Events Calendar

Upcoming Events Across Ontario
  • OMA Indigenous Collections Symposium 2021

    online

    The Ontario Museum Association Indigenous Collections Symposium: Mashkawatgong mamawewiziwin - Strengthening our bonds, sharing our practices will be presented online on March 25-26, 2021, with a pre-symposium event on March 24, 2021. Join us at our dynamic event platform for a gathering designed to support and connect museum professionals from Indigenous and non-Indigenous organizations! The...

    $160
  • Friends of Wesleyville Village Easter Egg Exploration 2021

    Wesleyville Village 2082 Lakeshore Rd., Port Hope, ON, Canada

    Saturday April 3rd, 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. Preregistration required at https://www.wesleyvillevillage.com/events-1 $5.00 per child (12 and under) **Something for the whole family** A pandemic version of the popular Friends of Wesleyville Village Easter Egg Hunt More information: 905-753-2196 or 905-797-2228

    $5
  • What Gravestones Can Tell You About Your Ancestors: A Genealogists Guide

    online

    Presented by Lennox and Addington County Museum and Archives Genealogists know information retrieved from gravestones has a practical application to identify the deceased. However, gravestones, as a research tool, can offer up more information about your ancestors when interpreted correctly. Besides functioning as a memorial to the deceased, gravestones provide insight into nineteenth and twentieth...

  • Niagara-on-the-Lake Museum Presents Robert J. Lake on Lawn Tennis

    online

    Join us on Zoom for our 2021 Virtual Lecture Series! On Wednesday April 7 at 10:30 a.m. Robert J. Lake presents, "'A Front Seat Among the Playgrounds of Two Nations': Lawn Tennis in Niagara-on-the-Lake, c.1880s-1920s." Registration is required. Please visit https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_N27s3yU5TuCYiqzMpCx5dQ.

  • Jane E. MacNamara: Life on the Farm, Your Ancestor‘s Place in Ontario Agriculture

    online

    Presented by Lennox and Addington County Museum and Archives We often think of farming as a traditional occupation—something that hasn’t really changed much. But that is not and was never the case. Farmers had to react and adapt to changing conditions like climate, technology, economics, new markets and new competitors. Some farmers did more than...