Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Mad Hatter's Tea Room

       Recently, we travelled to Aylmer and visited 'The Mad Hatter Tea Room'. It offers a high tea but we went for the all you could eat buffet. The food was very good and it was like home cooking.
       When you enter the place, it is like being transported to a scene from Alice in Wonderland. There are many ornaments and mementos in the Wonderland theme. For those who enjoy a touch of fantasy, this place is a must to visit.
       It is attached to 'Quaker Barrel Unique Antique and General Store. Beside the tea room is ' the Queen of Hearts Garden'. Unfortunately, it was too early in the season to be open, but it looked like it would be nice to eat your lunch out there.
       It is located on Hwy 3 between Aylmer and St. Thomas




Wednesday, May 14, 2014

Castle Kilbride

       Recently, we went to visit an interesting site near Kitchener called Castle Kilbride. It was the residence of  James Livingston who was born in Scotland in a town called Kilbride who moved to Canada. This is how it got its name.
       It was constructed in Baden, Ontario in 1877. Its major feature is the interior decorative murals done in the style of the Italian Renaissance. A technique called trompe-l'oeil is used which gives the murals a 3-D effect by means of painted shadows.
       Livingston and his brother John grew flax which was used in hemp for clothing and in linseed oil for oil based paints. Because of the Civil War in the States, a lot of cotton had been used for uniforms and linens, causing a shortage of cotton, so the flax was needed as an alternative.
       The two brothers started a company called 'J&J Livingston Dominion Linseed Oil Company'. It was from the proceeds of this venture that money was available to build the castle. With the development of latex paints, linseed oil was not in demand and so the company failed.Eventually, the castle was sold to the Township of Wilmot. It became a National Historic Site of Canada in 1988.
       The castle is located west of Kitchener in a small town called Baden. The address is 60 Snyder's Road West.



     
     

Wednesday, May 7, 2014

Kitchener's Pioneer Tower

     This tower overlooks the Grand River Valley and was constructed in memory of Ontario's first inland pioneers. Joseph Schoerg and Samuel Betzner of German descent, arrived here in 1800. The German Company purchased 60000 acres from the Mohawks. In 1805, Dutch and Mennonite settlers arrived, and established an agricultural community.
     The tower was constructed in 1925 to celebrate the German origins of the Waterloo area. In 1926, the tower was officially opened and declared a National Historic Site. It stands 22 metres tall and is topped by a weather vane in the shape of a covered wagon to commemorate the arrival of the colonists from Pennsylvania in Connestoga wagons. Beside the tower, the  graves of the Schoerg and Betzner families are situated. It is the oldest non-Aboriginal burial grounds in Ontario.
     It is an interesting piece of history in the Kitchener-Waterloo area and is located at the end of Pioneer Tower Road off  Deer Ridge Drive, east from King Street in Kitchener. The site is part of the Woodside Historic Site in Kitchener.