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Port Dover Harbour Museum in Port Dover, Canada

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Fishing equipment display

The perilous Long Point of Lake Erie has claimed countless ships over the generations. Among them is the famous passenger liner Atlantic wreck, a palace steamer that sunk in 1852 and now lies, along with thousands of other vessels, at the bottom of the great lake. The treasures salvaged from these lost ships are just a small part of the rich history you'll find at the Port Dover Harbour Museum in Southern Ontario.

Today, Port Dover is most notable for its massive gatherings of motorcycle enthusiasts every Friday the 13th. But beyond the modern veneer of hogs and Harleys, the town has been a center of industry on the Great Lakes for over a century — from fishing to luxury passenger lines to rum-running in the Prohibition era. 

The Harbour Museum is housed in an original net shanty used by local fishermen working the lake. The tiny museum — inconspicuously located on the edge of downtown, next to the channel connecting boats to Lake Erie — punches way above its weight, packing every free centimeter of floor space with historical dioramas and relics of various Lake Erie industries. 

Parts of the museum are dedicated to the history of fishing in the region, with a collection of net-mending displays, local fish varieties and fishing net floats. Other sections display relics that have washed up on the shores of Lake Erie from the countless ships that have sank here over the years, as well as the romantic history of rum running on the Great Lakes.

When you visit the museum — and it's well worth the visit — you'll first encounter the preserved 1932 fish-tug "Almidart," before moving inside to be immersed in the history of Lake Erie. You'll find a range of interactive exhibits including shift change bells, a collection of operating steam whistles, and a 3D display of regional photographs. The crème de la crème is a preserved 1912 lake freighter wheelhouse that looks out over the water, with an interactive ship wheel and controls, giving you the feel you're captaining a ship out on the lake. 

This tiny gem of a museum in the heart of Southern Ontario will give you a unique insight into the regional history of a booming Great Lake port industry town. 


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