If These Walls Could Talk

The sisterhood of the dazzling porch

Illustration of the house at 283 Albert St.

Illustration by Wendy Treverton

In the fall of 2016, eight first-year students on the fourth floor of McNeill House decided they simply had to live together for rest of their time at Queen鈥檚. Except for two from Carleton Place and two from Aurora, the young women had known each other for less than two months.

鈥淲e didn鈥檛 know how to split,鈥 says Katelyn Hochgeschurz (PHE鈥20). 鈥淭here weren鈥檛 two different cliques鈥 We were all just so close together as a group.鈥

Their parents were dismayed.

鈥淲e had everybody yelling at us not to do it, that we couldn鈥檛 survive with eight people in the house,鈥 says Cassidy Van Stiphout (Artsci鈥20).

More to the point, University District houses with eight unoccupied bedrooms were rare. Yet, by early November, they had signed a lease on 283 Frontenac St. just north of campus, a century-old, seven-bedroom house that the landlord offered to renovate. There 鈥渨as one big room鈥 He put a wall up and it was then an eight-person house,鈥 says Emily Elliott (Artsci鈥20, Ed鈥21).

As it turned out, the bedrooms were incidental to the real charm of the house: the front porch. Running the length of the house, the porch had a roof supported by jack posts, and its floor had seen better days. The roommates loved it.

鈥淢orning coffees on the porch, that was key to starting off the day,鈥 says Ms. Van Stiphout. 鈥淚f you were home and able to be on the porch, you were.鈥

鈥淲e would stretch the season, too,鈥 says Ryley McAndrew (Com鈥20). 鈥淲e were out there in October, early November, when it was not warm enough to be outside.鈥

They were back out on the porch by March, says Mackenzie Kaleta (Artsci鈥20). 鈥淎s long as the sun was shining, I was out there.鈥

The porch became the social hub of the neighbourhood, says Sarah McGee (Artsci鈥20). 鈥淭here was always someone walking by that we knew who would stop and chat.鈥

During Homecoming and St. Paddy鈥檚 Day, 鈥渨e used to rent massive speakers and鈥 put them on the porch,鈥 says Gillian Baker (Artsci鈥20).

Outside, there was the porch. Inside there was the mural. It took up a whole wall in the living room, and was designed by committee and rendered by Ms. Baker. 鈥淲e made such a home of 283 that we wanted to leave our mark there.鈥 Painted entirely in Queen鈥檚 tricolour, it includes stylized silhouettes of the roomies.

Erica Lewick (Artsci鈥20, Ed鈥21) still lives in Kingston and reports the new tenants of the house love the mural, and have added to it.

Ms. Hochgeschurz says 283 Frontenac鈥檚 other touchstone was in the kitchen.

鈥淲e had a horseshoe-shaped counter and it had just enough room for all eight of us to be up there dancing.鈥

Dancing on the counter was pretty much an everyday event. 鈥淲e would have plans some nights to go see friends but we would get so carried away with having fun, we wouldn鈥檛 make it out of the house,鈥 says Ms. Van Stiphout.

COVID-cancelled classes broke up the group in spring 2020, and now its members are spread across Eastern Ontario and around Toronto. Ms. Lewick and Ms. Elliott will soon leave for work in London, England, and Saint Maarten, West Indies, respectively. But all eight chat online every night, says Ms. Baker.

It鈥檚 gone beyond mere friendship, the women agree. You might call it the Sisterhood of the Dazzling Porch, founded in residence and perfected at 283 Frontenac.

鈥淲e really are sisters and that鈥檚 how sisters work,鈥 says Ms. Van Stiphout. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e going to get in little kerfuffles, but at the end of day we all love each other. That鈥檚 undeniable.鈥

Tell us about the University District house you lived in and the memories you made.

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