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Built around 1838 by Thomas Ridley, the Ridley Offices were the business premises of
one of Harbour Grace's best-known, and most notorious, merchants.
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© 1998 Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador
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From 1820 to 1870 Thomas Ridley
was one of the most important fishing/sealing merchants in Newfoundland. Known for his
stubbornness, he was the only ship owner to refuse concessions to a group of striking
sealers in 1832 and enraged sealers tore down the mast of one of his sailing vessels.
During an attempt to become elected to the House of Assembly in 1836, Ridley
encountered similar difficulties and
was forced to withdraw because of violence and intimidation. In 1840 he was nearly killed during his second
attempt to obtain a seat. Eventually he managed to get elected, and he served on the Executive
Council from 1843 until 1848.
Because of his wealth and power, Ridley and his family were involved with several "firsts"
in Harbour Grace. In 1854 he was the first to use gas lighting and in 1866 he was the first to use a
steamship in the annual seal hunt. Thomas Ridley's son, William, was one of the founders
of the Harbour Grace Water Company, the Harbour Grace Railway and the local grammar
school.
With the failure of the Newfoundland fishery in the 1860s, Ridley and Sons experienced severe
financial difficulties. In 1873, the company went bankrupt and the offices were sold. Over the
years they have been owned by a number of different people, including such well-known local
families as the Harveys and the Munns and, Most recently, former senator Eric Cook.
After the Ridleys, the most famous resident may have been Captain F. W.
Golder. Working for John Munn, Golder found several
inventive uses for codfish. His boneless codfish called "King Cod" won a prestigious award at
the 1893 Chicago World Fair. He developed fertilizer from the bones and liquid glue from
the skins. The glue was marketed under the slogan "It will mend anything but a broken
heart."
The offices that have seen so much history are among the last of their kind in Harbour
Grace. Of all the businesses built along the beach during the 1700s and
early 1800s, it is the last one standing. It also survived the disastrous fire of 1844 that wiped out
most of the community.
The Ridley Offices are made of stone with brick trim and a slate roof. The walls are two ft.
thick and consist of inner and outer stone with a rubble fill. The stone is said
to have come from either Kelly's Island or as ballast on ships from England. The offices have been
altered over the years to suit various owners; the chimney, for example, was not part of
the original. The building also has inset windows.
The building was beginning to fall into disrepair, but with combined funding
from the federal government and the Heritage Foundation, much of the damage is being fixed.
Ridley and Company Limited, a company created to restore and maintain the building,
has assumed ownership and plans for either a new business or a museum to open in the structure.
The Ridley Offices were recognised as a Registered Heritage Structure in April 1990.

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