Another Mansion in the Wilderness
But there was much more construction to come. John Wentworth
regained his title of Surveyor of the King’s Woods in North America
again in 1792, but this time he became the royal governor of Nova
Scotia. That, according to the governor and his lady, required the
building of a new, much grander mansion, this time in Halifax. Across a
lane in the outskirts of the city then known as Pleasant Street (now
Barrington Street) Sir John Wentworth set the cornerstone to Government
House on September 11, 1800. Halifax was then only 50 years old,
younger than its governor, born in Portsmouth, NH in 1737.
Two
previous provincial governors had found their official housing in
Halifax very satisfactory, but Wentworth reported in 1792 that the
existing structure was "in Danger of falling into the Cellar". Both Sir
John and Lady Wentworth demanded the best and, according to one
Canadian historian, were ready to pursue their whims up to the very
brink of bankruptcy." Gentlemen did not measure the cost of
accommodating and entertaining British royalty, and Prince William
Henry, third son of King George III, was a frequent guest at the
Wentworth’s Canadian home. The young prince, popular legend says,
dallied with the middle-aged Lady Wentworth while her husband trekked
the wilds of Canada as royal surveyor.
A devoted Loyalist, John Wentworth may have imagined that his new
palatial home would return some of the glory lost to Britain in the
American Revolution. Nova Scotians, however, did count their pennies.
The local Assembly voted 10,500 pounds for the governor’s new home. As
costs rose, tempers flared and John Wentworth found himself again at
odds with his subjects. By his retirement in 1808 the cost to build and
equip Government House was nearly three times the original sum.
Wentworth moved in before the house was officially completed in 1805,
and as in his Wolfeboro mansion, enjoyed only a few short years in
residence. He was officially retired as governor when his successor
Gen. George Prevost arrived from England accompanied by 3,000 soldiers.
Another war with America was brewing and the elderly and expensive
Wentworth was no longer needed.
Guarded by "beefeater" style re-enactors, Government House is now
the grand residence of the lieutenant governor of Nova Scotia. The
high-priced house costs Canadians over $300,000 a year including
maintenance, plus three office staff, a chauffeur, chef, custodian and
three housekeepers, in addition to the lieutenant governor’s salary.
Other than the White House, according to one source, no government home
in North America has been continuously occupied longer.
Three stories of stone with rounded two-story wings at each side,
the mansion is designed to entertain visiting royalty – as was the
Wolfeboro house – with a grand ballroom, drawing room and marble
fireplaces. It is the grandest of the Wentworth homes and the most
admired Georgian structure in Nova Scotia. Likely drawn from the same
European design book as familiar New England structures, the building
materials include a wide variety of native stone from surrounding
towns. As with the empty cellar hole in Wolfeboro, a brass plaque
identifies this as the former home of Sir John Wentworth. The plaque,
in French and English, notes apologetically that Government House "was
built to satisfy his own sense of propriety and that of his glamorous
wife."
Things did not end well for the Wentworths. Bored with life in
Canada, Frances initiated their return to London where the governor’s
pension, small by their standards, offered little in the way of luxury.
As their debts rose, to avoid prison, John fled first to Liverpool,
then to Halifax under the assumed name of John Wallace. Frances, by now
very ill and medicated with opium, was not told of his departure. John
was able to sell off some Halifax properties to pay their debts, but
Frances died during his absence in 1813. Aging and ill, with nowhere
left to go, John Wentworth lived out his days in Halifax where he is
buried not far from his former mansion. He died at age 84 on April 8th,
1820.
Four months later, on September 12 of that same year, the new owner
of John Wentworth’s mansion in the wilds of Wolfeboro filled the
fireplace. It was a frigid fall morning and the large fireplace was
stacked with dry unused shingles. According to a nine-year old
eyewitness, angry flames instantly roared up the chimney and flaming
shingles landed on the roof. In three hours the mansion where John
Wentworth had planned to rule the British province of New Hampshire –
like its original owner -- was gone forever.
Copyright © J. Dennis Robinson. All rights reserved. Author Sources:
"The Romance of Government House" by James Stuart Martell, Nova Scotia
Communications, 1939; "The Saga of a Palace" by Robert F.W. Meader,
Wolfeboro Historical Society, 1962; An unpublished manuscript history
of the Mark H. Wentworth Home by Gerald D. Foss, 1984.