"The Antoine-Polette house is a residential building built in 1828. Its stone square rises one and a half stories high and is topped with a hipped roof which is pierced by a large brick chimney on each side.
The main facade is symmetrical and the entrance is centrally located. The double-leaf door with transom is framed by pilasters and preceded by a portico. The roof of the portico consists of a pediment sitting on an entablature decorated with triglyphs which rests on Ionic columns.
On either side of the entrance there are two rectangular wooden casement windows with large panes. They have a transom decorated with mullions creating ogival shapes.
The main facade also has two pedimented pendant dormers as well as a pedimented cat window located at the top of the roof. The right side facade also has two pendant dormer windows with pediments placed on either side of the chimney while there is only one on the left side facade.
This facade is pierced by a traditional wooden door. This entrance opens onto a large gallery protected by an independent canopy supported by Ionic columns arranged in pairs. The gallery expands to form a circle in front of the door. The columns of the gallery and the portico are surmounted by an entablature decorated with dentils.
The windows have stone casings while the dormer windows are framed by decorative wooden columns. There is plenty of woodwork. This residence is located on Bonaventure Street in the heart of downtown Trois-Rivières.
The Antoine-Polette house is located in the protection area of the Boucher-De Niverville manor, classified as a historic monument in 1960.
Historical information
This residence was built in 1828 for the lawyer Antoine Polette (1807-1887). This lawyer held several major positions during his lifetime, including that of second mayor of the city from 1846. He was also a deputy from 1848, then a judge of the Superior Court in 1860. The Polette family lived in this residence until 1868, when the Girard family took possession and kept it for around forty years, during which an extension for the kitchen was built at the back.
On the west side of this section of Bonaventure Street, the residence is one of the only ones to have survived the conflagration of 1908. Its stone walls and the slate that covered the roof at the time surely played a role in the preservation of the house against the fire which destroyed a good part of the city center. The neighboring houses, with roofs covered in cedar shingles, have not survived. However, it appears that the dormer windows and wooden porch seen in an old photo of the house were damaged in the fire. It would be following this damage that the dormer windows would have been redone according to a pendant model, that is to say crossing the drip edge of the roof, and that the neoclassical portico would have been built. The models of the new openings with transoms and motifs are also influenced by the Victorian movement which was still in vogue at that time.
In 1964, the residence still belonging to the Girard family was sold and transformed into a law office. In 1999, Michelle and Roch Parent acquired the building, which had been vacant for two years. They are undertaking major interior and exterior restoration work to convert the residence into an inn and restore it to its initial appearance. The building now bears the name Manoir de Blois and welcomes tourists."