Local Government
Fremantle
Region
Metropolitan
13 Cantonment St Fremantle
Fremantle
Metropolitan
Constructed from 1922, Constructed from 1898
Type | Status | Date | Documents | More information |
---|---|---|---|---|
Heritage List | YES | 28 Sep 2011 | City of Fremantle |
Type | Status | Date | Documents |
---|---|---|---|
(no listings) |
Type | Status | Date | Grading/Management | More information | |
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Category | Description | ||||
Municipal Inventory | Adopted | 28 Sep 2011 | Level 2 |
Level 2 |
City of Fremantle |
Woodsons, 13 Cantonment Street is an example of a warehouse in the Inter War Functionalist style. The place has historic significance for links with the Fremantle Port.
The use of limestone is part of the Fremantle landscape and gives the City coherence and character. Limestone walls were built around properties in Fremantle to prevent sand drift in response to an early building regulation dating from the 1830s. Limestone walls are one commonly encountered example of use of this stone as a building material, most of them dating from the 19th century and early years of the 20th century. Most of the limestone in small walls came from local quarries.
Woodsons, 13 Cantonment Street is a three level brick and rendered and parapeted roof building which has multi-paned tilt windows.
Cantonment Street appears on Surveyor-General Roe’s earliest maps, and used to continue as Cantonment Road to Cantonment Hill, until this section was renamed as Queen Victoria Street in 1892 to avoid confusion.
The firm G.Wood and Son purchased lot 326 Cantonment Street in 1898. Cost of building was £8,250. By 1900 a full page advertisement appeared in the W.A. Postal Directory showing the new building with the name "G. Wood, Son and Co." surmounting the top storey and beneath it, above the ground floor "Wholesale Grocers and Importers". Also in the scene were three senior staff members and a horse drawn lorry piled with cartons and boxes, plus a pushbike on the footpath. The building was gutted by fire in 1915 and in 1922 and rebuilt each time.
While the premises were being rebuilt following the 26 March 1922 fire which was lit by an arsonist, the company moved to a warehouse owned by Dalgety and Company at the West end of High Street.
Parry's Department Store purchased the property in 1975. The building housed the firm and activities (despite interruptions by the disastrous fires in 1915 and 1922) until 1966 when the business was transferred to new premises at the corner of Carrington and Clarke Streets. See: "Anchor in the West" by J. Lee and A.W. Barrett (p664).
This place was identified in the "Heritage Report on 19th century limestone walls and steps in Fremantle" prepared by Silvana Grassadonia, for the City of Fremantle, 1986.
Ref ID No | Ref Name | Ref Source | Ref Date |
---|---|---|---|
MI not adopted - |
This place was adopted onto the Fremantle MHI and the Heritage List by the decision of Council on 28/09/2011. (The limestone feature was already adopted.)
Individual Building or Group
Epoch | General | Specific |
---|---|---|
Original Use | COMMERCIAL | Warehouse |
Style |
---|
Inter-War Functionalist |
Type | General | Specific |
---|---|---|
Wall | BRICK | Common Brick |
Wall | RENDER | Smooth |
General | Specific |
---|---|
OCCUPATIONS | Commercial & service industries |
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