Saltscapes Food and Travel 2022

Page 80

Gaol bird tour Historic lock-ups of Atlantic Canada STORY AND PHOTOGRAPHY BY DARCY RHYNO

A

fella down the hall is behind bars for nothing more than running his horses through town. The only crime of the women in the cells upstairs is being poor after their indebted husbands abandoned them. In a temperance town like Sherbrooke Village, ending up behind bars is as easy as pie. That’s because there ain’t no real crimes, so they gotta dream stuff up. Heck, nothin’ more than cussin’ got me locked up in this gaol cell. But I would be lying if I said being a gaolbird didn’t have its rewards. Take the

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ATLANTIC PROVINCES

smell of fresh biscuits drifting from Mrs. Scott’s kitchen. She’s the gaoler’s wife and lives with her kids in the other half of this gaolhouse. Some are so fond of Mrs. Scott’s grub, they run around town cussing their heads off every December just for a serving of her famous Christmas turkey dinner. Catching a whiff of biscuits, I just know there’s freshly churned butter to be slathered on a couple and delivered through these bars. I’m playing the role of an 1867 prisoner dressed in period clothing including britches, bowler hat and coat; but those aromas are real. Phyllis Jack brings me some biscuits and springs me from gaol. She’s the Supervisor of Hands on History at this living history museum of 25 buildings, including shops, houses, and churches. Along with the biscuits, Jack presents me with a pound of that fresh butter. The gift is a sure sign that my sentence for criminally cussing has been commuted to time served.

“Science centre exhibits are often massive things,” Salonius says. Because the rooms at Science East were once offices and cells, exhibits here are smaller than what is typical. “As far as we know, we’re the only science centre located in a former prison. It’s just an incidental innovation, but we’ve taken a lot of the classic science centre ideas and we’ve downsized and redesigned them. Children frequent the smaller exhibits because they’re not overwhelming.” After exploring exhibits on the top two floors, we head to the basement, ducking along narrow passageways to a series of rooms where prisoners once lived out their sentences. To keep things kid-friendly, the exhibits here are about the forensic science of catching criminals rather than the criminals and their crimes. But when asked, Salonius and other guides are happy to entertain adults with stories of billion-dollar capers, bizarre escapes, and the door nicknamed “the point of no return.”

The science gaol

Georges Island and the Citadel

Sherbrooke’s is just one of many historic East Coast gaols where visitors can peek into penitentiaries of the past. In Fredericton, the former gaol serves as a family-friendly science centre. Lieff Salonius, director of development and communications at Science East, shows me around. We dodge kids running from one ingenious exhibit to another, their parents barely keeping up. It’s a tight squeeze, but I fit myself into the infinity room where my reflection repeats itself forever.

Two national historic sites in Halifax have historic gaols. Georges Island in the middle of Halifax Harbour has a military lockup, but at one point, the entire island served as an open air prison. About 1,000 Acadians were held here before their expulsion from the Maritimes by British forces in the mid-1700s. Many died before they could be exiled. Today, their descendents consider Georges Island a sacred site for its connection to that famous tragedy. The Halifax Citadel fortress stands guard


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ADVERTISING What Will Your #MaritimeFerry Adventure Look Like?

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pages 90-92

ADVERTISING: Join us on a Bay of Fundy adventure

2min
page 89

ADVERTISING: The CAT is coming back— and we’re faster than ever

1min
page 88

ADVERTISING Maritime Adventures from Ship to Shore

2min
pages 86-87

Of giant lobsters and drunken lampposts

4min
pages 83-85

Gaol bird tour

3min
page 80

Ecclefechan Tart from Birkinshaw’s Tea Room & Coffee House

2min
page 79

Border town twins

4min
pages 77-78

Canvas crush

7min
pages 74-76

Hot Lobster Sandwich Clara Harris style

2min
page 73

Don’t stop for winter

2min
page 72

Quark Cheesecake from Ran-Cher Acres

2min
page 71

Say cheese Atlantic Canada!

3min
pages 69-70

Beyond the ordinary

6min
pages 66-68

Island Hill Farm Breakfast Sandwich

1min
page 61

From royal fries to championship seafood

4min
pages 62-63

Dinosaur Island

5min
pages 64-65

Milk ‘n’ Make

4min
pages 58-60

Foodie days

5min
pages 54-55

Back to Birchtown Chutney

2min
page 40

Victorian gardens

4min
pages 51-53

Smoked Haddock Fishcakes from Seawind Landing

1min
page 50

“Here to stay”

4min
pages 48-49

Treading lightly

6min
pages 41-43

Cadillacs, cannons and sea caves

5min
pages 44-47

The missing chapter

4min
pages 38-39

Bridget’s Breakfast Risotto

2min
page 37

Two shores—two UNESCO gems

4min
pages 33-36

Three of the most popular French fry sauce recipes from Potato World

4min
pages 9-10

Potato road

2min
page 8

Well worth a side trip

4min
pages 26-27

Of gannets and Basques

4min
pages 28-29

The “great equalizer”

4min
pages 14-16

The island frozen in time

4min
pages 24-25

The country of the washerwoman

1min
page 6

Acadian Molasses Cake

3min
page 7
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