© Parks Canada Agency / Agence Parcs Canada, B. Morin, 1995.
Detail view of the Bethune Memorial House showing the longstanding features which enrich its design (symmetrical window placement, bay windows, ornamental porch and vergeboard), 1995. © Parks Canada Agency / Agence Parcs Canada, B. Morin, 1995.General view of Bethune Memorial House showing the simple L-shaped asymmetrical massing and modest scale of the house, 1995. © Parks Canada Agency / Agence Parcs Canada, B. Morin, 1995.Front facade of the Bethune Memorial House emphasizing the vertical emphasis of its design, enhanced by a steeply pitched roof, 1995. © Parks Canada Agency / Agence Parcs Canada, B. Morin, 1995.
Address : 235 John Street North, Gravenhurst, Ontario

Recognition Statute: Historic Sites and Monuments Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. H-4)
Designation Date: 1997-09-22
Dates:
  • 1880 to 1880 (Construction)
  • 1890 to 1893 (Significant)

Event, Person, Organization:
  • Dr. (Henry) Norman Bethune  (Person)
  • People’s Republic of China  (Organization)
Other Name(s):
  • Bethune Memorial House  (Designation Name)
Research Report Number: 1996-29; 1971-21; 1971-05; 1967-08
DFRP Number: 11176 00

Description of Historic Place

Bethune Memorial House National Historic Site, the original manse of Knox Presbyterian Church, is located in the older residential district of Gravenhurst, Ontario.

Heritage Value

Bethune Memorial House National Historic Site of Canada was commemorated in 1996 because: as a memorial, it embodies and interprets the national historic significance of Dr. Norman Bethune, as a memorial, it embodies and interprets his ancestral roots, formative years as a minister's son in small-town Ontario, love of the outdoors and restless mobility, and as his birthplace, a site valued and revered in China, it captures the symbolic significance of Dr. Bethune to the Chinese.

The heritage value of this site resides in its associations with Dr. Norman Bethune and its illustration of his childhood environment. The Bethune family only lived in this house a short time (1890-1893) before moving on to a new parish in another small Ontario town. Dr. Norman Bethune is revered by the Chinese for the time he spent in China serving on battlefields, training medical personnel, and setting up medical programs and hospitals. He is considered a role model by Chinese society.

Source: HSMBC Minutes, June 1996.

Character-Defining Elements

The features of the house which remain consistent with the Bethune period of occupancy (1890-1893), including:
the simple L-shaped asymmetrical massing and modest scale of the house, the vertical emphasis of its design, enhanced by a steeply pitched roof, the longstanding features which enrich its design (symmetrical window placement, bay windows, ornamental porch and vergeboard), the modest original wood materials of the exterior (clapboard siding, wood details, windows), the intact original features of the house interior (layout around an entrance hall and stairs, undisturbed surfaces of most rooms), its setting in a small scale residential neighbourhood with tree-lined streets, the continuity of the memorial's setting which has changed little since Dr. Bethune was born there.