Walking Tour

Red Deer’s Oldest Neighbourhood: Parkvale

Join us for a 1 hour guided historical walking tour in downtown Red Deer. All tours start at the Red Deer Museum + Art Gallery. Please pre-register.

The Parkvale district is one of Red Deer’s oldest residential areas, developed in 1905 for the working-class. Take a stroll through the area to see some of the earliest homes built and learn who occupied them and what their role was in developing our community.

Learn about Edward Barrett, former Mayor and businessman, as you stroll through Barrett Park. Visit the ghost sculpture of Mickey the Beaver in Coronation Park as well as view a few homes in the Waskasoo neighborhood. You will learn about the McIntosh residence and the Manning Residence as you loop back towards the museum.

Dedication of the Pioneers Lodge (4324 46A Avenue) July 16, 1958. Photo courtesy of the City of Red Deer Archives, N10030.

Walking Tour

Red Deer’s Oldest Neighbourhood: Parkvale

Join us for a 1 hour guided historical walking tour in downtown Red Deer. All tours start at the Red Deer Museum + Art Gallery. Please pre-register.

The Parkvale district is one of Red Deer’s oldest residential areas, developed in 1905 for the working-class. Take a stroll through the area to see some of the earliest homes built and learn who occupied them and what their role was in developing our community.

Learn about Edward Barrett, former Mayor and businessman, as you stroll through Barrett Park. Visit the ghost sculpture of Mickey the Beaver in Coronation Park as well as view a few homes in the Waskasoo neighborhood. You will learn about the McIntosh residence and the Manning Residence as you loop back towards the museum.

Dedication of the Pioneers Lodge (4324 46A Avenue) July 16, 1958. Photo courtesy of the City of Red Deer Archives, N10030.

Join us as part of #FirstFridaysRedDeer this May as we celebrate some of the remarkable people and places of Red Deer in our permanent history exhibit, Remarkable Red Deer.

We will unveil new additions to our collection including the taxidermized Buffalo head from the Buffalo Hotel and Curtis Labelle’s performance costume and memorabilia. Check out these treasures from our collection to celebrate our 50th anniversary!

Buffalo Hotel. Image courtesy of City of Red Deer Archives, P3000

About #FirstFridaysRedDeer

On the first Friday of every month, join the galleries in downtown Red Deer in celebrating local, regional and national artistic talent. The galleries buzz with art experiences, open gallery spaces, social mingling and maybe some entertainment. Suitable for adults, youth, families, date nights, music lovers, culture-vultures and anyone who enjoys kicking off their weekend with a Friday night party.

View the monthly First Fridays schedule on the Red Deer Arts Councils website.

Last day to see the exhibit!

Drop in and join a MAG staff member for a 2 pm tour of the Red Deer Polytechnic Visual Art Student Exhibition, Long Live.

Jewish History in Alberta with Sandra Morton Weizman

Join us for a talk on the Jewish History in Alberta by Sandra Morton Weizman, a Heritage Consultant from Calgary. Free to attend; donations appreciated. Please pre-register. This presentation may move to a virtual format, weather permitting.

Register: Jewish History in Alberta (April 16)

About Sandra

Sandra Morton Weizman (pictured) has been working in the museum and heritage field for over 40 years. She holds an M.A. in Canadian History and a Master of Museum Studies, both from the University of Toronto. She has worked as Executive Director of The Ontario Historical Society in Toronto, Curator of Social History at the Royal Alberta Museum in Edmonton, Senior Curator of Cultural History at the Glenbow Museum in Calgary, and Interim Executive Director at Lougheed House museum in Calgary. She was also an Exhibition Project Manager for the National Museum of Science and Technology in Ottawa. She was the Curator of the exhibition “A Coat of Many Colours: Two Centuries of Jewish Life in Canada,” a joint project of the Canadian Museum of Civilization (now Canadian Museum of History) in Ottawa and the Canadian Friends of Beth Hatefutsoth in Israel. This exhibition traveled from 1990-1993 to nine venues in Canada, to the Jewish Museum in New York and to Beth Hatefutsoth in Tel Aviv, Israel.

She has been a museum and heritage consultant for the past 19 years, specializing in exhibition planning, project management, curation, collections management, policy writing and analysis and interpretive planning. Her clients have included the Canadian Museum of History, Lougheed House, Glenbow Museum, The Little Synagogue on the Prairie at Calgary’s Heritage Park, the Calgary Board of Education, the Eleanor Luxton Historical Foundation in Banff, The Museum of Tolerance in Jerusalem and The Military Museums. She also curated the inaugural exhibition for the Cree Cultural Institute and was directly involved in the establishment of this new museum for the Eastern Cree First Nation of the James Bay in the Subarctic of Quebec. In 2017, she curated the travelling exhibition “The Canadian Jewish Experience” in honour of Canada’s sesquicentennial.

She has been an instructor in the Heritage Resources Management Program of Athabasca University for the past 11 years where she also wrote the curriculum for their courses on Museum Interpretation and revised their curriculum for the Introduction to Heritage Resources Management.

Last day to see the exhibit! Join a MAG staff member for a guided tour of the exhibit Landmarks: A Sense of Place, featuring the work of local artists Carol Lynn Gilchrist and Wendy Meeres.

Join a MAG staff member for a guided tour of the exhibit, Upon Further Reflection: Highlights from the Past 50 Years.

CANCELLED

This program has been cancelled due to unforeseen circumstances.

Jewish History in Alberta with Sandra Morton Weizman

Join us for a talk on the Jewish History in Alberta by Sandra Morton Weizman, a Heritage Consultant from Calgary. Free to attend; donations appreciated.

About Sandra

Sandra Morton Weizman (pictured) has been working in the museum and heritage field for over 40 years. She holds an M.A. in Canadian History and a Master of Museum Studies, both from the University of Toronto. She has worked as Executive Director of The Ontario Historical Society in Toronto, Curator of Social History at the Royal Alberta Museum in Edmonton, Senior Curator of Cultural History at the Glenbow Museum in Calgary, and Interim Executive Director at Lougheed House museum in Calgary. She was also an Exhibition Project Manager for the National Museum of Science and Technology in Ottawa. She was the Curator of the exhibition “A Coat of Many Colours: Two Centuries of Jewish Life in Canada,” a joint project of the Canadian Museum of Civilization (now Canadian Museum of History) in Ottawa and the Canadian Friends of Beth Hatefutsoth in Israel. This exhibition traveled from 1990-1993 to nine venues in Canada, to the Jewish Museum in New York and to Beth Hatefutsoth in Tel Aviv, Israel.

She has been a museum and heritage consultant for the past 19 years, specializing in exhibition planning, project management, curation, collections management, policy writing and analysis and interpretive planning. Her clients have included the Canadian Museum of History, Lougheed House, Glenbow Museum, The Little Synagogue on the Prairie at Calgary’s Heritage Park, the Calgary Board of Education, the Eleanor Luxton Historical Foundation in Banff, The Museum of Tolerance in Jerusalem and The Military Museums. She also curated the inaugural exhibition for the Cree Cultural Institute and was directly involved in the establishment of this new museum for the Eastern Cree First Nation of the James Bay in the Subarctic of Quebec. In 2017, she curated the travelling exhibition “The Canadian Jewish Experience” in honour of Canada’s sesquicentennial.

She has been an instructor in the Heritage Resources Management Program of Athabasca University for the past 11 years where she also wrote the curriculum for their courses on Museum Interpretation and revised their curriculum for the Introduction to Heritage Resources Management.

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