The Town of Torbay is issuing a request for proposals (RFP) to identify qualified consulting firms to examine and present recommendations on the future of the Torbay municipal museum.
The Town seeks a firm with specific past experience in the research, preparation and delivery of reports for municipal museums, and cultural or heritage focused organizations.
Copies of the RFP and all inquiries relating to it, can be requested from the Town by emailing bparsons@torbay.ca.
Contract award is dependent on government funding approval.
Proposals will be accepted up until 12:00pm (NST) Friday September 30, 2016 and must be mailed in marked “Attn: Municipal Museum Plan & Heritage Evaluation” to the following address:
Town of Torbay
1288 Torbay Road
PO Box 1160
Torbay, NL
A1K 1K4
Friday, September 2, 2016
Thursday, September 1, 2016
Living Heritage Podcast Ep051 Archiving the Arts
Colleen Quigley holds a Masters degree specializing in Archives from University of Toronto and is Acting Head of Archives and Special Collections at Memorial Libraries. Her primary responsibilities include managing the vast treasures of the division’s Performing Arts Collection, which included North America’s largest online performing arts poster collection. In addition to archival work Colleen is also a trained dancer, with a degree from York University, who performs and choreographs regularly.
On this week's episode of the Living Heritage Podcast we discuss how Colleen started working with archives, her work with ANLA and a dance think tank which moved Colleen into the archives world, her work with the Archives and Special Collections at Memorial University including their poster collection, the STAGE project, and some of Colleen’s favourite collections.
Tuesday, August 30, 2016
Wooden Boat Heritage 2016 is Looking for Youth Ambassadors!
Are you a youth? Do you enjoy heritage? Education? Working within your community?
We have the perfect opportunity for you!
The Wooden Boat Museum of Newfoundland and Labrador is hosting Wooden Boat Heritage 2016 from October 4th-6th in St. John's and Petty Harbour, and we're looking for volunteers! You'll be Team Leaders during the Heritage Skills Challenge, moderators during brainstorming sessions and, of course, active participants throughout the whole conference. We want your voices to be part of the conversation!
We are looking for people who can commit to both Wednesday, October 5th, and Thursday, October 6th, and who are available for the full day. Volunteers will have free registration to the conference.
If you're interested, please click here to learn more and register!
Looking forward to seeing you at this unique conference. It promises to be an exciting time!
We have the perfect opportunity for you!
The Wooden Boat Museum of Newfoundland and Labrador is hosting Wooden Boat Heritage 2016 from October 4th-6th in St. John's and Petty Harbour, and we're looking for volunteers! You'll be Team Leaders during the Heritage Skills Challenge, moderators during brainstorming sessions and, of course, active participants throughout the whole conference. We want your voices to be part of the conversation!
We are looking for people who can commit to both Wednesday, October 5th, and Thursday, October 6th, and who are available for the full day. Volunteers will have free registration to the conference.
If you're interested, please click here to learn more and register!
Looking forward to seeing you at this unique conference. It promises to be an exciting time!
Monday, August 29, 2016
The City of St. John's Volunteers: Kat de Metz
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| Kat de Metz volunteering with one of the horses |
“I think I was born into it. My grandmother Metz and Uncle Ed homesteaded in Alberta, where she was in charge of the two big draft horses. I look like her and I’m petite and strong also. I’ve never had a fear of animals, only respect.”
Kat told us all about her experiences caring for animals in B.C. She has rehabilitated family pets, livestock, and wild animals alike. Her wards have included everything from cats and dogs to horses, toads, and birds of all kinds. She told us what it was like to work with raccoons:
“They’ve got little, almost human-like hands with little opposable thumbs, and they are quite grabby! They’re very intelligent, and we had double locked entrances, because if they saw how you got in they would know how to get in and get out - they’re very smart! They would remember it and go ‘Ah, I can do that!’ Little hands, you know…”
Kat is presently working on a related novel, The Dragon of Tessier Place. It’s a story about Peter Easton, a certain dragon, and modern day domestic violence.
