GENERAL
Type / PurposePrivate Residence
358 Montague Street, St Andrews, New Brunswick
The Thomas Armstrong Residence at the corner of Montague and Augustus streets in St. Andrews is a two-storey wooden residence with a twin-gabled Maritime Gothic Revival southern façade and a Classical Revival-style eastern façade.
The Thomas Armstrong Residence is recognized for its Maritime Gothic Revival style, its role in St. Andrews' heritage, and its time as the residence of Thomas Armstrong.
The Thomas Armstrong Residence is a somewhat unusual adaptation of the Maritime Gothic Revival style. The house's southern façade, facing towards Montague Street, is in the Gothic Revival style with twin cross-gables with Gothic Revival windows beneath them. In contrast, the narrow eastern façade facing Augustus Street is a vernacular version of the Classical Revival style. As such, it can appear to be a very different building depending on which side of the corner lot you look at it.
Over the years, the Thomas Armstrong Residence has had several owners. It is believed to have originally belonged to boat builder William Edwards, who sold it in 1864. In 1868, the house was sold by surveyor Mr. Robert Melville Jack to its namesake occupant. Thomas Armstrong was a longtime employee of New Brunswick Railway and ran the New Brunswick machine shops. He briefly moved to McAdam when the machine shops moved there, but retired with a full pension shortly afterwards and returned to St. Andrews. Though he died in 1930, at the age of 90, Thomas's estate did not sell the house until 1953.
The Thomas Armstrong Residence is one of the many heritage buildings in St. Andrews, which has one of the best collections of heritage buildings per capita in all of Canada. This residence, as well as all the rest, help create the serene seaside atmosphere the town is known for.
Municipal Register of Local Historic Places (2009/11/02)
ARCHITECTURE
Date of Constructionc. 1859
- Small two-storey rectangular massing
- Wooden cladding
- Wide corner boards
- Side-gabled roof
- Wide frieze under roof
- Twin cross-gables with Gothic windows below on southern façade
- Vernacular Classic Revival-style eastern façade with enclosed veranda
- 6/6 wood-framed windows across building
- Stone foundations
- Elaborate spiral staircase in interior
OWNERSHIP HISTORY
Notable Historic OccupantsWilliam Edwards:
Original owner and boat builder. Sold the property in 1864.
Thomas Armstrong:
Purchased the residence in 1868 from surveyor Robert Melville Jack. He was a longtime employee of New Brunswick Railway and ran the New Brunswick machine shops. He briefly moved to McAdam when the machine shops moved there, but retired with a full pension shortly afterwards and returned to St. Andrews. Though he died in 1930, at the age of 90, Thomas's estate did not sell the house until 1953.
SOURCES AND DOCUMENTS
PhotosTown of St. Andrews, Canada's Historic Places
Sources Contributors
Gabrielle Byrne