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Halifax has the longest wooden waterfront boardwalk in North America. A stroll along it is recommended to view both the city and our harbour life. Halfway down the boardwalk from the Farmers Market you will find the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic.
The Maritime Museum of the Atlantic will take you back in time to the sinking of the Titanic, and holds the largest collection of wooden artefacts from the ship. It also highlights Nova Scotia’s maritime heritage, including a depiction of the Halifax explosion which tore the city apart in 1917.
Halifax has the longest wooden waterfront boardwalk in North America. A stroll along it is recommended to view both the city and our harbour life. Halfway down the boardwalk from the Farmers Market you will find the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic.
The Maritime Museum of the Atlantic will take you back in time to the sinking of the Titanic, and holds the largest collection of wooden artefacts from the ship. It also highlights Nova Scotia’s maritime heritage, including a depiction of the Halifax explosion which tore the city apart in 1917.
Halifax has the longest wooden waterfront boardwalk in North America. A stroll along it is recommended to view both the city and our harbour life. Halfway down the boardwalk from the Farmers Market you will find the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic.
The Maritime Museum of the Atlantic will take you back in time to the sinking of the Titanic, and holds the largest collection of wooden artefacts from the ship. It also highlights Nova Scotia’s maritime heritage, including a depiction of the Halifax explosion which tore the city apart in 1917.
I went there once in college. I recall a casino and a really cool old-school pub where there was an acoustic band playing the scottish-influenced folk music of the region (sounded a lot like bluegrass, which also has its roots in scotland / ireland). I'd check those places out but not sure what they're called.
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