Halifax museums July 2nd

 This morning we awoke to a torrential downpour but it had cleared by 10 am. The first stop was the Maritime Museum. There is so much maritime history in Halifax. Firstly the harbour’s development throughout at least four wars including the war of 1812 between the British and the Americans. Cunard originated here. The Titanic survivors arrived there in 1912. There was the 1917 Halifax harbour explosion. It was the harbour from where convoy’s set out in WWII. Several small boat sailors like Joshua Slocum came from Nova Scotia. Halifax was a major immigrant screening centre from about 1928 to 1971. It has been one of the two naval bases for the Canadian Navy (the other being Esquimalt in Victoria). 


 












It was a half hour walk from the Maritime Museum to pier 21 the immigrant museum. However we were able to stop for lunch at another very nice fish restauraunt. The Halifax waterfront is a great promenade and  tourist attraction.










In the evening our friend Jill from Victoria came to meet us and we went out together for dinner to a pub in a house built in 1896 that had survived the Halifax explosion of 1917.






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