CitadelOne of Halifax's military history heritage sites, the citadel was built between 1828 and 1856 and is regarded as a fine example of a bastioned fort of the 'smooth bore' era. It is built in a star-shaped design and features vaulted rooms, a dry defensive ditch, a musketry gallery and offers an inspiring view of Halifax and its harbor from the ramparts. Visitors can watch an audio-visual presentation about the defenses of Halifax, and visit the soldiers' library, barrack rooms, powder magazine and garrison cell. The site also has exhibits about communications and the engineering
and construction of the citadel. Guides at the site wear the uniform of soldiers of the Royal Artillery and the 78th Highlanders of 1869 and conduct tours in English and French.
Address: Citadel Hill
Phone Number: (902) 426 5080
Email Address: halifax.citadel @pc.gc.ca
Hours: Daily 9am to 5pm (7 May to 30 June, September, October); 9am to 6pm (July to August). From November to 7 May only the grounds are open
Admission: Peak season: C$10 (adults), C$5 (children); Shoulder season: C$6.50 (adults), C$3.25 (children). Other concessions available
Memory Lane Heritage VillageThis site in Clam Harbour Road, Lake Charlotte is community owned and operated and features 13 rescued and restored buildings that illustrate rural village life in Nova Scotia in the 1940s. The buildings include a general store, a one-room schoolhouse, church, homestead, barn, icehouse, workshop, goldmining complex, boatshop, fisherman's store, garage and cookhouse. Local people demonstrate traditional skills like rug hooking for visitors, and the cookhouse offers typical 1940s cookhouse meals.
Address: Lake Charlotte
Phone Number: (902) 845 1937
Email Address: memorylane@ns.sympatico.ca
Website: www.heritagevillage.ca
Hours: Daily 11am to 4pm (15 June to 15 September only)
Admission: $6 (adults), $4 (children); other concessions available
Maritime Museum of the AtlanticThis museum has one of Canada's finest collections of both ship models and ship portraits, the world's largest collection of wooden artifacts from the Titanic, some rare and beautiful examples of unique Nova Scotian boatbuilding traditions in its small craft collection, and a collection of about 24,000 marine photographs, some dating from the 19th century. The collections span days of sail, shipwreck treasures, naval World War II convoys, the age of steam and the opportunity to explore the 1913-built ship, CSS Acadia, at the dockside. The Museum also has a large collection of genealogical resources, including journals, diaries, ship's logs, shipping registers and a library containing more than 5,000 books relating to shipping.
Address: 1675 Lower Water Street
Phone Number: (902) 424 7490
Website: museum.gov.ns.ca/mma
Hours: May to October: Monday and Wednesday to Sunday 9.30am to 5.30pm (in May and October open from 1pm on Sundays); Tuesday 9.30am to 8pm. November to April: Tuesday 9.30am to 8pm; Wednesday to Saturday 9.30am to 5pm; Sunday 1pm to 5pm
Admission: November to April: C$4.75 (adults), C$2.75 (children); May to October: C$8.75 (adults), C$4.75 (children); other concessions available
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Word Travels is a comprehensive travel guide covering hundreds of cities and holiday resorts in more than 125 countries.