J. OWENS HOUSE
Description of Historic Place
The Owens House is a two-storey Edwardian Colonial Revival house located in the Hillhead
subdivision on the East Hill in Vernon.
Heritage Value
Built in 1909, the Owens house is valued as an excellent example of Edwardian Classical Revival architecture. The early 1900s marked the beginning of the Edwardian era and a new interest in classical revival styles emerged with the new age. More symmetrical designs replaced the Victorian architecture with its complex asymmetry and varieties of materials. Many of these designs came from the United States where there was a renewed interest in Colonial Revival styles. This variant, which has a four-square shape and a low-pitched bellcast hipped roof, was a prevalent urban style in British Columbia from 1900 to around 1911 and was particularly popular in Vancouver. The Owens house takes the four-square form and embellishes it with Colonial Revival details. These are evident in the highly symmetrical form of the house with its full-width porch with central entrance, above which are placed a second storey porch, and attic dormer. The front door with sidelights, the paired windows in the dormers and upstairs porch and the use of narrow board siding are also Colonial Revival elements.
The Owens house is also valued for its association with the social history of Vernon. Under the second owners, Mrs. Maud Barkley (from 1918 to 1921), the house was used as classrooms for St. Michaels School, a private girls school. Maud Le Gallais founded St. Michaels School in 1913 and became the school’s first principal. The School also used rooms in the Lefroy house across the street. The School was associated with the Anglican Church and drew girls from throughout the Interior and the Coast. Active until the 1940’s, the school was an important social and educational institution in the Okanagan. In 1921, a new school was built on the East Hill. The Hon. Walter Nichol, Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia, laid the cornerstone. Miss Topham Brown, who began as the housekeeper and games mistress and later became the art teacher, lived in a suite upstairs in the Owens house. As a founding member of the Vernon Public Art Gallery, one of the galleries is named after her.
Character-Defining Elements
- two-storey foursquare or “classic box” scale and massing of the house
- hipped roof with bell-cast eaves
- wide roof overhang with modillions
- fenestration including paired windows
- entrance with sidelights
- hipped dormers
- full-width porch with round columns
- cladding of narrow boards
From the City of Vernon Heritage Register, Page 53