Ukrainian Catholic Church of the Immaculate Conception National Historic Site of Canada
Cook's Creek, Manitoba
Exterior View
© Parks Canada / Parcs Canada
Address :
Highway 212 & Zora Road, Cook's Creek, Manitoba
Recognition Statute:
Historic Sites and Monuments Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. H-4)
Designation Date:
1997-09-22
Dates:
-
1930 to 1938
(Construction)
-
1930 to 1962
(Significant)
Event, Person, Organization:
-
Reverend Philip Ruh
(Architect)
Other Name(s):
-
Ukrainian Catholic Church of the Immaculate Conception
(Designation Name)
Research Report Number:
1996-039
Plaque(s)
Existing plaque: Highway 212 & Zora Road, Cooks Creek, Manitoba
Executed between 1930 and 1952, this building is one of the most ambitious accomplishments of Msgr. Philip Ruh, O.M.I. A prolific and imaginative builder of Ukrainian Catholic churches in Canada, he was closely associated with the church until his death in 1962. Known as a Prairie Cathedral, this multi-domed structure is large in scale, and architecturally complex. The design features dramatic exterior and interior painted surfaces. Rising out of the flat prairie, its silhouette evokes the great Byzantine churches of Ukraine.
Description of Historic Place
The Ukrainian Catholic Church of the Immaculate Conception National Historic Site of Canada stands at a crossroads in rural Cook’s Creek, Manitoba. Its substantial size and many-domed profile create a distinctive silhouette on the flat landscape of the surrounding prairie. It is a relatively unsophisticated Kievan-style Ukrainian church that features complex Byzantine massing, Depression-era materials and a folk-type handling of details. The designated place is the single, legally-defined property at the time of designation.
Heritage Value
The Ukrainian Catholic Church of the Immaculate Conception was designated a national historic site of Canada in 1996 because: it is one of the most ambitious and accomplished buildings designed by the Reverend Philip Ruh, a prolific and imaginative designer of early Ukrainian Catholic churches in Canada; the church itself, a "Prairie Cathedral" built in the multi-domed Kievan style, is remarkable for its size, the complexity of its massing, and its delightfully painted interior and exterior surfaces.
The heritage value of the Ukrainian Catholic Church of the Immaculate Conception National Historic Site of Canada lies in its illustration of the architectural work of Reverend Philip Ruh and its representation of Ukrainian-Canadian religious architecture on the Prairies. From 1930 to 1962, Cook’s Creek was the home parish of Reverend Philip Ruh (1883-1962) who was responsible for designing 33 other Ukrainian church buildings in Canada, several of them in Manitoba.
The church, one of Ruh’s most adventurous designs, is endowed with nine domes or dome-like structures, a multiplicity of stepped masses, and accommodating side aisles and chapels in keeping with the style of the multi-domed Kievan churches that served as inspiration. The warm golden tones of the exterior walls simulate Tyndall limestone, and are accentuated with rows of red and green stars at the lower cornice levels and around the arched doorways. Inside, solid-colour areas create drama in their juxtapositions of burnt oranges, periwinkle blues, yellow ochres, and dark greens, while boldly painted bands of marbling highlight distinct architectural components, such as vault ribs and the edges of pilasters, lending the building a charming vernacular quality.
Source: Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada, Minutes, 1996.
Character-Defining Elements
Key elements that contribute to the heritage value of this site include: its location at a rural crossroads in a historic Ukrainian settlement area of Manitoba; its siting, set back from the road and raised on a high foundation; its complex Byzantine massing, nine-domed Kiev-inspired design with bell-tower and nave expressed on the exterior by the central, projecting frontispiece; its classically inspired exterior decoration with arcading, round-headed windows and columned entry porch; its reinforced concrete construction technology; its vernacular, twentieth-century New World interpretations of traditional Ukrainian finishes such as the textures, surfaces and composition of its original construction materials concrete-stucco as an exterior finish, concrete as decorative material, reinforced concrete as a floor and foundation medium, and interior detailing including cement and concrete stucco for interior wall surfacing, fibreboard for the interior arches of the ceiling, interlocking Bruno tile blocks as a wall material, and religious art painted by local artists; its generous well-landscaped site with grotto and separated from the road by formal fencing; the associated cemetery marking the graves of Ruh and others involved in the construction; its continued use as a community church.