Saturday, September 4, 2010

City of Halifax, Nova Scotia






After my recent trip, I was planning to post at least three entries detailing what I had learned on my informative tour. But I have made an executive decision ( I'm all alone here, so I am the executive and I am allowed to make all the decisions.) My decision is to leave it alone for now.
I am overwhelmed with some pretty interesting computer challenges at the moment, and something had to give. I may get back to it later, because I am obsessed with all things Halifax at the moment and doing lots of reading . I will cite good books when I do post.
Meanwhile, if you want to read a really interesting fiction book about the Explosion in Halifax Harbour in 1917, go to the library and get "Burden of Desire" by Robert McNeill of the original McNeill/Lehrer hour. He is from that area and it is very authentic and compelling reading
Halifax is across the harbor from the town of Dartmouth . The harbor itself consists of Bedford Bay, at the nw end, the Narrows and the main area, leading out to the sea. In some ways , from a visual point of view, it reminds me of Sarasota Bay. For those familiar with this area, imagine that , once you reach the shore of Sarasota, there is a large harborfront where City island is now located and that the city streets begin to rise uphill immediately.
The same is true on the other side, making it a sort of valley with the harbor in between.
(that would be Longboat Key with the same hills.) In another way, it reminds me of Seattle, the way the town immediately slopes up steeply and houses are all on a hilly street.
So, I came away with some not very explicit photos and a great curiosity about life in this fishing and shipping port and it's significance to Canada, the U.S., and the role it played in World War II.
My words do not do it justice and until I know more about it, I will hold comment.
My photos were taken at the Citadel, atop the hill overlooking the harbor.

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Fort Louisbourg, Nova Scotia





Canada certainly has an interesting history! Since I can’t even remember all I learned about American History, it has taken me several weeks to make sense of the Maritime Provinces and their beginnings.


Canada was officially made a country in 1867. But it was not until 1982 that The Canada Act severed all constitutional and legislative ties with the UK. Can you believe that? Just 28 years ago!


In 2009, the population of Nova Scotia was 940,000. Almost 80 percent of Nova Scotia's population trace their ancestry either wholly or partly to the British Isles. French origin ranks second: 16.7 percent of residents have some French ancestry. The next largest groups by ancestry are German and Dutch. Residents of Nova Scotia are also of Polish, Italian, Chinese, and Lebanese descent. Over 6,400 residents of the province have African origins. About 28,560 residents have Amerindian origins, and primarily belong to the Micmac Nation.

Up there they are referred to as “First Nations people”.


So, it was difficult for me to unravel the tangled history of the Fortress at Louisbourg on the eastern shore of N.S. In 1713, mainland Nova Scotia was ceded to the British, and the French build the fortress on Cape Breton Island. In 1745, the fort was captured by a force from Maine. Later it was destroyed by the British and it was left in rubble. Because it was on a sheltered body of water it lay undisturbed for many years.






The government of Canada has now restored this fort in Nova Scotia,, to the state as it would have been in 1744. Thanks to documented inventories of the fort, archaeologists and historians were able to reconstruct the fort and outer buildings using much of the original materials into a condition that impresses one as being 'authentic.'


It’s good location offered ready access to fishing and links to colonies in the FrenchWest Indies, North America and France, so the settlement became a thriving town and seaport. It became one of the most significant fishing and commercial ports in North America

The fortress of Louisbourg became a National Historic Site in 1928. In 1961, Parks Canada began reconstruction of approximately 25 percent of the fortified town.


While we toured the fort, we were amused and intrigued by the ‘people of the village.” They were local residents, of course , and a fair number of college kids working there on summer vacation. Each person is given a role to play and they are trained in the habits, customs and events of the time. All that we encountered were excellent in answering our questions about what life was like for the soldiers inside the fort and for the townspeople who manned the taverns, bakery, blacksmith shop, and finer homes for the officers’ families. These are some of the photos I took which gives you a glimpse into the reinactment.


As we looked out over the harbor, we tried to imagine what it would be like at the end of a cold winter, when the ice melted and one kept a constant lookout for ships ,arriving with long awaited supplies from England or France..