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Storied Places | Lieux Enchanteurs What do you think are the best national historic sites in Canada? | Quel est selon vous le lieu historique national canadien le plus enchanteur?
Travel | Voyages > Storied Places | Lieux Enchanteurs > Lower Fort Garry Modes d'affichage:  
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TJ - 2011-01-13 14:18:26
   
Lower Fort Garry
Lower Fort Garry is one of my favourite places to take visitors. The wide open spaces are breath-taking, but even more so for people from crowded places like Europe and Asia.

You can wander the grounds and listen to costumed interpreters re-enact the lives of company clerks, York boatmen, native trappers, and the more genteel people of Red River society.

They teach historic skills, such as baking bannock and you can hang out with the blacksmith. (I still have a picture of me with my school field trip buddy, circa 1978, making candles with the candlemaker.)

Looks like 2011 will be a busy year for LFG with tea parties, school programming and family days. I heard kids can sign on for a day as an HBC worker. There will also be Treaty 1 commemoration days happening in early August.
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noosterom - 2011-01-21 14:35:24
   
RE:Lower Fort Garry
LFG also has had a nice upgrade to its interpretive centre, which is open year round. There are great interactive touch screens that kids will enjoy.

I personally like the very cool metal sculptures by artist Sharon Johnson -- there's one outside of a York Boat that is stunning. And inside the centre is a giant wall-sized metal relief of men straining to pull a cart over a portage. They look like they are going to jump out of the sculpture and into your face!

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Patrick_Adams - 2011-01-25 15:36:18
   
RE:Lower Fort Garry
I visited Lower Fort Garry many years ago with my future father-in-law. He's a retired teacher of Canadian history and was in his element. I remember him explaining to me why the dust on the trail meant the red river carts had to be built entirely of wood. Just when I was feeling like one of his pupils, he introduced me to one of his former students who was working there. I was impressed by her knowledge and by the way in which my father-in-law-to-be was happy for the role of teacher and student to be reversed. I proposed to his daughter that summer.

We're a family of four now, but we'll make a point of visiting Lower Fort Garry next time were in the 'Peg. Hopefully this summer.

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entropy33 - 2011-01-26 16:55:34
   
RE:Lower Fort Garry
I have the pleasure to be one of those interpreters who works at LFG. I can honestly say that these have been some of the best years of my life.

Interacting with visitors is always unique - each person comes for their own reason, is fascinated by a different item, person, or event, and each visitor finds something special to remember about the Fort.

The breadth of things you can do, eat, touch or watch is quite unique to a historic site. I was shocked when I was hired on at LFG and they started to show us the ropes... "get a visitor to do this!" was a common suggestion. It baffled me that people could actually touch a great majority of the site. Of course, there are resources there that can't be handled, but it is definitely unique that we encourage people to become hands-on with what we do.

If anyone reads this thread and decides to come to the Fort, plan to spend a good chunk of your day there. You'll be shocked at how much time you can spend just talking to one of the dozens of animators (those of us in a character). If you are planning to come by, make sure you post in here!

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HollyAdams01 - 2011-01-27 00:45:19
   
RE:Lower Fort Garry
My mother was the first of her family to be born in Canada. Her grandparents, aunts and uncles all lived in England. Christmas cards and letters were sent to her parents rather than to her. It wasn't until she was in her 20s, married several years and expecting me, that she met her maternal grandfather for the first time. They visited Lower Fort Garry with all the family then in Canada.

My great-grandfather had started his life in rural Essex, but instead of following his father into the pub trade, he headed for London and the railyards of the East End, becoming a blacksmith in the early 20th century. As a husband and father of small children, and as someone who provided a necessary trade, he was exempted from service during the First World War. He was at the same forge in the railyards from the late Edwardian period right up until it closed in the 1960s and he retired.

The crowd of Canadian relatives moved through Lower Fort Garry and it wasn't until sometime later that one of them did a quick headcount and discovered that their English connection had disappeared. He was found in the forge, having taken over from the animator, demonstrating to other visitors how everything worked and sharing his tales of life in the East End during the Blitz. My mom said it was fascinating, both to see him at work and to hear his stories. It was the only time they ever met and she's certain that she would never have learned so much about him if they had spent the day at home.

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