The Shano/Le Shane Property Registered Heritage Structure is the site of a late 19th century outport estate situated on Burnt Woods Road in Lower Island Cove, NL. The property consists of a steep gabled wooden house, a root cellar, a small wooden well house and a wooden shed with attached outhouse. All buildings reside on a large piece of coastline property comprised of green space and trees. The designation takes in the property in its entirety.
Formal Recognition Type
Registered Heritage Structure
Heritage Value
The Shano/Le Shane Property was designated a Registered Heritage Structure by the Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador in 2006 due to its aesthetic and historic value.
The Shano/Le Shane Property has aesthetic value in its completeness as a 19th century outport estate, for its presence of original materials and for its vernacular outport architectural style. The house survives in its original form, style and location. Constructed of wood, this traditional modified salt box style house has a steep gable roof with wooden shingles and chimney extended above the ridge. The wooden 2/2 windows have plain flat mouldings with lintels and small sills. The panelled main door is inset in the plain, moulded door frame and is protected by a plank storm door because this is the ocean-facing side of the house. This house maintains its 1860 unadorned character which reflects the utilitarian nature of homes constructed along the coast by fishermen.
Several other structures are features of this property. The root cellar, located at the rear of the house is noted by a grassy mound and small wooden door. The well house, also situated at the rear of the house is a small shed-roofed structure with wooden clapboard, wide cornerboards and a plank door. It covers a shallow, hand dug well. A long rectangular shed is also located on this property. It has two entrances with two separate rooms inside, as well as an attached outhouse at one gable end. This shed has a shallow pitch gable roof and is sheathed in wooden clapboard. The outhouse is a shed-roofed extension. Two plank doors are located on one side and the windows are small, wooden and square.
The Shano/Le Shane Property has further aesthetic value due to its setting on a coastal landscape. The property sits on a high point of land and overlooks the Atlantic Ocean, a testament to its earlier use as a homestead for a fishing family. It is surrounded by green space and forest, on a large, undeveloped piece of land enveloped by wild grasses and other foliage. The cliffs are high in this area, and the ocean lies quite far down from the house.
The Shano/Le Shane Property has historic value due to its age and associations with the Shano/Le Shane family. The property is thought to have been built around 1860. The Shano/Le Shane family are recorded in early plantation records in 1796. The earliest known member of this family was a Philip H. Shano, of French origins, who set up fishing rooms in the area and settled the land. The family name has been altered over time and became Le Shano and eventually Le Shane. The house was built by John Shano, a descendant of Philip, though more recent members of that family go by the name Le Shane. This type of simple, wooden 19th century architecture within its wild, undeveloped setting is reminiscent of an outport culture that, today, is rapidly disappearing from Newfoundland’s coastlines.
Source: Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador property file “Lower Island Cove – Shano/Le Shane Property – FPT 2854”
Character Defining Elements
All those original elements that pertain to the vernacular outport architecture of the house, including:
-steep gable roof;
-chimney extending from the roof ridge;
-narrow wooden clapboard with wide cornerboards;
-plain trims and mouldings;
-2/2 wooden windows;
-inset front door and plank storm door; and
-size, dimensions and orientation towards the ocean.
Those elements that pertain to the outbuildings, including:
-grassy mound and small wooden door of root cellar;
-wooden shed-roofed well house with narrow clapboard; and
-wooden, two room shed with narrow clapboard, low gable roof, two wooden doors, small square wooden windows and attached, shed-roofed outhouse.
All those elements that help to preserve the environmental features of the area, including:
-open, undeveloped space in its natural setting; and
-wild grasses and trees of surrounding land.