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Explore150: Go Canada!

What place in Canada most defines you as a Canadian? Vote while you’re here, then follow us @Explore150 to join the discussion and show us on Instagram #Explore150!

Through this participatory process, you will identify and vote for your favourite natural, historic, and cultural sites across each province and territory, ultimately choosing the Canadian places and milestones we highlight in our Explore150 mobile app – to be launched November 1st! Stay tuned for updates on the project.

Do you have questions, comments or want to get involved? Get in touch through Explore150@takingitglobal.org

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14 results found

  1. Seal Cove Smoked Herring Stands

    54 wooden buildings surrounding a cove bounded by breakwaters; a cultural landscape once typical of the Maritimes, but increasingly rare today, and evocative of the Atlantic herring fishery

    10 votes
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  2. Fort La Tour

    An archaeological site containing the remains of a 17th-century fortified fur-trading post established by Charles de Saint-ƒtienne de la Tour; one of the earliest centres of the French fur trade with the Aboriginal peoples in the region

    5 votes
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  3. Saint John City Market

    The Saint John City Market is the oldest continuing farmer's market in Canada, with a charter dating from 1785. Located in Saint John, New Brunswick and completed in 1876, the current market building has a unique roof structure that resembles an inverted ship's keel. Made of wooden trusses, the structure was reportedly built by unemployed ship carpenters of the day. Also, the floor slopes with the natural grade of the land. The architecture is in the Second Empire style. Some of the businesses in the market have been operating continuously there for more than 100 years. Facing onto Kings Square,…

    2 votes
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  4. Imperial Theatre, Saint John

    The Imperial Theatre, in Saint John, New Brunswick, was designed by Philadelphia architect Albert Westover and built in 1912 by the Imperial Theatre by the Keith-Albee-Orpheum Corporation vaudeville chain of New York City and their Canadian subsidiary, the Saint John Amusements Company Ltd. It opened to the public on September 19, 1913. One of Canada's first comedy troupes, The Dumbbells staged several of their first shows there. Many early stars of silent film had their films played in the Imperial, such as Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, Fatty Arbuckle, Greta Garbo, and Harold Lloyd. The theatre was designed as a modern…

    1 vote
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  5. St. Andrews Blockhouse

    The blockhouse was built as a coastal defense structure in the War of 1812 between the United States and the British Empire, but never saw action. Twelve similar structures were built, and only the St. Andrews blockhouse still stands. It was repaired in the 1990s following a fire. Guided tours are conducted during tourist season.

    0 votes
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    0 comments  ·  New Brunswick  ·  Admin →
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  6. Carleton Martello Tower

    A martello tower located across the harbour from downtown Saint John, built to protect the city from an American land attack during the War of 1812; representative of the type of coastal defence used by the British during the Napoleonic era

    0 votes
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    0 comments  ·  New Brunswick  ·  Admin →
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  7. Old Government House

    The stone Palladian-style official residence of the Lieutenant Governor; the location of a historic 1866 meeting between Governor Arthur Gordon and Premier Albert James Smith which paved the way for the colony's entry into Confederation

    0 votes
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    0 comments  ·  New Brunswick  ·  Admin →
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  8. Free Meeting House

    The Free Meeting House was built in 1821, and is one of MonctonÕs oldest standing public buildings. It was constructed in the style of a New England Meeting House without steeple, bell or cornerstone. Its purpose was to serve as a home for all religious denominations until such time as individual groups could raise the money required to build their own churches.

    0 votes
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    0 comments  ·  New Brunswick  ·  Admin →
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  9. William Brydone Jack Observatory

    The William Brydone Jack Observatory a small wooden observatory in Fredericton, New Brunswick. Designed by William Brydone Jack and first operational in 1851, it was the first astronomical observatory built in Canada. It comprises an octagonal tower with a conical roof and a one-story rectangular wing with a gable roof.

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    0 comments  ·  New Brunswick  ·  Admin →
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  10. Boishébert

    Beaubears Island is an island at the confluence of the Northwest Miramichi and Southwest Miramichi Rivers near Miramichi, New Brunswick. The island is most famous for being the site of an Acadian refugee camp during the French and Indian War. The camp was under the command of leader of the Acadian resistance to the expulsion, Charles Deschamps de Boishébert et de Raffetot. The island is named after Pierre Beaubair, superintendent of the colony.

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    0 comments  ·  New Brunswick  ·  Admin →
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  11. Hartland Bridge

    The Hartland Bridge in Hartland, New Brunswick, is the world's longest covered bridge, at 391 metres (1,283 ft) long. It crosses the Saint John River from Hartland to Somerville, New Brunswick. The framework consists of seven small Howe Truss bridges joined together on six piers.

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    0 comments  ·  New Brunswick  ·  Admin →
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  12. Wolastoq

    Wolastoq, Saint JohnÕs River National Historic Site of Canada consists of the cultural landscape along the river extending 700 kilometres in a broad arc from its headwaters in QuŽbec and northern Maine to its mouth at Saint John Harbour, Bay of Fundy.

    0 votes
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    0 comments  ·  New Brunswick  ·  Admin →
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  13. BoishŽbert

    Beaubears Island is an island at the confluence of the Northwest Miramichi and Southwest Miramichi Rivers near Miramichi, New Brunswick. The island is most famous for being the site of an Acadian refugee camp during the French and Indian War. The camp was under the command of leader of the Acadian resistance to the expulsion, Charles Deschamps de BoishŽbert et de Raffetot. The island is named after Pierre Beaubair, superintendent of the colony.

    0 votes
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    0 comments  ·  New Brunswick  ·  Admin →
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  14. Roosevelt Campobello International Park

    Roosevelt Campobello International Park preserves the house and surrounding landscape of the Roosevelt family summer retreat. It was here in August 1921, future president Franklin D. Roosevelt was stricken with poliomyelitis at the age of 39. Franklin rarely returned but Eleanor Roosevelt loved the cool summer weather and visited many times with her small children and later she came alone in the summer. After her death the family deeded the property to the governments of the U.S. and Canada and in 1964 they created the 2,800 acre International Park. The park occupies most of the southern end of Campobello Island,…

    0 votes
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    0 comments  ·  New Brunswick  ·  Admin →
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