Sister Sarah, Joey, Gord and I spent time today at the
Maritime Museum of the Atlantic on Upper Water Street.
It is the oldest and largest maritime museum in Canada with a collection of over 30,000 artifacts including 70 small craft. Public galleries include the Days of Sail, the Age of Steam, Small Craft, the Canadian Navy, the Halifax Explosion and Shipwrecks. It is an interesting museum to check out and admittance is more than reasonable at about $5.
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Merlin |
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Sambro Lighthouse Lens |
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Sambro Lighthouse Lens |
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Sambro Lighthouse Electric Beacon |
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Mark IX 21-inch Whitehead Torpedo, used during
and after WWII |
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The Dockyard Bell from the mid-1700s |
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The Dockyard Bell from the mid-1700s |
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Joey and Sister Sarah |
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HMS Imaum figurehead |
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HMS Imaum figurehead |
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Gord with the Hotchkiss Gun |
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William Edward Hall (1827 – 1904) was the first
African-American person, first Nova Scotian
and third Canadian to receive the Victoria Cross |
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The Halifax Explosion exhibit was interesting and timely |
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In 1917, Richard Mason had ordered a tombstone for
three of his children who had died 29 years earlier.
He and all the members of his family died in the
Halifax Explosion. The tombstone was found in 1973. |
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Goose Boat @1900 |
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A contact mine used by the Allied navies in both
World Wars |
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The rum ration |
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Range Light, probably used as an approach light
to Yarmouth Harbour |
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Fog Bell mounted aboard lightship 14, Lurcher |
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Captain James Augustus Farquhar (1842-1930) |
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Figurehead from the ship Saint Patrick, which was
wrecked on the coast of Nova Scotia in 1841 |
There is a store where you can buy souvenirs.
There is a photo op in the lobby.
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Me, Gord, Sister Sarah and Joey |
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Me, Gord, Sister Sarah and Joey |
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