March 16, 2002 marked the 91st
anniversary of the first court session in the Fernie Courthouse. While
this was the first court date for this building, three court
facilities had preceded it.
The first Court House was simply a
shack that used for less than one year. Then in April, 1899, the
courts moved to a "grander" building which measured 28 feet square.
This modest 784 square foot building described as "the merest
makeshift" housed a courtroom, a guardroom, a constable's room, a
magistrate's chamber and four jail cells. This building served the
community for 8 years until 1907 when it was then determined that the
building was inadequate.
In 1907 construction began on a
large two-story building which was to contain the Court and Provincial
Government offices. It was designed by a Glasgow native - J.J.
Honeyman and constructed by a Vancouver contracting firm - Cornish &
Cooper. Mr. Honeyman had previously designed the Rossland Court House
in 1898 and improved on his design for the Fernie Court House. This
courthouse possessed ornamental gables and roofing, wooden exterior,
elaborate front and rear entrances and a beautiful west window.
This, the third of Fernie's
courthouses, was completed in the spring of 1908 at a cost of
$26,359.50. On March 19, 1908 the first sitting of the County Court
took place with His Honour Judge Wilson - a fine opening for a solid
building.
The glory was short lived. On August
1st, Fernie Fire of 1908 destroyed the building along with most of the
community.
To guard against further destruction
by fire, construction of future buildings in the commercial district
was to be of "fire resistant" materials such as brick and stone.
Immediately, our citizens and the government of British Columbia set
out to rebuild Fernie and of course a new Court House. Within two
months - October 1908 - the Provincial Government had accepted and
approved new courthouse plans. The site of the new building was a
centrally located lot facing Howland Avenue (now 4th). George Stanley
Rees, again of Honeyman and Curtis, did the architectural plans and
James A. Broley of Fernie was awarded the construction contract in May
1909.
The architect's plans called for the
use of locally produced bricks, for the general work, red pressed
bricks for the pilasters on the front facade. The basement walls were
to be made of concrete, but faced with British Columbia granite. The
trim on the upper level wall was to be Calgary sandstone. The steep
pitched roof made of British Columbia slate was to be trimmed with
copper on all cornices. In the late 1940's a copper roof was put on
but this was once again replaced by slate in 1992.

The dogwood emblems in the carved stairposts that adorn the
Fernie Courthouse. |
While the building's exterior is
spectacular, the interior is equally magnificent. Upon entering the
main doors of the building, one finds oneself in a spacious vestibule
of oak and stained glass. The floor here is a fret-like pattern of
tile. At the rear of the main floor there is a private entryway and
stairs which lead to the Judge's chamber on the second floor. The
public must use the wide slate and steel stairs to the left. The
balustrade or railing is made of figured metal and a golden oak
handrail with hand-carved wooden dogwood emblems in the upper part of
the stairposts.
The second floor contains the
courtroom, jury room, barrister's room and Judge's chambers. Many say
this courtroom is the most majestic in the entire province. Six lofty
stained glass windows light the room. Each of these six windows bears
a coat of arms significant to the history of British Columbia
including the insignia of our first governor Sir James Douglas and
British Columbia's first judge, Mathew Baillie Begbie. West Coast
cedar provides the finishing in this room and the paneled dome ceiling
leaves all the beautifully grained timber exposed.
The arrangement of Judge's bench,
jury box etc. is the usual arrangement in British courtrooms. When the
Judge leaves the bench he or she retires into a private chamber
through a door immediately behind the judge's chair. The small
stairway leading into the judge's chamber contains carved hearts in
the woodwork and a tiled fireplace surmounted by a natural fir mantel
is the prominent feature of this room. The fireplace is no longer
useable but it makes a nice feature accompanying spectacular views
from the windows.
The cost of the new Court House was
enormous. The Free Press of June 18, 1909 reported that "while the
winning bid was slightly in excess of $70,000.00 some changes in the
plans and other expenses will probably bring the cost close to the
$100,000 mark" - a very costly project in 1909!
Since its completion, the Fernie
Court House has undergone a few alterations, none of which have
detracted from its original character.
Fernie can be proud of its
Courthouse. It has few equals and no superiors in cities even twice
its size.