Nitsitapiisksakoo: Nitsitapii Landscapes Part 3
Explore more traditional landscapes of the Niitsitapii and discover their connection to the land. These Alberta and Montana sites are culturally and spiritually important to the Blackfoot people.
Explore more traditional landscapes of the Niitsitapii and discover their connection to the land. These Alberta and Montana sites are culturally and spiritually important to the Blackfoot people.
Examine the traditional landscapes of the Niitsitapi through archival images from the Galt's collection. These southern Alberta sites are culturally important to the Kainai and Piikani peoples.
Examine the traditional landscapes of the Niitsitapi through archival images from the Galt's collection. These southern Alberta sites are culturally important to the Kainai and Piikani peoples.
Discover Lethbridge as seen by Herald photographers over the past century, including Lloyd Knight, Ian Martens and Dave Rossiter.
Terry Fox’s Marathon of Hope which he began in 1980 to raise funds for cancer research is a seminal moment in Canadian history. This exhibit will feature oral history interviews with the Lethbridge citizens who have organized the community runs, explore the familial connections that Terry Fox had in southern Alberta, and will examine how the COVID-19 pandemic affected the 2020 Terry Fox Run in Lethbridge.
Between 1939 and 1945 Lethbridge was absorbed into the “home front” culture of the Second World War. Despite wartime restrictions and visible reminders of the war in the city, live music brought people together for some welcome entertainment and a lively social dance scene. This exhibition highlights collections and stories from some of the region’s big names in big band during the early 1940s.
During the First World War, Canada interned 8,579 people identified as “enemy aliens,” across a network of 24 camps. A special feature, Escape!, focuses on the Lethbridge internment camp (guest curated by Galt Museum & Archives intern Benjamin Weistra).
Southern Alberta is home to some iconic natural and cultural landscapes. Explore visual representations of some of these wondrous settings including Frank Slide, Waterton Lakes National Park, the Prince of Wales Hotel, the Cardston Temple, Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump and the Burmis Tree.
In the late 1800s, Eaton’s grew from a small dry-goods business into Canada’s largest department store. Drawing on the Galt’s retail and merchandising collections from the local Eaton’s branch, this exhibit explores the history of the department store and shopping practices through the twentieth century.
Discover the long history of recycling and upcycling in southern Alberta.
“Can I Survive an Atomic War?” This headline from the Lethbridge Herald in 1960 captured a worry on the minds of many North Americans at the time. Over the previous decade, tensions had mounted between the western and eastern hemispheres in what became known as the Cold War—an ideological conflict in which countries raced to produce more and more sophisticated nuclear weapons. With disaster on the horizon, Canadians began pushing for civil defence.
curated by Aimee Benoit
Here I was, in this horrible clay cavity, somewhere in Belgium, miles and miles from home. Cold, wet through and covered with mud…so far as I could see, the future contained nothing but repetitions of the same thing, or worse.
—Bruce Bairnsfather, Bullets and Billets, 1916
The First World War (1914–1918) was one of the most grueling and deadly conflicts in history, yet soldiers on the front lines made the best of it. British machine-gun officer Bruce Bairnsfather (1887–1959) entertained his comrades by sketching cartoons on rough bits of paper. The drawings were passed up and down the lines, conveying the humour and absurdity of life in the muddy Belgian trenches.
In 1916, Bairnsfather’s first collection of cartoons was published by The Bystander magazine, to instant success. At first, military officials worried that the images’ sarcastic view of war might slow recruitment efforts—but they soon recognized the value of humour in keeping up troops’ morale.
Bairnsfather was promoted to officer-cartoonist and spent the next three years turning tragedy into laughter. His cartoons became a common language for soldiers across the Western Front, and a way to share, with loved ones at home, a war that could not be put into words.
Capt. Bairnsfather’s drawings are very true to life, except the absurd visages of the soldiers. So you will be able to see for yourself, not only what a soldier does but what he thinks. Please do not destroy this copy as I value it greatly. So when you are thru with it just tuck it away somewhere so that I can laugh at those same pictures when I go home.
—Inscription from No.1 Canadian Field Ambulance soldier to his mother (Fragments from France vol. 1, Glenbow Library, 940.30207 B163f Pam)
Bairnsfather’s genius was his ability to poke fun at everyday incidents and hardships, in a way that rang true to other enlisted men. His characters took on a life of their own and had a humanity that resisted the brutal effects of war.
The most beloved of Bairnsfather’s characters was “Old Bill” Busby, a seasoned, grumbling soldier with a famously bushy moustache. With his pals Bert and Alf, Old Bill was an anti-hero next to the brave, patriotic figures shown in home front propaganda. He embodied the “everyman” soldier: his fears, stresses, and nostalgia for home—but also his determination to carry on. As the Lethbridge Herald commented in 1920, “He is a type that took things as they found them, and made the best of them. It was the spirit of the ‘Old Bills’ that won the war.”
The creator of Old Bill has rendered a great service to his country, both as a soldier and as one who has done much to lighten the darkest hour… Though the clouds of war have lifted, we still need his cheery optimism.
—General Sir Ian Hamilton, cited in Fragments from France, vol. 7
During the course of the First World War, Bairnsfather’s work inspired countless imitations, including cartoons drawn by Canadian soldiers and published in trench newspapers. Even after the war ended in November 1918, Old Bill lived on in the public imagination. He starred in books, plays, films and eventually more war cartoons, this time for the American Forces during the Second World War.
Between 1920 and 1950, Bairnsfather made 11 tours across Canada and the United States. He gave an illustrated lecture in Lethbridge in November 1920, and returned at least twice. These visits speak to Bairnsfather’s broad impact across the English-speaking world—but also, amidst people’s desire to forget the horrors of war, an ongoing need to make sense of it all.
More than a century since the Armistice was signed, Bairnsfather’s work continues to offer a “bottom up” view of the unique soldiers’ culture that helped carry them through the war.
Albertans fight a seasonal flu each year, but in 1918 the flu was especially deadly. That strain, commonly referred to as the Spanish flu, was unique because it disproportionally killed young, healthy adults (aged 15–45). Scientists are still unsure why.
Cinescapes invites visitors to explore the history of movie entertainment, from production to exhibition, as movies evolved from a side-show novelty into one of the most popular forms of mass entertainment.
To soar like a hawk, or ride a wild “mountain wave” off the edge of the Rockies: this dream has enticed generations of gliding enthusiasts to the skies of southwestern Alberta.