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Fading murals and old brick ads: hunting for ‘ghost signs’ in uptown Saint John

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The next time you’re walking around uptown Saint John, don’t forget to look up. Hidden in obscure alleyways and side-streets are traces of centuries┬аof history.┬а

Ghost signs are┬аthe fading remains of hand-painted advertising murals popular in the 19th and early 20th┬аcenturies.┬аBusinesses would also frequently etch┬аtheir names on the bricks themselves.┬а

In New Brunswick, these relics┬аare┬а“not very common at all outside Saint John,” said art historian John Leroux, manager of collections and exhibitions at the Beaverbrook Art Gallery in Fredericton.

“It’s another reminder of how fascinating and precious architecture in Saint John is.”

WATCH |┬аHow many of these fading murals and old brick ads can you spot in Saint John?:┬а

Documenting the ‘ghost signs’ of Saint John

Advertising murals and brick ads from the 19th and early 20th centuries are slowly fading away тАФ but reveal stories from more than a century of history in this New Brunswick port city.

From Masonic mottos, to funeral businesses, to tobacco ads, here are 10 brick ads that tell the story of Canada’s oldest incorporated city.┬а

1. Shamrock Plug Tobacco┬а

A faded colour mural advertising Shamrock Plug Tobacco.
The colour ad for Shamrock Plug Tobacco on the side of 44 Water St. is one of the better-preserved ghost signs in Saint John. (Julia Wright/CBC )

Shamrock Tobacco was a major Canadian tobacco company headquartered in┬аQuebec.┬а

It’s┬аimmortalized in Saint John in a large colour mural at 44 Water St.┬аand another┬аat 166 Prince William,┬аright beside a faded ad for┬а“delicious, refreshing Coca-Cola.”

“Plug” tobacco isn’t popular these days. In the┬а19th┬аand early 20th century, however, it was all the rage to bite or cut pieces off a compressed rectangles of tobacco leaves, which were chewed and spit out. “Navy plug,” originally produced for the U.S. navy, was made with heavily sweetened Burley tobacco,┬аwhile “flat plug” was less sweet and made with Bright tobacco.┬а

“So it tells you 100 years ago what was important to people: Coke and cigarettes,” Leroux said. ‘In some ways, some things haven’t changed quite so much.”

2. Dominion Rubber Company

A fading brick advertisement for Dominion Rubber Company.
The advertisement for Dominion Rubber Company тАФ one of two ghost ads on Canterbury Street тАФ was partially painted over with another advertisement, creating an effect known as a palimpsest. (Julia Wright/CBC)

Tucked high above the street in an alleyway between the Canada Revenue Agency, and offices at┬а87 Canterbury, is this large hand-painted ad for Dominion Rubber Company Ltd.┬а

Dominion, founded in Montreal in 1854 by William Brown, Ashley Hibbard, and George Bourn,┬аmanufactured tires and other rubber goods

An old 1920s newspaper ad advertising Dominion Rubber products
An ad for Dominion Tires that appeared in the Saint John Standard on March 11, 1929. (Saint John Free Public Library )

In the 1920s, Dominion opened a Saint John office in this three-storey brick warehouse, originally┬аbuilt for the D. F. Brown Paper Box and Paper Company in 1901, according to information from the City of Saint John’s community planning department.┬а

Obscuring the first few letters of “Dominion” are the remnants of another, almost unreadable painted ad.

“The logo that’s coming through is probably the original paper box company,” Leroux said. The layered effect is known as a palimpsest:

3.┬аAmes Holden McCready Footwear

Faded lettering ona  brick wall high above the street reads 'Ames'
The words ‘Ames’ and ‘boots’ on the block of Canterbury Street between Duke and Princess hark back to the days when Ames Holden McCready Footwear operated at 93 Canterbury St. (Julia Wright/CBC)

Best spotted looking south from the corner of Princess and Canterbury streets, the words “Ames” and “boots” on the side of 93 Canterbury are vestiges of the Ames Holden McCready Footwear Company.┬а

This type of mural was “designed for pedestrians,” Leroux said. “In a car, you wouldn’t really notice these things. You go by the buildings too fast.”┬а

AHM, a leather merchant founded in the 1860s, became a major player in Canadian footwear by the late 19th century. Their Saint John office and warehouse, built in 1912, was located just down the street at 89 Canterbury.

A turn of the century newspaper ad for a shoe company
In the top right corner of this ad for AHM footwear, which appeared in the Saint John Daily Times in 1918, there’s an illustration of the firm’s factory on Canterbury Street in Saint John. (Julia Wright/CBC)

In a 1919 newspaper ad in the St. John Standard, Ames Holden McCready called itself “Shoemaker to the Nation,” with offices in Montreal, Toronto, WInnipeg, Edmonton, Vancouver┬аand Saint John. In 1920, it advertised itself in the Daily Telegraph and Sun as “carrying at all times “stocks, not only of leather shoes, but also of rubbers, white canvas, tennis and outing shoes and felt footwear.”

