Historic Hamilton: Erland Lee Museum Traditional Cache
Historic Hamilton: Erland Lee Museum
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Difficulty:
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Terrain:
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Size:
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Historic Hamilton will be a series of caches that serve to bring cachers to historic places in and around the City of Hamilton. These caches can be placed by anyone, and are not limited to one CO. If you know of a historic place that you would like to bring people to, feel free to add it to the series!
Historic Hamilton: Erland Lee Museum
Cache is a magnetic lock box that is located at the Erland Lee Museum and should be a quick grab and go. Parking is available in the lot. Please walk along the inside of the guardrail on the grass, and not on the side of the road. Please bring your own writing instrument to sign the log.
The Erland Lee Museum is a National Historic Site of Canada located on the ridge of the Niagara Escarpment in Stoney Creek, Ontario. Originally a farmhouse belonging to Erland and Janet Lee, the museum is recognized as the birthplace of the first Women's Institutes, an international organization formed in 1897 to promote the education of isolated rural women.
The oldest part of the home, a log cabin, dates to 1808. An addition was built onto the log cabin in 1873 in the Carpenter Gothic style, part of the Gothic Revival Architectural tradition. This is best exemplified by the steeply-pitched gables, gingerbread trim, and the board-and-batten planks.
The Lee Family lived in the house from 1808 until 1970, when it was sold to the Women's Institutes. Its first historical designation was granted in 1961, by the South Wentworth Women’s Institute. In 1972, the home was opened to the public as a museum, and has since been owned and operated by the Federated Women's Institutes of Ontario. In 1995, the museum was designated as a historic home under the Ontario Heritage Act, and in 2003, the museum was granted status as a National Historic Site of Canada.
The museum itself contains three floors of original Victorian furniture and furnishings, with an emphasis on the history of the Lee family, and the events surrounding the 1897 founding of the Women's Institutes. For example, the dining room table on which Janet Lee wrote the first Women’s Institute constitution still stands in its original location. The farmhouse is complemented by an 1873 carriage house, which contains two floors of local history exhibits.
Congratulations to akela31 on the FTF!
Additional Hints
(Decrypt)
Fgbc ng gur gerr.
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