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Fort Macleod Courthouse (Town Hall)

Fort Macleod

Other Names:
Fort MacLeod Courthouse
Fort Macleod Courthouse (Old)
Fort Macleod Courthouse (Town Hall)
Fort Macleod Courthouse and Town Hall
Fort Macleod Courthouse/Town Office
Macleod Courthouse (Town Hall)
Old Fort Macleod Courthouse
Town Hall

Statement of Significance

Description of Historic Place
The Fort Macleod Courthouse (Town Hall) is an early twentieth century, two and one half-storey building situated on a portion of a block of land located by the commercial centre of Fort Macleod. It features a red brick facade with horizontal bands of rusticated sandstone and a cross-gabled roof.

Heritage Value
The heritage value of the Fort Macleod Courthouse lies in its association with both the territorial and the provincial administration of justice and its outstanding example of territorial courthouse architecture.

When the Government of Canada acquired the vast territory known as Rupert's Land from the Hudson's Bay Company (H.B.C.) in 1870, the fledgling Dominion government recognized that the newly acquired region had a pressing need for the institutions of law and order. In 1874, the North West Mounted Police (N.W.M.P.) arrived in western Canada and set up the first police post in present-day Alberta at Fort Macleod. A decade later, during the 1880s, the federal government established the territorial court system and began building twelve courthouses in the North-West Territories. The Fort Macleod Courthouse was built between 1902 and 1904 for the Alberta Judicial District of the Northwest Territories. With the creation of Alberta and Saskatchewan in 1905 and the founding of their provincial court systems in 1907, most of these territorial courthouses were either demolished or transformed for alternate uses. Only the courthouses at Fort Macleod and Wolseley, Saskatchewan are still extant, though the building at Fort Macleod bears the distinction of being the only territorial courthouse that continued to operate in its original capacity after the transition to a provincial court system. It was transferred to the provincial government in 1911 and continued to operate as a courthouse until 1971, when it was converted into the Fort Macleod Town Hall.

The Fort Macleod Courthouse is the best preserved example of the territorial courthouses constructed by the federal government between 1888 and 1905. It is also the only extant territorial courthouse built by the federal government in Alberta and one of the few buildings that remains from the period in which the Government of Canada administered the Northwest Territories. The courthouse was designed by Dominion architect David Ewart, who was also responsible for the plan of the Royal Canadian Mint. The cross-gabled design of the building was one of the standard plans for territorial courthouses and was also employed at the courthouses constructed in Medicine Hat (built 1899) and Red Deer (built between 1903 and 1905). Its rusticated sandstone base, red brick facade, and simple, yet elegant, design embody the ideals of the justice system - balance, strength, and rationality.

Source: Alberta Culture and Community Spirit, Historic Resources Management Branch (File: Des. 109)



Character-Defining Elements
The character-defining elements of the Fort Macleod Courthouse include such features as:
- massing, form, and style;
- fieldstone and sandstone foundation;
- red brick facade featuring rusticated sandstone stringcourses;
- sandstone block with engraved "1902" on north elevation;
- cross-gabled roof;
- returned eaves gable ends;
- corbelled decorative brickwork supporting the eaves;
- corbelled brick chimneys featuring rusticated sandstone bands;
- projecting front entry porch with rusticated sandstone stringcourses, semi-circular arched entry and side windows with brick voussoirs;
- second floor balcony supported by the projecting front entry porch;
- two projecting structures on the east elevation featuring brick sides and face crowned by a fascia and pediment, the one closest to the south elevation featuring two windows on the north and south sides and a door with glass panes and a fanlight;
- fenestration pattern and style, including semi-circular windows on west and east elevations;
- entrance to basement on rear south wall;
- semi-circular brick courses containing geometrical patterns above windows on north elevation and semi-circular brick courses above windows on east and west elevations;
- rusticated sandstone lintels and sills;
- original interior elements, including wainscoting, balustraded staircases and newel posts, counters, windows and casements, and doors;
- original artifacts associated with the site.



Location



Street Address: 236 - 23 Street
Community: Fort Macleod
Boundaries: Lot 1, Block 2, Plan 7910480
Contributing Resources: Building: 1

ATS Legal Description:
Mer Rge Twp Sec LSD
4
26
9
12
13 (ptn.)

PBL Legal Description (Cadastral Reference):
Plan Block Lot Parcel
7910480
2
1


Latitude/Longitude:
Latitude Longitude CDT Datum Type
49.724409 -113.407331 GPS NAD 83

UTM Reference:
Northing Easting Zone CDT Datum Type

Recognition

Recognition Authority: Province of Alberta
Designation Status: Provincial Historic Resource
Date of Designation: 1979/11/16

Historical Information

Built: 1902 to 1904
Period of Significance: 1904 to 1971
Theme(s): Expressing Intellectual and Cultural Life : Architecture and Design
Governing Canada : Security and Law
Historic Function(s): Government : Courthouse and/or Registry Office
Current Function(s): Government : Town or City Hall
Architect: David Ewart
Builder:
Context: HERITAGE SIGNIFICANCE

In 1874, Fort Macleod was regarded as the first outpost of constituted authority in what is now Alberta. When judicial districts were created or renamed in the North West Territories in 1878 and 1884, Fort Macleod was selected as a centre or division within the district. The Fort Macleod Courthouse is the only surviving courthouse in Alberta constructed to meet the judicial needs of the North West Territories prior to the formation of the Province of Alberta in 1905, and that has served the judicial systems of both the territorial and provincial administrations.

Built in 1904, it is also the only surviving example in Western Canada of a basic design for Territorial Courthouses drawn up by the Dominion's Public Works Department. Ownership was transferred to the provincial government in 1911 and it was used as a courthouse until 1971, representing a long judicial tradition.

Additional Information

Object Number: 4665-0190
Designation File: DES 0109
Related Listing(s):
Heritage Survey File: HS 29238
Website Link:
Data Source: Alberta Culture and Community Spirit, Historic Resources Management Branch, Old St. Stephen's College, 8820 - 112 Street, Edmonton, AB T6G 2P8 (File: Des. 109)
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