Another View of Cobalt

ca 1910 view from silver Street, looking toward Argentite Street and “French Town” atop the escarpment. Note the buildings just behind the people.

Always on the lookout

Several of our members regularly check the latest listings on auction sites, looking for “new to us” photos of Cobalt. 

Just when we are about to declare “no more new photos are out there” we learn we are mistaken.

That’s OK. We like THESE kinds of mistakes. Above is the latest “new to us” photo. 

Now, take a look at that row of buildings just behind the people. They can be seen in the next two photos.

This photo was used in an Ontario Provincial Health report to illustrate the less-than-standard living accommodations erected by capitaltist JH Hunter of Cincinnati. You are looking at the front access to the “cottages” here. In the header photo above, you see them from a different angle.
The Cobalt Streetcar stop on Argentite Street. This is a view of the same area as the header photo, but from the opposite side of town. The escarpment and “French Town” are behind the photographer who is facing toward Silver Street. Can you see Hunter’s cottages? See below for a closeup.

Who was JH Hunter?

Joseph Hendricks Hunter was one of the directors of Horatio Barber’s Open Call Mining Exchange. In 1907, he was a Vice President of the City of Cobalt Mine. The press referred to him as a capitalist from Cincinnati who owned considerable property in Cobalt’s residential and commercial neighbourhoods. His most significant, most  visible contribution to Cobalt was the Hunter Block in the Square. It was completed in 1907.

By mining-town standards, the Hunter Block was impressive. On the outside, that is. Inside was another matter. It was a cheaply built structure without toilets. In 1909 during the typhoid crisis, Joseph’s brother Cromwell Orrick acted as the landlord, and was fined for non-compliance after he ignored the health authorities’ order to install toilets in the building and other rooming “facilities” in town such as the above illustrated, so-called, cottages.

The Hunter Block ca 1910 in “The Square”. The building burned in 1926 and was replaced by the Inch Block, which still stands today.
The red arrow point to Hunter’s cottages.

No big deal, except it is

If you’ve followed Cobalt’s history from the discovery of silver in 1903 to present day, you know that the landscape has changed dramatically over the years.

Especially in the early days when. for example, a building that was erected in spring 1905 was relocated elsewhere by the end of the same year.

To find new photos that illustrate something new is a VERY big deal to we few die-hard Cobalt-o-philes. 

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