| Language of origin |
English language
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| Feature Type: | Provincial Historic Site - Property, whether a site of nature or a work of man, that is of interest for its architectural, historical, cultural, environmental, aesthetic, or scientific value. |
| Status: |
Official
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| Name Authority: |
BC Register of Historic Places |
| Tags: |
BC Register of Historic Places
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| Latitude-Longitude: |
48°25'10"N, 123°22'00"W at the approximate centre of this feature. |
| Datum: |
WGS84 |
| NTS Map: |
92B/6 |
Origin Notes and History:
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Borden number: DcRu-162. A Borden number is a unique identifier code that is assigned to an archaeological or historic site on the basis of its location.
Source: BC Heritage Branch files
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Designation; Ministerial Designation; 05 December 1963.
Source: BC Heritage Branch files
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Helmcken House is a one-storey log house with two distinctive two-storey wood-framed additions. This residence faces the Elliott Street Square beside the Royal BC Museum on a slight rise of land that looks north to downtown Victoria.
Source: BC Heritage Branch files
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Helmcken House is significant because it was the home (1853 to 1920) of Dr. John Sebastian Helmcken, first speaker of an elected assembly in British Columbia, one of the three negotiators of British Columbia's entry into Confederation, early Vancouver Island doctor, and first president of the Canadian Medical Association. It is also an excellent example of the evolution of wooden, vernacular houses in nineteenth-century British Columbia.
The original shingle-clad, squared-log structure, begun by Hudson's Bay Company workers in 1852, is one of the few surviving intact examples in British Columbia of piece-sur-piece construction. The dining room addition, clad with cedar shingles, added ca. 1856, is a good example of vernacular post and beam construction. The two-story gabled balloon-frame addition with its front verandah, built ca. 1889 for the doctor's youngest daughter, was professionally built, its mass-produced drop siding contrasting with the cedar shingles of the earlier wings.
Heritage value is also derived from Helmcken House's location beside the site of Sir James Douglas's home (demolished). Upon marriage to the eldest Douglas daughter, Helmcken built his house to be next door to his in-laws. The two houses were among the first substantial houses built outside Fort Victoria, marking the beginning of James Bay, Victoria's earliest residential neighbourhood. Purchased by the provincial government in 1939, Helmcken House is also significant as the first provincially owned historic site in British Columbia.
Source: BC Heritage Branch files
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The character-defining elements of Helmcken House inlude: - physical features remaining from the residency of Dr. John Sebastian Helmcken - the house's three distinctive styles, construction techniques and exterior colours - the original location of the house - the spatial configuration of the stairways and of the interior rooms and corridors on both floors - original woodwork and interior surfaces throughout the house - the furnishings and layout of the doctor's bedroom, which his daughter preserved as a shrine to her father after his death in 1920
Source: BC Heritage Branch files
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To learn more about Helmcken House, visit the Canadian Register of Historic Places website: www.historicplaces.ca.
Source: BC Heritage Branch files
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