4. Jardine & Co.┬а

A brick facade with the name Jardine on Water Street in Saint John.
The name Jardine is etched into the Water Street side of the Jardine Building, which would have been used as a warehouse. The other side fronts on 87 Prince William St. (Julia Wright/CBC )

The Jardine family built a grocery and wholesale empire in Saint John in the mid-nineteenth century тАФ┬аimmortalized by their name etched in the bricks on the Water Street-facing side of 87 Prince William.┬а

Jardine & Co. was founded by Robert Jardine, born in 1812 at Girvan, Ayrshire, Scotland, who moved to Saint John along with his brother Alexander in the early 1830s.

In the 1840s and 1850s, the Jardines supplied Saint John with goods from around the world.┬а┬а“Java coffee, Puerto Rican molasses, British seed, American tobacco, Peruvian fertilizer, Canadian flour, African cocoa, and Nova Scotian fish, as well as agricultural implements,” according to the Dictionary of Canadian Biography. The grocery business operated until 1896.┬а

A nineteenth century Christmas ad for Jardine & Co., a grocer in Saint John
A Christmas ad for Jardine & Co. that appeared in the Saint John Daily Telegraph in December 1889. (Saint John Free Public Library )

Both Robert Jardine and Alexander Jardine┬аare buried in Fernhill Cemetery, close by Craigie Lea┬атАФ Alexander Jardine’s┬аresidence, which remains┬аone of┬аthe oldest surviving homes in east Saint John. In addition to the black brickwork on Water Street, their names also live on in newly illuminated Jardine’s Alley, which runs between Prince William and Water streets.

5. Hayward and Warwick

A brick facade with a damaged sign reading 'Warwick' and 'china, glass gifts.'
Hayward and Warwick sold china, glassware and gifts in Saint John for 161 years before it closed in 2017. The sign on the rear of the brick building, visible from Trinity Church, is now all that remains of the business. (Julia Wright/CBC)

Many Saint Johners will still recall shopping for china, glassware and gifts at Hayward and Warwick over the decades.

The business, founded in 1855, was named after founding brothers-in-law William Henry Hayward and William Warwick, whose first establishment burned in the Great Fire of 1877.

An archival silver print interior of an eary 20th century china shop.
The intererior of the Princess Street china shop, photographed by J. Morris as it appeared around 1900. (New Brunswick Museum – Mus├йe du Nouveau-Brunswick. Accession #: X8680)

Hayward and Warwick rebuilt their crockery-making shop at 85 Princess St. in 1879, which remained a local name in china sets, lamps, ornaments and glassware until it closed in 2017.

The sign┬аadvertising china, glass and gifts is still visible from the steps of Trinity Church on Germain Street.┬а

“Even though the business doesn’t exist, it is as much a part of the story of Saint John as a church, or a statue,”┬аLeroux said.

It’s “the life of the city that made Saint John тАФ┬аand this is part of it.”

5. Townsend Company

A brick building constructed in the slope of a steep hill bearing a black-and-white painted ad for Townsend Co.
This painted brick ad for Townsend Co., a ship chandler, is of more recent vintage than many of the other brick ads in Saint John. (Julia Wright/CBC)

Water Street has been a key location to┬аSaint John’s marine history тАФ┬аpart of which is captured in a hand-painted sign for Townsend Company Ltd (Maritime) at 110-112 Water St.

The sign is┬аnewer┬аthan most of the other hand-painted ads in Saint John. Townsend Company was a waterfront ship chandler that provided supplies and equipment for ships from 1970 until 2000. But the history of the building┬аin the marine industry dates back much further.┬а

A 1980s newspaper ad for a Saint John ship chandler.
A 1980 newspaper ad for Townsend Company Maritime Ltd. – which advertised itself as the ‘oldest established merchant marine supplies in Saint John’ and ‘a company with a future.’ In 2023, a painted ad on Princess Street is all that remains of the company’s Saint John presence. (Saint John Free Public Library )

110-112 Water St.,┬аnow home to Steamers Lobster Co., was built in 1910 as a warehouse for Andrew “Beef” Malcolm, according to the City of Saint John’s Community Planning Department. Three generations of the Malcolm family тАФ┬аall with the name Andrew Malcolm тАФ┬аoperated a wholesale business there until the late 1950’s.

The building is a designated provincial historic site for its role in the shipping and fishing industry.

6. M.N Powers

A brick facade with the inititals M.N. Powersw and the date 1877.
The storefront at 79 Princess Street that housed the operations of M.N. Powers, undertaker. (Julia Wright/CBC)

Just above the sign for the restaurant Decimal 81 at 79-81 Princess St. is a large brick bearing the name┬а“M.N. Powers, 1877.”

Mark Needham Powers was “the first full-time undertaker in the City of Saint John,” according to the city’s planning department, and used this address as both his residence and his “warerooms.”

