Introduction
Simply put, I love Lunenburg. It is one of Nova Scotia's most historic and appealing villages, a fact recognized in 1995 when UNESCO declared the old downtown a World Heritage Site. The town was first settled in 1753, primarily by German, Swiss, and French colonists. It was laid out on the "model town" plan then in vogue (Savannah, Georgia, and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, were also set out along these lines), which meant seven north-south streets intersected by nine east-west streets. Such a plan worked quite well in the coastal plains. Lunenburg, however, is located on a harbor flanked by steep hills, and implementers of the model-town plan saw no reason to bend around these. As a result, some of the streets can be exhausting to walk.
About 70% of the downtown buildings date from the 18th and 19th centuries, and many of these are possessed of a distinctive style and are painted in bright colors. Looming over all is the architecturally unique Lunenburg Academy, with its exaggerated...
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Fisheries Museum of the Atlantic
The sprawling Fisheries Museum is professionally designed and curated, and it manages to take a topic that some might consider a little, well,...
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- Museums
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Lunenburg Body Care
This pleasantly old-fashioned operation sells soap made the old-fashioned way: with natural colorings and the highest-quality ingredients. A Frommer's...
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- Shopping
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Bluenose II
- A replica of the world famous Bluenose II, this beauty was launched in 1963 and has been thrilling ship lovers ever since. Public sailings are...
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- Attractions
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