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Village Squire, 1980-08, Page 4The past comes alive Western Ontario is full of small area museums. They welcome you and your children for a look at the way we were. Thanks to the foresight of people who understood the importance of preserving the past for the future, Western Ontario has excellent musuems in which yesterday comes alive today and today will be alive tomorrow. BRUCE COUNTY MUSEUM In terms of space - 22,000 square feet - the museum is not the largest in Western Ontario; in terms of staff - 17 summer employees and two fulltime, Claus Breede, Director, and Jim MacDougall, Curator, it might even be called small; but in terms of preservation of artifacts and reaching out into the community, Bruce County Mus- eum in Southampton is "big." Dr. Morton, a dentist, was the driving force behind the establishment of a museum in the old public school from 1954 to 1956. A collection of his instruments, lamps, chairs, drills, a foot -pumped drill and a 'travelling' dentist's chair pay tribute to the founder. In 1975, the old high school next to the museum was dismantled to allow expan- sion of the original building, which is now PG. 2 VILLAGE SQUIRE/AUGUST 1980 BY ELAINE TOWNSHEND 102 years old. The extension was funded partially by private funds. Wintario and a sizeable bequest from the estate of Wilfred Krug of Chesley. Women's Institutes were instrumental in setting up the original museum and later were responsible for moving a log house to the site. For many years, the ladies served as hostesses, demonstrating handwork and explaining the house to visitors. Installation of environmental controls to enhance preservation of artifacts is tenta- tively scheduled for completion by Dec- ember 1980 and is being financed by a 5118,000 grant recently approved by the National Museum's Corporation. Work began last year with a S20,000 donation from Bruce County. TEXTILE COLLECTION The museum in Southampton has one of the most extensive textile collections in Ontario ranging from coverlets to christen- ing gowns originating as early as 1850. For preservation, items are packed in acid free tissue paper and placed in acid free boxes. Cataloging and a condition report is done on each article. The oldest artifact in the museum is a tooth from a woolly mammoth - an extinct northern elephant.The artifact weighs 61/2 pounds; it is between 10,000 and 14,000 years old and was unearthed in a farmer's field in Tara when he was harrowing. On loan from the Royal Ontario Museum for the summer is a parasauralophus - a bird -hipped lizard found in the badlands of Alberta. Among the many interesting galleries are the general store - an authentic reconstruction of our ancestors' 'super- market" - a furniture gallery, which pays tribute to one of the largest industries of the county and includes a parlour setting and bedroom suite with rollaway bed; and the marine gallery - a collection of dugout canoes and implements from the thriving 19th century shipping industry on the Great Lakes. Bruce County Museum has extensive archives. The reading room with its microfilm projector, purchased by the Historical Society, is a popular area for research. The museum is open seven days a week from the May 24 weekend to Labor Day weekend and is open for group appoint-