A newly added interactive exhibit is giving visitors some high-tech tools to investigate the historical context of Lower Fort Garry.
Photo: Parks Canada/Parcs Canada
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Saint Louis Forts:
Trent-Severn Waterway:
Lower Fort Garry:
Lower Fort Garry: Hands-on heritage
Visitors are expected to touch the exhibits at Manitoba’s Lower Fort Garry
By Nelle Oosterom
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EVERY SPRING, North America’s oldest still-standing stone
trading post comes to life. Costumed interpreters get to business
on the grounds of Lower Fort Garry National Historic
Site, bartering for furs, baking hardtack biscuits and telling
tales of voyageur life in the 1850s. Some of these actors, mostly
young university students, have recently taken to calling their
workplace “CSI Lower Fort Garry.”
While the fort may not be a crime scene (though it was once
a prison), a newly added interactive exhibit is giving visitors some
high-tech tools to investigate the historical context of this sprawling
site on the banks of the Red River north of Winnipeg.
Among other elements, the exhibit features two large tabletop
screens, known as multi-touch tables, which two or more
people can use at the same time. Grainy black-and-white
portraits of Hudson’s Bay Company officers whirl into view
at dizzying speed, along with maps of fur-trade routes and
handwritten company dispatches. The exhibits expand, contract
and spin off the screen with the light touch of a finger — the
sensitive screen takes a little getting used to.
“The idea here,” says Paul Legris, a senior interpretive planner with Parks Canada who designed the exhibit, “is that we
wanted to provide a set up for the visitor before they go onto the site.”
Built in 1830, Lower Fort Garry functioned as a trading post, depot and living quarters for Hudson’s Bay
Company employees, as well as a base of operations for British troops during the Oregon boundary dispute of
the 1840s. The first treaty in Western Canada (in which Ojibway [Saulteaux] and Swampy Cree First Nations transferred
lands that now comprise part of modern Manitoba) was signed here in 1871, and it was briefly but famously occupied by rebel
Métis leader Louis Riel. The North West Mounted Police used it as a training centre. It also served as an asylum and, later, as
a golf course and playground for the Manitoba Motor Country Club, before the federal government took it over in 1951 and
opened it as a historic site in 1963.
Open year-round, the new interactive display is housed in the
fort’s visitor reception centre, which includes a main hallway and
a gallery that show off some of the thousands of artifacts found
on Fort Garry’s grounds. Behind glass, you’ll see muskets,
chamber pots and even a small wooden bust of Riel. But unlike
typical museum exhibits, these items speak for themselves —
they are not accompanied by distracting text. “You tend to lose
people’s attention when there is too much writing next to the
artifact,” says Legris.
To learn more, you touch an image of the artifact on a flat
screen located above the display and delve into the details. For
instance, poking a picture of a musket brings up the information
that it was built especially for the Hudson’s Bay Company in 1870 and that its short barrel enabled Métis hunters to shoot
bison from atop a galloping horse.
Touch other parts of the screen and short bilingual videos
bring daily life of the fort’s past into focus — a burly blacksmith
swelters at his forge, a maid leans against a doorway watching
a rainstorm.
The displays are arranged along a wide entranceway that
leads to the reception desk and opens into a large room devoted
to transportation. The latter features a stunning, larger-than-life
metal sculpture of men labouring to pull a York boat over
a portage. Created by artist Sharon Johnson and based on a
photograph taken in the 1870s, the men seem about to burst out
of their back-breaking scene and tumble into the visitors’ area.
“People love it,” says Ken Green, the site’s visitor experience
manager. “When people see it, they do something very un-
Canadian and reach out and touch it. It’s very tactile.”
The large sculptural installations, along with the high-tech
interactive displays, are new for Parks Canada. What has been
done at Lower Fort Garry will eventually show up at other
national historic sites in Canada, says Legris.
Nelle Oosterom is the associate editor of Canada’s History magazine
(formerly The Beaver), which is based in Winnipeg.
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| Comments on this article | Leave a comment | Is not Fort Prince of Wales considered a trading post? It is surely older than Lower Fort Garry. Also - Riel occupied Upper Fort Garry during the Red River Rebellion - did he occupy the lower fort as well?
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