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Like many other buildings in downtown St. John's, the LSPU Hall currently stands on a site that
has a history stretching back hundreds of years. In the case of this building, the use of the site
traced back to 1789 when it was the location of the first Congregationalist Church in
Newfoundland.
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© 1998 Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador
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The structure built by the Congregationalists lasted until 1817 when it was destroyed in
one of several Great Fires that ravaged St. John's in the nineteenth century. An ecumenical
meeting hall was built next. In 1853 the Sons of Temperance purchased the building and
rebuilt it after it was destroyed in the Great Fire of 1892. The building was sold again in 1912,
this time to the Longshoremen's Protective Union (LSPU). Victoria Street, the street on
which the LSPU Hall is located, was originally known as Meeting House Lane, due to the
meeting house that occupied the spot of the hall.
The Longshoremen bought the hall at least partially because of its location. At that time
the secretary of the union could look out the window to see the flags on Signal Hill that indicated
if any ships were coming into St. John's Harbour. In 1922 the building was again extensively
damaged by fire and was once again rebuilt.
In the decades that followed the union's purchase of the hall, the building was used for
many purposes. Quite frequently the building was rented out to members of the local community for
bingo, speeches and other social functions. There were
other buildings in the area that had similar functions, but the LSPU Hall is one of the few buildings
that remains standing.
The next major change in the history of the hall came in 1975. The hall was then being
leased by the Resource Foundation for the Arts who decided to purchase it from the union in
1976. The group eventually changed its name to the Resource Centre for the Arts (RCA). The
RCA is a non-profit organisation committed to the advancement of the visual and performing
arts in Newfoundland. In the years since the building has hosted hundreds of plays, concerts,
exhibitions and workshops. It is one of the most important centres for the arts in Newfoundland.
The LSPU Hall is located at 3 Victoria Street, near Duckworth Street, in the old
downtown core of St. John's. While the interior of the building has been extensively renovated
over the years, the exterior remains basically the same. A large timber-frame building with a
wooden exterior, one of the more unusual features is the massive stone-rubble retaining wall that
contain sections of the original retaining wall built for the foundation of the Congregationalist Church in 1789.
The building also has a gable roof with ornamental exposed rafter ends supporting the building's
eaves.
RCA's restoration of the building earned the organisation a Southcott Award in 1984.
The LSPU Hall was recognised as a Registered Heritage Structure in October 1988.

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