full tour |
12.4Mb
3.7Mb |
Multi-node movie - high resolution
Multi-node movie - low resolution |
module 1 |
539K | Crossing the North
Atlantic
A Norse Settlement in Newfoundland
European Exploration, circa 1500
The San Juan |
module 2 |
538K | A Basque ship
Winter in Labrador
Cod Fishing |
module 3 |
539K | Whaling
Hunting Whales
Whaling Stations |
module 4 |
538K | Early Acadia
Salt-Marsh Dike
Acadian Cart, circa 1750 |
module 5 |
520K | Farm Life
The farmhouse is typical of the New France era. Inside, there were
normally one or two rooms, divided by a central fireplace used for cooking
and heating. |
module 6 |
520K | The Town Gate
Gates to fortified towns in New France (circa 1750) displayed the royal
coat of arms. |
module 7 |
520K | Fortified Walls
As you enter the Place de la Nouvelle-France town square, you pass through
the fortified wall that protected urban dwellers from enemy attack. |
module 8 |
539K | Place de la
Nouvelle-France
New France Towns
Buildings |
module 9 |
539K | Inside the Inn
The inn’s modest size meant that guests slept on the floor. Food was
cooked in the fireplace. For entertainment, guests enjoyed games such as
nine-pin bowling, checkers and chess. |
module 10 |
539K | Inside the
Shoemaker’s House
In rather cramped quarters, the shoemaker housed and fed his family, and
made and repaired shoes and leather goods. |
module 11 |
538K | The New France Convent
The Hospital
The Chapel Bell |
module 12 |
538K | Inside the
Hospital
Nuns provided daily medical assistance to all members of the community,
including long-term care for the chronically and mentally ill. |
module 13 |
538K | The Fur Trade
A Voyageur Camp
Trade Goods |
module 14 |
539K 539K |
The Métis View A View B
Using horses, oxen, and Red River carts, the Métis achieved great
mobility in the Canadian West. At large campsites they gathered to
butcher the meat and prepare the hides following the buffalo hunt. Several
days were spent processing the meat into pemmican. |
module 15 |
539K | The Timber
Trade
In the early nineteenth century, a new industry emerged in the forests of
eastern and central Canada. The camboose shanty is typical of those found
in Ottawa Valley lumber camps. By mid-century, sawmills were producing
more and more milled lumber, needed for shipbuilding, for urban
development, and for the production of paper. |
module 16 |
539K | The Loyalists
Loyalist Settlement
Defence |
module 17 |
539K | The British Military
Following the 1763 conquest, the influential British military establishment
occupied a prominent place in many Canadian urban centres. The military
was responsible for defence, maintenance of civil order, surveying, map
making, road construction, and other tasks. |
module 18 |
539K | Maritime Trade
Canadian ships were involved in transatlantic trade, carrying domestic
goods such as lumber, fish, agricultural products, tobacco, and
manufactured goods, as well as American cotton. Between 1850 and 1870,
the Canadian merchant sailing fleet grew to be the fourth largest in the
world. |
module 19 |
539K | Shipbuilding
The shipbuilding industry has been active on the east coast since the
early days of settlement. With improved technology and the increased
importance of maritime trade, the production of bigger and faster ships
began. The ship under construction is a tern schooner, the type built in
Nova Scotia in the 1870s and 1880s. |
module 20 |
539K 532K |
Ontario Town Life View A View B
An Ontario Street
Shops
The Merchant's House
The Railway Station |
module 21 |
539K | Inside the Merchant's
House
The Drawing Room
The Dining Room |
object movie (module 21) |
1.14Mb 340K |
Tea Service (Merchant's House) large version small version The entertaining of guests at afternoon teas and dinner parties, served on fine chinaware, was of vital importance to a family’s image. |
Text: Nancy Ruddell
Photography: Harry Foster
Quicktime VR Production: Romy Randev
Web page production: Stephen Alsford