Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Haliburton Highlands Museum

Many former staff have taken an interest in the local Haliburton Country history so a visit here might be of interest if you're in the neighbourhood.

The Haliburton Highlands Museum is situated in Glebe Park on the north shore of Head Lake overlooking Haliburton. It was started by a local committee as a Canadian Centennial project to commemorate the early pioneers of the area. Originally housed in the Reid House, a historic village home, the collection soon outgrew the confines of this little house. A much larger facility was constructed in Glebe Park in order to meet the museum's growing requirements.

Reid House is a village home reflecting life at the turn of the century. In subsequent years a log barn, house and small building housing our forge were added to the museum grounds in order to depict life in a more rustic & rural setting.

The main gallery facility has numerous exhibits relating to the first inhabitants of the region, the native peoples, who were followed by the first influx of lumbermen and settlers. This area was promoted for its agricultural possibilities by the Canadian Land and Immigration Company who purchased ten townships in the surrounding area.

When:
Tuesday thru Saturday 10:00am - 5:00pm
How Much:
Adults $2.50, Children $1.00

Monday, October 6, 2008

Why become an Alumni Association member?

When the Alumni Association was founded 20 years ago, email was for techies and so for the most part were websites and the internet. The HSRSA was formed to help connect former staff members who were spread out across the province, the country and indeed, the world. The Thunderbird newsletter was the prime connector, sent to all members three times a year. Various reunion and social events help many of us to reconnect in person. They also help connect across the generations of staff from the earliest days to the present, as does the annual cricket challenge.

The most significant demonstration of this cross generational connection would have to be our Alumni Bursary. Since 1998 the Alumni as awarded a bursary annually to one or more current HSR staff members who will be attending a post secondary institution the following year - a total of $7,700 to date. You can read more about the bursar and the recipients at http://www.hsrsa.ca/SocialServiceActivities/Bursary.htm

But the Alumni is about more than just connecting - its also about involvement. Since its founding, Alumni members have raised funds for various projects, donated materials, developed a trail network and maintained it with annual trail work weekends, written and produced a trail guide, volunteered countless hours during the summer, helped with Mix-Fix weekends, served on and chaired various camp operating and planning committees, rebuilt Kennabi Lodge from the ground up, and established a camp archive. We've also built an extensive (and some might say definitive) online archive to document and preserve the history of the camp and camp staffs.

Today it's easier to stay connected with email, live chat, social networking sites like facebook, and even blogs :-) So is there still a need for a formal alumni association? My answer is of course! The Alumni executive helps to coordinate and maintain both your connection and your involvement. We've embraced all the connection technology - a website, emailing lists, a Facebook group and now a blog. But technology can't replace your involvement.

Becoming a member helps us produce our newsletter, maintain our website, supports our trail maintenance project, sustains our bursary program, and helps us coordinate our social events. Membership fees are very reasonable and we provide discounts for current staff members and families living at the same address. Please consider joining (or re-joining) - we want you and we need you! http://www.hsrsa.ca/AssociationInfo/How_To_Join.htm

Bursary Chair Katrina Angel present the 2007 bursar to Ian Hancock

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

The History of Camp Buildings

We're in the process of documenting the history of the buildings at camp: when and where were they built, who was involved, where they've been moved, what they've been used for, renovations, additions, etc. And of course photos both historical and current. We hope to have our current photo collection completed shortly and we'll be working our way at adding building profiles as time allows.

If you have any historical photos of camp buildings, relevant background on specific buildings or information that might help us answer any of the questions below, please email the webmaster@hsrsa.ca.

Can you us with information on any of the following:

  • When Pioneer Cabin was built
  • When Northern Lights was built
  • When the new Maintenance Workshop was built
  • When Pow Wow Lodge renovated
  • When screened in wash area was added to the west end of Pow-Wow Lodge
  • The storage room added onto the east side of the Hub Kitchen?
  • The Hub stop being used for composite feeding?