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Located in one of Harbour Grace's wealthier neighbourhoods, Victoria Manor was built
by James Hutchings, who helped build many of the houses in the community in the early to mid-1800s.
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© 1998 Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador
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Hutchings built Victoria Manor sometime around 1830. He is believed to have come to
Newfoundland in the company of a group of stonemasons. A master woodworker, Hutchings
combined his talents with the stonemasons to build many of the noteworthy stone buildings in
Harbour Grace at that time. The masons built the exterior and Hutchings
completed the interior.
Hutchings lived in the house until the late 1850s or early 1860s, at which time he moved to St.
John's. For the next 30 years, the house went by the name Victoria Lodge,
operating as lodgings for overnight guests. In the 1890s members of the
Hutchings family returned to Harbour Grace and converted the house back to a private dwelling.
They stayed until the 1920s, when the house was sold to the Power family. It
remained with the Powers until it was purchased by Gordon and Mary French.
Victoria Manor is a two-and-a-half storey Tudor-style house. The
wooden frame was infilled with brick and then covered with clapboard.
This kind of design, called nogging, was a common style in England in the 1800s.
While it is still a private dwelling, the Greens open the house to the public every day from
June to September. The interior has been meticulously restored and contains antiques and memorabilia
the Greens have accumulated over the years. Victoria was recognised as a Registered Heritage
Structure in September 1995.

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