I wanted to make you aware of a campaign going on right now to help save Holy Name Hall in Douglastown. It is part of a contest run by a T.V. program here in Quebec where people vote online to save a historical building in Quebec. Luc Shaput from Douglastown has been working hard over the past couple years to have this building made usable again for the population of Douglastown and the Gaspe coast.
The site is in French but here are my step-by-step instructions on how to vote for the non-French speaking readers:
- Go to this link: http://www.historiatv.com/concours/sauvez-un-batiment-de-chez-vous-phase2/vote.jsp?id=3
- In the box where it says "Prénom", enter your first name
- In the box where it says "Nom", enter your last name
- Where it says "Courriel", enter your email address
- Where it says "Confirmez que votre vote n'est pas robotisé en cliquant sur l'image « ...... »,puis cliquez sur « Soumettre ». " it is asking you to click on the image underneath corresponding to the word in between the « » symbols. What comes between the « » symbols will vary and you will need to select the appropriate image. Here is a translation guide:
- Type-writer = Machine à écrire
- Bottle = Bouteille
- Telephone = Teléphone
- Phonograph Player / Victrola = Phonographe
- Light-Bulb = Ampoule
- Letter = Lettre
- After you have selected the image, you must click the box that says "Soumettre" which is just underneath the images.
- Now the website will send you an email to confirm your vote. Go to your email and look for the email from HistoriaTV with subject "Sauvez un bâtiment de chez vous". Open this email.
- In the email, find where it says "Cliquez ici pour soumettre votre vote". Click on the word "Cliquez". Congratulations, you are done!
Here is some great background information on Holy Name Hall and the Irish community around Douglastown that Luc Shaput has prepared and allowed me to use here:
Many know that Irish immigrants have adopted new lands as their home throughout their history. However, few know that some of these immigrants chose the Gaspé Peninsula as early as the
second half of the 17th century to settle. Some of these Irish were Loyalists fleeing persecution in the United States after the Revolutionary War, others were ordinary peasants in search of new opportunities in farming or the fisheries controlled then by Jersey companies. The Morris, Kennedy, Rooney, Hackett, Maloney, McDonald and Walsh families are some of the oldest families who chose to start a new life in Douglastown on the side of St. John's river which flows into the bay of Gaspé. Most of the time, life was a matter of survival. Despite harsh difficulties, the Irish succeeded in becoming a strong, thriving community growing alongside English, French Canadian, Scottish and Jersey families. A significant part of their culture was maintained through religion, building their first church in 1800, as well as through educational and cultural institutions. St. Patrick's Day has been celebrated in Douglastown for more than 150 years.
Today, many people from Douglastown are concerned about reviving and preserving their cultural roots as their community has been in a dramatic demographic decline since the 1960’s. One strategy the community is employing to fight this decline is by attempting to restore Holy Name Hall. The hall was built in 1937 but has been in neglect since 1990. For many years, this parish hall was at the heart of the Irish cultural expression in Douglastown. School concerts, St. Patrick's Day celebrations, and other major community events took place in the hall. Though no longer in use today, beginning in the 1940's, the hall also served as a local cinema, still equipped with two original 1945 Simplex high projectors using carbon arc lamps. The building design was inspired by the fishery storage buildings and is contructed mostly from boards salvaged from burned buildings in Douglastown and donated lumber. It is composed of diagonally-laid weather boards to brace the balloon frame, covered with horizontal wooden boards on which were nailed asphalt paper imitating bricks. It features over 250 seats (dated 1897) made of wrought-iron, stuffed and covered with velour. The building was heated with wood. Some modifications were made in 1956 on the whim of the flamboyant parish priest, Father Patrick Nellis. Except a new heating system, the most important change was the covering of the facade with yellow bricks to create a cohesive look with the surrounding buildings (the presbytery, church and school).
As of May 2010, Holy Name Hall has been granted heritage status by the Town of Gaspé. This necessary step will allow the community to start looking for financing to assist in restoring this unique building for the population of Douglastown and the Gaspé coast. The Irish descendants of Douglastown know that this project could play an important role in helping guarantee their future on the Gaspé coast.
No comments:
Post a Comment