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Be…In This Place: Cornerstones of Atlantic Canadian Citizenship

Sarah King's presentation “Be…In This Place: Cornerstones of Atlantic Canadian Citizenship” from the Beyond 150: Telling Our Stories Twitter Conference held in August 2017. 


A Missed Opportunity: Teaching the Canadian Rebellion (1837-38)

In this article, Maxime Dagenais explores the subject of the Canadian Rebellion and how it is taught in middle and high schools in Canada.


Canadian Canoe Museum Opens New Building

At the Museums: The Canadian Canoe Museum launches into a fresh era this spring with the opening of its new building.

Reproducing Historical Objects from Canadian History

In this lesson, students will reproduce a historical object relating to the history of Canada and consider the historical significance of objects of all kinds from Canadian material culture.


Wikipedia as Outreach and Activism for Canadian History Webinar Series

In this webinar series, speakers will demonstrate why and how Wikipedia is used as a method of outreach and activism and why Canadian history on Wikipedia needs our attention.


The Irish Revolutionary who Became a Canadian Nationalist

Thomas D’Arcy McGee’s golden words helped to conjure Canada into existence — but his Irish revolutionary past came back to haunt him.

Witness: Canadian Art of the First World War

That tension is palpable in an impressive travelling exhibition from the Canadian War Museum in Ottawa.


Great War Costume Exhibition Seeks Canadian Submissions

An international costume exhibition about women who served in the First World War is looking for Canadian submissions.


From Suffragists to Superheroes: Canadian history for kids

Watch now: in this webinar presentation editor Nancy Payne and art director James Gillespie as they discuss their approach to making history come alive for kids in Kayak: Canada's History Magazine for Kids


Designing a Commemorative Coin: Historical Significance in Canadian History

In this lesson students learn to identify and evaluate historical significance by designing a commemorative coin that features a person, place, thing, or event in Canadian history.