Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Henry House (Halifax)

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Type
  
House

Country
  
Canada

Completed
  
1834

Opened
  
1834

Address
  
1222 Barrington Street

Current tenants
  
Granite Brewery

Owner
  
John Metlez

Province
  
Nova Scotia

Henry House (Halifax) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Town or city
  
Halifax Regional Municipality, Nova Scotia

Similar
  
Government House, Little Dutch (Deutsch) Church, Prince of Wales Tower, St Mary's Basilica, St Paul's Church

Henry House is a two-and-a-half-storey stone house located on Barrington Street in the Halifax Regional Municipality, Nova Scotia, Canada. The house is designated a National Historic Site of Canada, and is both a Provincially Registered Property and a Municipally Registered Property under the provincial Heritage Property Act.

Contents

Map of Henry House, Halifax, NS, Canada

History

The house was built in 1834 for John Metlez, a well-known Halifax mason and landowner. The house is primarily known for its association with William Alexander Henry, a prominent native of Halifax who resided in the house with his family from 1854-1864. Henry was a Father of Confederation, a co-author of the British North America Act, a provincial Attorney General,a Member of the Nova Scotia House of Assembly, a Mayor of Halifax and the first Nova Scotian to serve as a justice of the Supreme Court of Canada.

Since 1968, the house has housed a number of restaurants and is currently the location of Halifax's well known 'The Henry House Restaurant & Pub'.
It was designated a National Historic Site in 1969.

Architecture

Henry House has a gable roof, and has ashlar granite facades with ironstone on the gable ends. The architecture is generally representative of a typical style used in early 19th-century British North America for elite residences. In particular, it is an excellent example of the Halifax House style, a design brought to Nova Scotia by Scottish masons and characterized by three bays and a side hall plan.

References

Henry House (Halifax) Wikipedia