List of National Historic Sites of Canada in Prince Edward Island

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This is a list of National Historic Sites (French: Lieux historiques nationaux) in the province of Prince Edward Island. There are 22 National Historic Sites designated in Prince Edward Island, five of which are administered by Parks Canada (identified below by the beaver icon ).[1][2] The first National Historic Site to be designated in Prince Edward Island was Jean-Pierre Roma at Three Rivers in 1933.

Numerous National Historic Events also occurred in P.E.I., and are identified at places associated with them, using the same style of federal plaque which marks National Historic Sites. Several National Historic Persons are commemorated throughout the province in the same way. The markers do not indicate which designation—a Site, Event, or Person—a subject has been given.

This list uses names designated by the national Historic Sites and Monuments Board, which may differ from other names for these sites.

National Historic Sites

More information Site, Date(s) ...
Site Date(s) Designated Location Description Image
Alberton Court House[3][4] 1878 (completed) 1981 Alberton
46°48′45.1″N 64°4′6.6″W
A simple wooden hall evocative of a pioneer church, now used as the local museum; representative of the six circuit courthouses, all built according to a standard plan after the passage of Prince Edward Island's County Courts Act in 1873
All Souls' Chapel[5][6] 1888 (completed) 1990 Charlottetown
46°14′2.43″N 63°7′57.56″W
A small chapel built of rust-red, Prince Edward Island sandstone, attached to St. Peter's Anglican Cathedral; known as an exceptional example of the High Victorian Gothic Revival style in Canada, and for its 18 interior mural paintings by Robert Harris View of the altar in All Souls' Chapel
Apothecaries Hall[7][8] 1900 (completed) 1969 Charlottetown
46°14′5″N 63°7′41.16″W
A three-storey brick building in which an apothecary shop operated from 1810 to 1986, making it one of the oldest continually operated pharmacies in Canada Red and buff brick three-storey building with decorative brickwork
Ardgowan[9][10] 1850 (completed) 1966 Charlottetown
46°15′7.29″N 63°7′34.64″W
The residence of William Henry Pope, a Father of Confederation; the Popes billetted George Brown and hosted a luncheon for delegates here during the Charlottetown Conference Portrait of William Henry Pope
Charlottetown City Hall[11][12] 1888 (completed) 1984 Charlottetown
46°14′6.97″N 63°7′46.59″W
A Romanesque Revival style town hall, the design of which symbolizes the growth and prosperity of Prince Edward Island and its capital in the late 19th century Exterior view of Charlottetown City Hall
Confederation Centre of the Arts[13][14] 1964 (completed) 2003 Charlottetown
46°14′4.29″N 63°7′36.32″W
A Brutalist style multi-purpose cultural centre containing a theatre, art gallery and public library; built as a memorial to the Fathers of Confederation who met at the Charlottetown Conference, the facility is representative of the wave of cultural complexes built in the 1960s and 1970s in Canada Exterior view of the Confederation Centre of the Arts
Dalvay-by-the-Sea[15][16] 1899 (completed) 1990 Prince Edward Island National Park
46°24′53.48″N 63°4′24.01″W
A summer residence built for Alexander McDonald, president of Standard Oil of Kentucky; now a hotel, it is a noted example of the Queen Anne Revival style in Canadian domestic architecture Exterior view of Dalvay-by-the-Sea across the water
Dundas Terrace[17][18] 1889 (completed) 1990 Charlottetown
46°13′48.65″N 63°7′39.1″W
A wooden three-and-a-half-storey apartment building; a noted example of the Queen Anne Revival style in Canadian apartment building architecture Sepia-toned 1890s photo of dirt road with Queen Anne-style apartment at the end, with water in the distance
Fairholm[19][20] 1839 (completed) 1992 Charlottetown
46°14′18.36″N 63°7′37.98″W
A brick villa a carriage house built for Thomas Heath Haviland, Sr.; an excellent and rare surviving example of a Picturesque villa in Atlantic Canada Sepia-toned 1890s photograph showing two men in late 19th-century clothing standing on the street corner in front of a brick house
Farmers' Bank of Rustico[21][22] 1863 (completed) 1959 North Rustico
46°25′23.9″N 63°17′0.07″W
