Commissariat House Provincial Historic Site
At the corner of King's Bridge Road and Military Road, St.
John's, Newfoundland and Labrador. How to get here.
Visit this site
What will I see around St.
John's?
- Colourful houses, winding lanes and people who have
lived here since the 1600s. St. John's is really, really
old. It first appeared on a Portuguese map in 1519, only 22 years
after John Cabot's famous voyage to the "New Found Land". When Sir
Humphrey Gilbert sailed into the protected harbour in 1583 to claim
this area as England's first overseas colony, he found English,
French and Portuguese vessels fishing here for the summer, but no
permanent English settlement. This changed after the 1620s, as
English settlers moved in and stayed. This long history of
settlement informs the confidence of the people who live here, and
fuels one of the most active and interesting cultural scenes in
North America.
- Hills and more hills. Walking around the
downtown is great workout for your calf muscles. The protected
harbour surrounded by hills and its location as the North American
city closest to Europe gave St. John's military strategic
importance from the 1700s right up to through the Cold War. Don't
expect to get anywhere quickly though. Downtown streets laid out in
the 1700s were designed to confuse enemies approaching from the
harbour.
- A busy harbour. St. John's was always a busy
port, but now the city's booming economy is driven by offshore oil,
not cod. St. John's is the capital of Newfoundland and Labrador and
the largest city in the province. Though the population is only
around 100,000 people, its nightlife, and wide selection of
restaurants and shops are comparable with those of a much larger
city.
More to do around
St. John's