Grant's Stage, Trinity, NL
(Trinity)

Grant's Stage is a wooden one and a half storey gable-roofed building. Constructed around 1830, it is a good example of an intact outport fishing store/stage. Provincially, there are few examples of such structures left in their original shape and condition.

Captain Blackwood Fishing Stage
Grant's Stage, Trinity, NL
Grant's Stage is a good example of an intact outport fishing store/stage in the region.
© 2004 Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador

Grant's Stage has seen extended use as a fisheries premises. An 1833 map of Trinity shows a building called Grant's Stage located on the site of the present structure. During the late 1800s and early 1900s it reportedly was used by a Captain Blackwood, who sailed schooners in the Labrador fishery. Throughout the 1900s it was used by others involved in the fishery.

Fishery buildings were designed for practical use and had to endure the rigours of a harsh environment. As such they were not intended to be permanent structures, and are exemplified by the use of rough materials, simple design elements and utilitarian construction techniques. Such buildings are intrinsically linked to a way of life centred around the sea and are associated with the fishery as practised before the age of modern refrigeration.

Grant's Stage was declared a Registered Heritage Structure by the Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador in April 1999.

Registered Heritage Structures Table of Contents

Also view Grant's Stage Registered Heritage Structure (Captain Blackwood Fishing Stage) on the Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador web site. The Newfoundland and Labrador Heritage Web Site has on its site only a portion of the registered heritage structures in Newfoundland and Labrador. To view a complete list or search for a particular structure visit the Heritage Foundation's Property Search page.