A stone building that housed one of the first people's banks in the country, offering loans to residents in the predominantly Acadian farming community; its establishment heralded the development of the credit union movement in Canada Exterior view of the Farmers' Bank of Rustico
Former Summerside Post Office[23][24] 1887 (completed) 1983 Summerside
46°23′36.04″N 63°47′26.32″W
A stone post office with Gothic and Romanesque elements; representative of the small urban post offices erected by the Department of Public Works in smaller urban centres during Thomas Fuller's term as Chief Architect; current town hall
Government House[25][26] 1834 (completed) 1971 Charlottetown
46°13′52.42″N 63°8′10.15″W
The official residence of the Lieutenant Governor of Prince Edward Island, it sits on a more extensive property called Fanningbank. It is a finely-proportioned frame structure of Canada in the neoclassical style Exterior view of Government House and its grounds
Great George Street Historic District[27][28] 1990 Charlottetown
46°14′1.74″N 63°7′28.21″W
A wide six-block street that begins at the waterfront and ends at Province House; the view up Great George Street from Peake's Quay contains many elements that the Fathers of Confederation would have experienced on their way to the Charlottetown Conference in 1864 Looking from Province House down Great Gorge Street
Jean-Pierre Roma at Three Rivers[29][30] 1732 (establishment) 1933 Brudenell
46°10′54.88″N 62°33′37.13″W
Jean Pierre Roma established a fishing and trading post on this site in 1732, which was destroyed by New Englanders in 1745 after the Siege of Louisbourg; symbolic of the French presence on Île Saint-Jean (later named Prince Edward Island)
Kensington Railway Station[31][32] 1904 (completed) 1976 Kensington
46°26′16.15″N 63°38′20.15″W
A fieldstone station with a high gable roof and sheltered platforms, originally built for the Prince Edward Island Railway; commemorates development of the railways in the Maritimes and a rare surviving example of a railway station in Prince Edward Island
L.M. Montgomery's Cavendish[33][34] 2004 Cavendish
46°29′15.68″N 63°22′54.64″W
A cultural landscape near Cavendish that author Lucy Maud Montgomery made famous in her Anne of Green Gables books Exterior view of the Green Gables farmhouse
Province House[35][36] 1847 (completed) 1966 Charlottetown
46°14′5.74″N 63°7′33.9″W
A neoclassical legislative building that served as the site of the Charlottetown Conference of 1864, the first meeting that led to Canadian Confederation Exterior view of the front facade of Province House
Shaw's Hotel[37][38] 1860 (lodge completed) 2003 Brackley Beach
46°25′26.13″N 63°11′29.84″W
A two-and-a-half-storey main lodge, with two large barns and twenty-five cottages sitting on a 8-hectare (20-acre) site; operating as a tourist resort for more than 150 years, the site is evocative of the early years of tourism in Canada
Skmaqn—Port-la-Joye—Fort Amherst[39][40][41] 1720 (established) 1958 Rocky Point
46.197222°N 63.136944°W / 46.197222; -63.136944 (Port-la-Joye—Fort Amherst)
A hilly landscape on the west side of the channel entrance to Charlottetown harbour, with remnants of an 18th-century fort built by the French and later occupied by the British; the site was the seat of government and port of entry for settlers to Île Saint-Jean/Prince Edward Island Exterior view of the Port-la-Joye—Fort Amherst landscape
St. Dunstan's Roman Catholic Basilica[42][43] 1907 (completed) 1990 Charlottetown
46°14′0.96″N 63°7′31.44″W
St. Dunstan's is the centre of the Roman Catholic Church in Prince Edward Island and the mother church of the diocese; it was elevated to the status of Basilica in 1929; a noted example of the High Victorian Gothic Revival style in Canada Exterior view of front facade of St. Dunstan's Basilica
Strathgartney Homestead[44] 1861 (completed) 1996 Bonshaw
46°12′3.33″N 63°21′17.07″W
A 13-hectare (32-acre) remnant of the 200-hectare (490-acre) estate of Robert Bruce Stewart, a nineteenth-century landowner; illustrative of the land tenure system that dominated Prince Edward Island until the passage of the Land Purchase Act of 1875
Tryon United Church[45][46] 1881 (completed) 1990 Tryon
46°14′28.64″N 63°30′7.3″W
A wooden church designed for a Methodist congregation by William Critchlow Harris; now a United Church, it is an exceptional example of the Gothic Revival style in Canadian architecture.
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