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The Apothecary Hall, designed by John E. Hoskins, was built by M. & E. Kennedy
Contractors and builders in 1922. The original owner of the building was Peter O'Mara who
used the main floor for a drugstore and used the upper level as a residence for his family. Peter
O'Mara's association with pharmacy in Newfoundland began in 1890 when he opened his first
drug store at 486 Water Street. In 1910 he was a founding member of the Newfoundland
Pharmaceutical Society.
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© 1998 Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador
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By 1922 O'Mara had outgrown his initial store and decided to build the current structure.
The building is one of the few Art Moderne buildings in Newfoundland, and architect John E.
Hoskins may have been inspired by the work of the famous Scottish architect, Charles Rennie
Mackintosh. An outstanding architect, furniture designer, and painter who pioneered the Modern
Movement in Scotland, Mackintosh's works exist as the greatest flowering of the British Arts &
Crafts movement in either Scotland or England and had a profound impact on architects and
designers around the globe. Mackintosh died in London in 1928.
The building was owned and operated by the O'Mara family and retained the name "Peter
O'Mara's Drug Store" from 1922 until it closed in 1986. The building was subsequently bought
in 1987 by the Newfoundland Pharmaceutical Association, which uses the second floor for
administrative office space. They have since opened a Heritage Drug Store on the first floor.
The interior of Apothecary Hall was restored to resemble the drug stores which were built in St. John's after the
Great Fire of 1892. Today, it stands as the last of the nineteenth-century-styled drug stores in St.
John's. Although gas lighting was never used in the building, it contained gas pipes. The
coin-operated gas metre was used in the production of distilled water and to prepare certain
medicines.
The Heritage Drug Store is also named the James J. O'Mara Pharmacy Museum in honour of
Peter O'Mara's uncle, who became the first Newfoundlander to open a drug store in 1874. The
museum was established to celebrate and preserve the history of pharmacy in Newfoundland,
which dates back to the 1830s, when a Scottish pharmacist, Thomas McMurdo, arrived and began
to teach his trade.
Inside the museum there are numerous antique pharmacy bottles, many containing their
original substances. Of the approximate 2,200 artifacts in the museum, the most striking are the
late nineteenth-century oak fixtures made in England. The furniture was brought to St. John's in
the same year for use in Messers M. Connors Drug Store. The fixtures were later sold to Donald
Hogan for his drug store, which closed in 1975. The Pharmaceutical Association then took
possession and put it into storage until the opening of the museum.
In recognition of the Newfoundland Pharmaceutical Association's efforts to preserve an
important part of Newfoundland's past, the Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador
designated the Peter O'Mara's Drug Store a Registered Heritage Structure in June 1988.
In 1989 a certificate of commendation was presented to the Newfoundland Pharmaceutical Association
by the American Association of State and Local History, for preservation of the history
of pharmacy in Newfoundland.
This structure was also awarded the Southcott Award for heritage restoration by the Newfoundland
Historic Trust.

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