A 1878 newspaper ad for an undertaker located on Princess Street in Saint John
A 1878 ad notifying the public that the city’s first undertaker, Mr Mark Needham Powers, could be found on Princess Street near Germain – the building that still bears his name today. (Saint John Free Public Library )

Powers was a pioneer in the funeral industry. He constructed one of the first glass hearses in New Brunswick, which could regularly be spotted going through the carriageway that led to the stables behind the shop.

After Powers died in 1892, his son and grandson operated the business until 1925.

7. The Masonic Temple┬а┬а

A carved sandston arch with symbols and a motto associated with Freemasonry.
An arched window hidden between 96 Germain and the steps of Trinity Church bears a Masonic motto and symbols. (Julia Wright/CBC)

This brick sign on the side of 96 Germain St.┬аisn’t an ad тАФ it’s an admonition.

“Audi, vide, tace” is a Latin motto used in Freemasonry, which can be found on the coat of arms used by the United Grand Lodge of England.┬а

The Masonic motto translates as “hear, see and hold your tongue”: a reminder to Freemasons not to reveal the secrets of the lodge.┬а

Above it is a time-worn coat of arms with a lamb, a lion, and other Masonic symbols. The Grand Lodge of New Brunswick, founded in 1867, still operates at 96 Germain St.

A lantern slide of a Masonic Hall as it appeared in the early 20th century.
A photo taken by James Ramsay Woodburn shows the Masonic Hall at 96 Germain as it would have appeared around 1900, before its mansard roof was damaged by fire. The window bearing the brick motto and symbols is visible to the right of the image. (New Brunswick Museum – Mus├йe du Nouveau-Brunswick Accession #: X15451)

9. Dearborn & Co.┬а

The brick facade of a building with a white bar that reads "Dearborn Established 1863."
The black-and-white brick ad for Dearborn & Co. is visible high above Prince William Street. (Julia Wright/CBC)

These days, “people consider wealth a private thing,” Leroux said, but “back then, if you were extremely wealthy, your building was seen as an expression of wealth. It was also a gift to the city.”

High up on 93 Prince William St.┬аis a brick ad for Dearborn and Company, a coffee roaster and┬аspice dealer that also manufactured condiments ranging from┬аbaking powder to ketchup.┬а

A early 20th century newspaper ad for baking powder.
A 1917 newspaper ad for Dearborn’s Perfect Baking Powder which appeared in the Saint John Standard. (Saint John Free Public Library )

The Dearborn Building, like the Jardine Building down the street at 87 Prince William, had the advantage of having one side easily accessible from Saint John’s ice-free port and bustling Water Street, and the other on the major thoroughfare of Prince William Street.

The company was taken over by Canadian Mills and Specialties Ltd. in 1919.

10.┬аA & I Isaacs

A faded painted ad on the side of a brick building.
Close, but (almost) no cigar: a barely perceptible single word on the side of 80 Princess St. is all that remains of an ad for A&I Isaacs, a well-known cigar manufacturer in Saint John. Eventually, all of Saint John’s ghost ads will fade, just as this one has. (Julia Wright/CBC )

You need good eyesight to spot the faded word “cigar” on the side of 80 Princess St., one of several storefronts in the Port City once occupied by cigar manufacturers Abraham and Israel Isaacs.

The two brothers learned the cigar-making trade from their father while growing up overseas in┬аLondon. According to a 1909 obituary published in┬аThe Jewish Times, “in 1878 Mr. Isaacs removed his family to Saint John, and began cigar manufacturing on Dock Street.”

A composite of two19th century black-and-white photos of two brothers, one in a cravat and and the other in a bowtie.
Cigar manufacturers and brothers Abraham and Israel Isaacs. (Submitted by the Saint John Jewish Historical Museum)

“A year later, he was joined by his brother, Mr. Isaacs, and together they established the firm of A&I Isaacs тАж one of the oldest established and best-known firms in the Maritime provinces, ranking amongst the largest cigar manufacturers in Canada.”

The brothers helped found the Ahavith Achim (Brotherly Love) Synagogue, established in 1898 and forerunner of the present-day Shaarei Zedek Synagogue.┬а

The faint lettering is a good reminder that eventually, most hand-painted ads will fade from the old bricks of Saint John.┬а

“You lose the ad тАФ┬аbut you also lose a visual and tactile part of the history,” Leroux said. “They tell us about what people did, what they consumed, what mattered to them.┬а

“That’s part of the reason to save them тАФ┬аor at least to photo document them.”

A black and white photo of an uptown Saint John streetscape with handpainted signs.
There are lots of stories hidden in the bricks of old Saint John. This turn-of-the-century photo of Prince William Street shows storefonts belonging to A&I Isaacs, James S. May & Son, and Andrew Pauley, tailor. (Submitted by the Provincial Archives of New Brunswick, P210795)

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