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Core Area of the Town of Goderich
The
unique layout of Goderich’s core encompasses eight primary
streets radiating from an octagon bounded by eight business
blocks. This octagon,
marketplace or civic square, with a park at its centre, is
popularly known as “The Square”.
Four streets intersecting at right angles Victoria, Nelson,
Waterloo and Elgin- form the outer edges of the core with
the octagon in the centre.
“West
Street” and “The Square” are two heritage
conservation districts within this core area, designated by
the Municipality of Goderich under the Ontario Heritage Act.
In its early years, “The Square” was known as
“Market Square” and its current legal address
is “Courthouse Square”.
The
original concept for the core area has been attributed to
John Galt, the Canada Company’s first commissioner who
was inspired by the 1st Century B.C. city planning concepts
of Roman architect Vitruvius.These concepts were later translated
into town plans by Renaissance architects.
The historic value of the core lies in the fact that Goderich
is a rare example of a town plan that was designed and surveyed
in advance of any construction. Growth was not left to accident,
nor to the whim of individual tastes, but planned especially
to suit the flat ground upon which the core stands. The original
town had developed at the harbour following 1827. Later, businesses
relocated to the Market Square laid out by Galt above the
bluffs. |

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Contrary
to a popularly held belief, the town plan was NOT switched
with one meant for Guelph. It is likely that this myth arose
due to a struggle of wills between John Galt and the Canada
Company directors. The latter were determined to name present-day
Guelph, ‘Goderich’ in honour of Lord Goderich,
while Galt was equally determined that the first established
settlement be called ‘Guelph’. After a period
when both parties stubbornly used their own favoured names
for each settlement, Galt’s version prevailed. The town
plans for these two communities, however, were always intended
for where they are now found.
Goderich’s primary radiating streets, 99 feet in width,
converge onto the circular road which is also
99 feet wide. Secondary streets are 66 feet wide. The central
park covers about three acres. Added to
the clarity of the radial design and ordered symmetry, is
the alignment of the eight principal roads
with the points of the compass.
The
octagonal-shaped park at the centre was occupied for nearly
100 years by the original Huron County Courthouse, an Italianate
brick building of imposing scale, massing and elegance. The
current courthouse replaced the original which had been destroyed
by fire in 1954.
Ringed by eight commercial blocks, The Square reflects a vision
of a town centre of classical design and elegance, possibly
owing inspiration to formalized urban spaces like the London
Nash Traces and Bath Crescents, of England. The 1890s saw
The Square come closest to achieving the elegance its radial
plan promised. Although much has changed, a significant portion
of the aesthetic and architectural value evident at that time,
is still largely intact and still deserving of on-going maintenance
and preservation.
From the 1840s to the 1890s, the growth of Goderich centered
around the development of the Market Square. This fast growing
town was the centre of a prosperous agricultural region and
by the 1850s, had established itself as the social, economic
and administrative centre for the District of Huron, an area
much larger than the current County of Huron. Goderich was
also the headquarters of the Canada Company which was responsible
for opening up the million-acre Huron Tract for settlement. |
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Heritage
Goderich, Town Hall, 57 West Street, Goderich, Ontario, N7A 2K5
Telephone - 519-524-8344 | Fax - 519-524-7209
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