Artefact of the Week 2021 - 15. Half Ship Models

Artefact of the Week 2021 - 15. Half Ship Models

These half-model ships were used at the Bennett Shipyard in Hopewell Cape for ships built between 1860 and 1918. Included here are the ship models for brigantine ‘PJ Nevius’ (1860), and schooners ‘Vincent A White’ and ‘Meredith A White’ (1918), as well as barquentine Royal Harrie (1872), which was built at the neighbouring John Leander Pye Shipyard.

Artefact of the Week 2021 - 14. Moustache Cup

Artefact of the Week 2021 - 14. Moustache Cup

The moustache cup is a tea cup designed to include a small ledge on the inside of the cup. It was used to protect, of course, one’s moustache from the heat and moisture of the tea. A small opening between the ledge and the cup allowed for liquids to pass through, but not touch the pampered moustaches of the time.

Mystery Artefact 2021 - April

Mystery Artefact 2021 - April

Do you know what this is was for?

Throughout 2021, we will have a special mystery Artefact of the Week each month. These are artefacts in our collection with more unusual, outdated, or hard-to-guess purposes. See if you can guess what the item is before it’s revealed!

Artefact of the Week 2021 - 13. Photo of I.O.D.E at Albert County Museum

Artefact of the Week 2021 - 13. Photo of I.O.D.E at Albert County Museum

As part of the the Mildred Bennett Chapter’s (IODE) centennial project, a flag pole, a Canadian flag, and a plaque were presented to the Albert County Museum, as seen in the photo. Shown left in the photo to the right are Mrs. Borden Steeves and Mrs. George MacIntyre, both member of the committee working on the project, Borden Steeves, president of the Albert County Historical Society, and Mrs. I.M. McQuinn, regent of the Mildred Bennett Chapter I.O.D.E.

GOOD NEWS! MAJOR REPAIRS TO SAWMILL CREEK COVERED BRIDGE!

GOOD NEWS!  MAJOR REPAIRS TO SAWMILL CREEK COVERED BRIDGE!

Post by Dawne McLean, President, Albert County Historical Society. Everyone in our community is extremely pleased to see the scaffolding around the Sawmill Creek covered bridge, which means that major repairs are going to be done to preserve our covered bridge for years to come! No one is more pleased than I am!

Artefact of the Week 2021 - 11. Flow Blue Transferware

Artefact of the Week 2021 - 11. Flow Blue Transferware

This style of antique china is called Flow Blue due to the fact that the designs applied in blue would blur slightly when the pieces were fired in the kiln. The vintage dish ware was most popular during the Victorian era and has experienced several surges of renewed popularity in the past 45 years.

Artefact of the Week 2021 - 10. Gaol Graffiti

Artefact of the Week 2021 - 10. Gaol Graffiti

The now exposed walls reveal names of those who had been incarcerated, digits marking time, and dates as early as 1871. There are poems and comments on prisoners’ plights: “George Riley in for kissing a girl in September 1902 and walked out soon afterwards,” as well as a life-size sketch of a handle-bar moustached gentleman with devil horns, thought to be a sheriff of the time.

Mystery Artefact 2021 - March

Mystery Artefact 2021 - March

Do you know what this is was for?

Throughout 2021, we will have a special mystery Artefact of the Week each month. These are artefacts in our collection with more unusual, outdated, or hard-to-guess purposes. See if you can guess what the item is before it’s revealed!

Artefact of the Week 2021 - 09. Prosthesis

Artefact of the Week 2021 - 09. Prosthesis

This prosthetic belonged to John Benjamin Weir. Mr. Weir’s leg was shot in the knee when he was 13 years old and a year later he had to have it amputated. John arranged with a blacksmith to make the frame, while John padded it, carved the leg, and attached the leather strap himself.

Artefact of the Week 2021 - 08. Throat & Nasal Atomizer

Artefact of the Week 2021 - 08. Throat & Nasal Atomizer

An atomizer is a device that allows for the application of a medication in a spray of tiny droplets. They would be used to dissolve cocaine in an oil base as an anesthetic to both numb and coat the nasal cavity and throat, which was a common treatment in the late 19th century.