Description
Tom Porter Root Cellar is located along the old Shore Road (now a path) at Porters’ Point (also known as “The Point”), in Elliston, NL. It is a hillside type cellar with a rock facade and wooden door. The designation is confined to the footprint of the structure.
Statement of Significance
Formal Recognition Type
Municipal Heritage Building, Structure or Land
Heritage Value
Tom Porter Root Cellar has been designated a municipal heritage site by the Town of Elliston due to its historic, aesthetic and cultural value.
Tom Porter Root Cellar was built in 1879 by Porter and has historic value given its age and because it survives from a time before modern day refrigeration, when such structures were very important for storing and preserving foodstuffs. This particular cellar also evokes an earlier period in Elliston because it is situated along the old Shore Road, now used only as a walking path. As well, its roof is supported by a steel beam from the Eric, which was shipwrecked at Flower’s Cove, near Maberly in 1878. The beam was transported by horse and cart and is visible from inside the cellar.
Tom Porter Root cellar has aesthetic value as a good example of utilitarian design and functionality. Root cellars such as this were common in rural locations to store vegetables and other food items, and were built so that the temperature inside was more moderate than winter cold or summer heat. They also maintained an appropriate level of humidity. The Tom Porter Root Cellar is of the cellar type that is built into the side of a hill. The exterior at the face of the hill is reinforced with visible local stone and mortar, and the entrance is a wooden door of vertical boards. Tom Porter Root Cellar has aesthetic value on the cultural landscape of Elliston. It is one structure in a larger, community-wide collection of root cellars that makes the community’s landscape remarkable.
Tom Porter Root Cellar has cultural value in Elliston. Roots cellars have a connection to a subsistence economy where people farmed, hunted and gathered much of their family’s own food. Once commonplace, these cellars have become symbols of the history of subsistence in rural Newfoundland and specifically of the Town of Elliston, which declared itself Root Cellar Capital of the World in 2000.
Source: Town of Elliston Town Council Meeting Minutes of 2007/04/10
Character Defining Elements
All those exterior elements related to the historic and aesthetic value and design of the cellar:
-exposed stone on front;
-type, material, size and placement of door;
-dimensions;
-the general rugged appearance, with sods;
-built in hill construction;
-and location.
And in the interior:
-the visible steel beam from the shipwrecked Eric.
Location and History
Community
Elliston
Municipality
Town of Elliston
Civic Address
Old Shore Road, Porter's Point
Construction (circa)
1879 - 1879
Builder
Tom Porter
Style
Other
Location
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