Friday, August 26, 2016
Commemorating Carbonear's German History

I was in Carbonear today for the unveiling of a new plaque marking the history of German settlement and industry in the town. Early in the 1950s, nine craftspeople arrived in Carbonear as part of a plan to stimulate industrial growth in rural Newfoundland. Those nine would be followed by families and workers, who opened three leather-related businesses in Carbonear. While the businesses were short-lived, they had a great impact on the town and on its people. Many of the Germans left, but some married, and stayed, and the names Reiss, Reichel, Shaefer, and Stoeterau can still be found here to this day. The plaque unveiled today commemorates that history and their contribution to Newfoundland. Congratulations to the Carbonear Heritage Society and especially to Ron Howell for their fine work.




Lassy Wall, Crackie Road, and the Unmarked Graves – Stories from Spaniard’s Bay
| Workshop participants. |
| Discussing what to put on the cards for people, places, and traditions. |
| Brandon and Dale discussing the location of a local sliding hill. |
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| The Lassy Wall in Spaniard's Bay. Photo by Cathy Kleinwort, 2005. Courtesy of the Town of Spaniard's Bay. |
| Plotting the cards on the map. |
| People, places. and traditions. |
| Reviewing the story about the Spaniard's Bay Riot in 1932. |
| Traditions practiced at the Loyal Orange Lodge. |
Thursday, August 25, 2016
Living Heritage Podcast Ep050 Skeets, b'ys, and other bits of Newfoundland folklore
Philip Hiscock has been studying Newfoundland and Labrador language and folklore for four decades. These days, he teaches Folklore at Memorial University of Newfoundland, and is the coordinator of the MA and PhD programmes in that department. We discuss Philip’s interest in dialectology, folklore, radio, and popular culture, Newfoundland folklore and language including the terms skeet and b’y, Newfoundland language and YouTube, children’s folklore, and digital folklore.
Recorded 23 June 2016
Listen on the Digital Archive:
http://collections.mun.ca/cdm/ref/collection/ich_oral/id/671
Photo of Philip Hiscock by David Press.
Tuesday, August 23, 2016
The Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, Harbour Grace, circa 1949-1951.
We have a gem of a historic photograph for Tuesday's Folklore Photo this week!
The Heritage Foundation of NL has been working with a committee in Harbour Grace to find a new life for the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception (read about that here) and it has unearthed this great photo of the building, taken sometime between 1949 and 1951.
The photo comes from Bill Brooks, and was taken by his father, William Brooks (who was at the time a Captain in the US Air Force). I asked Bill what his father had been doing in Harbour Grace, and this is his response:
I’m guessing that he played some role in decommissioning the signal intelligence facility that was located at Harbour Grace – perhaps for reinstallation at Ft McAndrews, but it’s pure speculation. He was stationed at Ft McAndrew AFB in Argentia from 1949 through 1951 (where I was born). He was a Signal Officer. From his orders: “Commanding Officer of Signal Company Aviation responsible for training, administration, supply, personnel.” Responsibilities included “supervising installation, maintenance, operation of telephone, telegraph, and radio equipment.” I don’t think he was in Harbour Grace on vacation – not to dismiss it as a cold war period USAF personnel vacation destination, but his service record shows he had 58 days of unused vacation when he concluded service in Newfoundland, so he probably wasn’t taking much time off.
If you have any old photos of the Cathedral (or a memory of Captain William Brooks) email me at ich@heritagefoundation.ca.
Monday, August 22, 2016
#CollectiveMemories Roadtrip to Humber Valley - People, Places and Traditions
| Discussing people, places, and traditions. |
| Writing on their index cards. |
| The story of Dead Man's Woods. |
| Adding stories and memories to the map. |
| Impromptu story telling around the Reidville map. |
| Discussing the future of heritage in the Humber Valley region. |
~Terra Barrett
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