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From flints to NHL players — permanent museum exhibit shows the evolution of Grimsby

From flints to NHL players — permanent museum exhibit shows the evolution of Grimsby

Flint tools and projectiles dating back to 900 BCE, a cannon ball from the War of 1812 and an NHL jersey worn by a Grimsby native are among about a hundred artifacts that make up a new exhibit at
Grimsby Museum
.
Sofia Beraldo, the museum's exhibition and design co-ordinator, said the 'Grimsby: Our Story' display is the first permanent exhibit at the facility that opened in 1984.
She said through surveys it became evident the community wanted a permanent place for its 'diverse history.'
Beraldo did much of the research for the exhibit that opened at the Murray Street museum on May 29.
There are four sections: Ancestral Lands and Peoples, Forming Grimsby, Transforming Grimsby, Made in Grimsby.
Ancestral Lands and Peoples focuses on the area's first inhabitants.
Beraldo said with input from Indigenous experts to ensure accuracy, it 'shines a light on the Neutral Nation grave excavation which happened here in Grimsby around 1976 to '77.'
Forming Grimsby looks at some of the first European settlers .
'After The American Revolution in around 1787, there was an influx of American loyalists (who supported the British Crown),' Beraldo said.
The section includes displays about settler women, enslaved people and freedom seekers, and Grimsby Beach.
'The different phases that Grimsby Beach has gone through,' Beraldo said, '(there was) cottaging, then it was an amusement park and it's still a really vibrant part of Grimsby's history.'
Transforming Grimsby focuses on the 19th and 20th centuries.
'We have a (War of 1812) cannon ball there that was discovered on one of the Nelles (family) properties,' Beraldo said.
There are also displays about historical sites and buildings and the Farmerettes who played an important role during the First and Second World Wars.
'Young girls and women could actually skip their final exams in high school and work on farms when the men were overseas fighting and contribute to the war effort through feeding people locally and the troops,' Beraldo said.
Made in Grimsby includes displays about fruit farming, businesses and Grimsby Peach Kings Hockey Club, and includes some notable Grimsby folk including former NHLer
Kevin Bieksa
and musician
Kevin Hearn
of Barenaked Ladies.
Beraldo said the exhibit features an interactive component whereby people can ask questions about Grimsby's history using a posted QR code.
'I'm hoping (visitors) take away that Grimsby's history is a lot more diverse and unique, I think, than a lot of people realize,' said Beraldo.
She said some of the artifacts will be switched out annually with some of the thousands of other materials the museum has in storage.
She said the exhibit is also supported by artifacts from
Sustainable Archaeology McMaster
(University),
Royal Ontario Museum
and
Niagara Falls Underground Railroad Heritage Center
in Niagara Falls, N.Y.
'This has been in the works since 2022,' said museum manger and curator Janet Oakes, adding the exhibit is supported by $135,000 over three years from
Town of Grimsby
and $88,000 from the federal government.
Oakes said the town,
Nelles Manor Museum
and
Grimsby Historical Society
also contributed to the exhibit.
'We wouldn't have been able to accomplish this without the support of the community,' Oakes said.
See
grimsby.ca
(click on the Parks, Recreation and Culture link to get to the museum) for more information.
Meanwhile, the museum is hosting Coffee with the Curator on Thursday, June 19, 5:30-7 p.m. On this special evening Beraldo will take visitors on a guided tour of 'Grimsby: Our Story' and answer questions about the exhibit.
This is an admission by donation event and requires a ticket. Go to
grimsbymuseum.ticketspice.com/coffee-with-the-curator
for ticket information.

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From flints to NHL players — permanent museum exhibit shows the evolution of Grimsby
From flints to NHL players — permanent museum exhibit shows the evolution of Grimsby

Hamilton Spectator

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From flints to NHL players — permanent museum exhibit shows the evolution of Grimsby

