Nova Scotia Museum of Industry
Established | 1986 |
---|---|
Location | 147 North Foord Street, Stellarton, Nova Scotia |
Type | Industry museum |
Director | Debra McNabb[1] |
Curator | Erika Smith (Collections) Andrew Phillips (Education and Public Programming)[1] |
Website | museumofindustry.novascotia.ca |
The Nova Scotia Museum of Industry is a provincial museum located in Stellarton, Nova Scotia, dedicated to the story of Nova Scotia work and workers.[2] Part of the Nova Scotia Museum system, the museum aims to explain how Nova Scotia was affected by the opportunities and challenges of the Industrial Age.
The museum began with a series of studies on ways to preserve Nova Scotia's industrial heritage beginning in 1974. A curator was hired and the collection was started in 1986. Construction began in 1990 and the museum opened to the public in 1995.[3] The museum occupies a site beside the Trans Canada Highway which includes some of the oldest industrial sites in Nova Scotia including the Foord Pit, once the deepest coal mine in the world and the Albion Railway, the first passenger and freight railway in Canada.
The collection comprises 30,000 objects. Notable artifacts include the Albion Railway's Samson locomotive, the oldest railway locomotive in Canada and the Victorian, a horseless carriage, the first gasoline powered car built in the Maritimes. The museum has extensive hands on galleries that explore the evolution of industry and work in Nova Scotia. Highlights include a large exhibit on coal mining in Nova Scotia including a special display on the Westray Mine disaster which took place near the museum in 1992.
External links
References
- ^ a b "Staff". Nova Scotia Museum of Industry. Retrieved 2017-06-19.
- ^ "Home". Nova Scotia Museum of Industry. Retrieved 2017-06-19.
- ^ ""History", Nova Scotia Museum of Industry web site". Archived from the original on 2013-10-04. Retrieved 2013-10-04.
45°34′06.6″N 62°39′35.8″W / 45.568500°N 62.659944°W