OLDEST and LARGEST Maritime Museum in Canada
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member T0SHEA
N 44° 38.870 W 063° 34.239
20T E 454749 N 4943988
Situated right on the waterfront, the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic has it all, including a World War warship and a real, working tugboat. Enter and you will be in Canada's OLDEST and LARGEST Maritime Museum.
Waymark Code: WMZNA1
Location: Nova Scotia, Canada
Date Posted: 12/06/2018
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member bluesnote
Views: 7

The Maritime Museum of the Atlantic is just one of the 28 museums spread out over the province which comprise the Nova Scotia Museum. This museum deals with the story of Halifax and the events which shaped its history, from the sinking of the Titanic to the 1717 Halifax Explosion to the evolution of sea travel and the vessels which enabled it.

Within the main building is a large and informative exhibit concerning the 1917 Halifax Harbour Explosion and another on an equally devastating disaster, the sinking of The Titanic. Other displays include the Days of Sail, the Age of Steam, Shipwreck Treasures, a Navy Gallery and a Small Craft Gallery.

Toward the wharf, in smaller buildings, are boat building shops, demonstrating the art and history of building various small watercraft, primarily fishing boats. Outside are displays of small watercraft, again primarily fishing boats. At the waterfront is the Tugboat, the Theodore and the aforementioned warship, the C.S.S. Acadia, the only warship to serve Canada in both World Wars.
Maritime Museum of the Atlantic
Canada's Oldest and Largest Maritime Museum

The Maritime Museum of the Atlantic is the oldest and largest Maritime Museum in Canada. The original concept of the Museum can be credited to a group of Royal Canadian Navy officers who envisioned a maritime museum where relics of Canada’s naval past could be conserved.

Starting with a small space at the Halifax Dockyard in 1948, the museum moved then moved to quarters in the Halifax Citadel in 1952, and became the Maritime Museum of Canada in 1957.

Floods and fires in the early 1960s caused temporary relocations to a variety of sites until 1965, when a home was found in a former bakery building at the Navy’s Victualling Depot. The Museum became the Marine History section of the Nova Scotia Museum in 1967.

The exhibits remained on Citadel Hill while the offices, library and some of the collection moved to the new Nova Scotia Museum building on Summer Street in Halifax in 1970. Through the 1970s, a long search for a permanent home ensued.

Finally, in 1982, the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic was established on the site of the Robertson & Son Ship Chandlery and A.M. Smith and Co. Properties on the Halifax Waterfront. It opened on January 22 of that year. Since then, more than 4 million people have visited the Museum.

The Museum is a valuable historical, cultural and educational institution. It is the largest site in Nova Scotia that collects and interprets various elements of Nova Scotia’s marine history. Visitors are introduced to the age of steamships, local small craft, the Royal Canadian and Merchant Navies, World War II convoys and The Battle of the Atlantic, the Halifax Explosion of 1917, and Nova Scotia’s role in the aftermath of the Titanic disaster.
From the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic
Photo goes Here Photo goes Here
Photo goes Here Photo goes Here
Photo goes Here Photo goes Here
Department Number, Category Name, and Waymark Code:
2-Buildings • Victorian Style Architecture • Art Gallery of Nova Scotia • WMZJRX
5-Entertainment • Official Local Tourism Attractions • Maritime Museum of the Atlantic • WMZJT7
6-History • Atlantic Canada Heritage Properties • Art Gallery of Nova Scotia • WMXEWJ
8-Monuments • Made for the Millennium • Boardwalk Millennium Legacy Flagpole • WMZJT2
10-Oddities • Superlatives • OLDEST and LARGEST Maritime Museum in Canada • WMZJT5
14-Technology • Wikipedia Entries • Maritime Museum of the Atlantic • WMZJT4
15-Multifarious • News Article Locations • Museum fixes wrong Africville information in Halifax Explosion exhibit • WMZJTM


Check if all of your waymarks are within a 0.1 mile?: no

Tally: 7

Reused Waymarks: no

Did you have fun while doing this waymark?: no

Visit Instructions:
If you choose to visit a Lucky 7, please include a picture of the target of your favorite Waymark in the grouping. Include yourself in the picture if possible.
Search for...
Geocaching.com Google Map
Google Maps
MapQuest
Bing Maps
Nearest Waymarks
Nearest Lucky 7
Nearest Geocaches
Create a scavenger hunt using this waymark as the center point
Recent Visits/Logs:
Date Logged Log User Rating  
petendot visited OLDEST and LARGEST Maritime Museum in Canada 12/11/2021 petendot visited it
DND.Fireman visited OLDEST and LARGEST Maritime Museum in Canada 08/09/2021 DND.Fireman visited it

View all visits/logs