Old Waverley Hotel

 

GENERAL

Type / Purpose

Historic hotel, current store

Location

30-32 Victoria Street, Shediac, New Brunswick

Description

The Old Wavery Hotel is a three-storey building located at 30 Victoria Street in Shediac. It is designed in the Second Empire style. It formerly served as a hotel and is now home to local businesses.

Heritage Value

The Waverly Hotel is a designated Heritage Site for its connection to a famous murder, as well as its Second Empire style architecture.
 
In 1887, Timothy McCarthy, a wealthy businessman and horse trader who had visited the hotel, disappeared in nearby Pointe-du-Chêne. His corpse was found in the Scoudouc River the following year. The killing caused an uproar, and it was suspected he had been robbed and murdered by Harry Osbourne, whose father ran the Waverly Hotel. He was tried and ultimately acquitted of the charges, leaving the crime unsolved. Annie Parker, a maid who worked at the hotel, claimed the Osbourne family had indeed murdered Mr. McCarthy for his money and that she had witnessed the event. The tragedy inspired folk singer Georges Arsenault to write a famous mourning ballad that details McCarthy’s killing from the perspective of Annie Parker.
 
The hotel is also exemplary of Second Empire, an architectural style that at the time dominated buildings, particularly hotels, in the area.

Heritage Recognition

Local Register (2005/09/26)

ARCHITECTURE

Date of Construction

c. 1865

Character Defining Elements

- Three-storey squarish Second Empire style massing
- Mansard roof with shed dormers

OWNERSHIP HISTORY

Notable Historic Occupants

Osbourne Family, Timothy McCarthy

SOURCES AND DOCUMENTS

Links/Related Content Photos
[:en]Southwest view of the Old Waverly Hotel, photographed by the Town of Shediac. Image taken from historicplaces.ca.

Sources Contributors

Gabrielle Byrne

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A Ginger Design