Flint tools and projectiles dating back to 900 BCE, a cannon ball from the War of 1812 and an NHL jersey worn by a Grimsby native are among about a hundred artifacts that make up a new exhibit at Grimsby Museum . Sofia Beraldo, the museum's exhibition and design co-ordinator, said the 'Grimsby: Our Story' display is the first permanent exhibit at the facility that opened in 1984. She said through surveys it became evident the community wanted a permanent place for its 'diverse history.' Beraldo did much of the research for the exhibit that opened at the Murray Street museum on May 29. There are four sections: Ancestral Lands and Peoples, Forming Grimsby, Transforming Grimsby, Made in Grimsby. Ancestral Lands and Peoples focuses on the area's first inhabitants. Beraldo said with input from Indigenous experts to ensure accuracy, it 'shines a light on the Neutral Nation grave excavation which happened here in Grimsby around 1976 to '77.' Forming Grimsby looks at some of the first European settlers . 'After The American Revolution in around 1787, there was an influx of American loyalists (who supported the British Crown),' Beraldo said. The section includes displays about settler women, enslaved people and freedom seekers, and Grimsby Beach. 'The different phases that Grimsby Beach has gone through,' Beraldo said, '(there was) cottaging, then it was an amusement park and it's still a really vibrant part of Grimsby's history.' Transforming Grimsby focuses on the 19th and 20th centuries. 'We have a (War of 1812) cannon ball there that was discovered on one of the Nelles (family) properties,' Beraldo said. There are also displays about historical sites and buildings and the Farmerettes who played an important role during the First and Second World Wars. 'Young girls and women could actually skip their final exams in high school and work on farms when the men were overseas fighting and contribute to the war effort through feeding people locally and the troops,' Beraldo said. Made in Grimsby includes displays about fruit farming, businesses and Grimsby Peach Kings Hockey Club, and includes some notable Grimsby folk including former NHLer Kevin Bieksa and musician Kevin Hearn of Barenaked Ladies. Beraldo said the exhibit features an interactive component whereby people can ask questions about Grimsby's history using a posted QR code. 'I'm hoping (visitors) take away that Grimsby's history is a lot more diverse and unique, I think, than a lot of people realize,' said Beraldo. She said some of the artifacts will be switched out annually with some of the thousands of other materials the museum has in storage. She said the exhibit is also supported by artifacts from Sustainable Archaeology McMaster (University), Royal Ontario Museum and Niagara Falls Underground Railroad Heritage Center in Niagara Falls, N.Y. 'This has been in the works since 2022,' said museum manger and curator Janet Oakes, adding the exhibit is supported by $135,000 over three years from Town of Grimsby and $88,000 from the federal government. Oakes said the town, Nelles Manor Museum and Grimsby Historical Society also contributed to the exhibit. 'We wouldn't have been able to accomplish this without the support of the community,' Oakes said. See (click on the Parks, Recreation and Culture link to get to the museum) for more information. Meanwhile, the museum is hosting Coffee with the Curator on Thursday, June 19, 5:30-7 p.m. On this special evening Beraldo will take visitors on a guided tour of 'Grimsby: Our Story' and answer questions about the exhibit. This is an admission by donation event and requires a ticket. Go to for ticket information.

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If you're the kind of person who finishes a jar of pickles and finds yourself tipping it to sip the last of the juice, kanji is the drink you didn't know you were waiting for. Popular throughout India, it's like a brine you can drink by the glassful: fiery, sour, and the same deep purple as Barney the Dinosaur or the name of a legendary rock band. Kanji, which shares a name with the fermented rice dish, dates back to the Indus Valley Civilization between 3300 and 1300 BCE, is a seasonal drink in India, where it appears only for a few weeks each year as spring leans into summer, when the sun is warm enough to coax a ferment but winter vegetables like black carrots and beets haven't yet disappeared from the markets. Made with carrots, beets, crushed mustard seeds, pink salt, and sometimes a whisper of pungent chaat masala, kanji is what you get when a pickle becomes a cooler. Electrolyte-rich and teeming with gut-friendly bacteria, it's as energizing as it is tart. 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But unlike kombucha, which requires a SCOBY (Symbiotic Culture of Bacteria and Yeast), thick and strange like a jellyfish pressed between glass, kanji ferments with what's already there. No starter, no cellulose mat, no mother. Just water, salt, and time. In kombucha, the SCOBY feeds on sugar in the tea, converting it into acids, carbon dioxide, and a trace amount of alcohol through a careful choreography of yeast and lactic acid bacteria. Kanji does this too, in its own unruly way: the sugars from carrots and beets become food for wild microbes, and the crushed, antimicrobial mustard seeds help shape the flavor, keeping the funk clean, not rotten. In Delhi this March, I drank it by the glassful. The beets painted my lips a gothic red, the mustard warmed the back of my throat, and the drink's brightness spoiled me for soda. After five days fermenting in the sun, kanji comes to life, animated with the memory of heat. 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