Historic Charlottetown showcased in outdoor heritage exhibit - Action News
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Historic Charlottetown showcased in outdoor heritage exhibit

A unique outdoor heritage exhibit is going up in Charlottetown next month, featuring sepia tone photos, ads and historic interpretations in the windows of about 15 businesses. It's called "A Walk Through the Past: Great George Street to University Avenue and Back."

The exhibit will be unveiled on Heritage Day and run until Feb. 29 in some storefront windows

City councillor Greg Rivard and Natalie Munn, heritage researcher and collections co-ordinator for the City of Charlottetown, hold up a photo that will be on display as part of the exhibit. (CBC)
A unique outdoor heritage exhibit is going up in Charlottetown next month,featuringsepia tone photos, ads and historic interpretations in the windows of about 15 businesses.
Great George Street from the cenotaph north, circa 1930. (City of Charlottetown)

The exhibit, "A Walk Through the Past: Great George Street to University Avenue and Back," will be held in the windows of participating businessesfrom the cenotaph to Euston Street.

According to the city's website, "this section of Great George Street became University Avenue in 1971, however the original name, honouringGeorge III, was returned in May 2015."

Natalie Munn is the heritage researcher and collections co-ordinator for the City of Charlottetown and she says some of the photos on display go back 150 years.
One of the photos to be featured in the exhibit "A Walk Through the Past: Great George Street to University Avenue and Back." (CBC)

"They will see photographs from way back in the 1860s up until the 1980s. There will be images of what buildings were before now, like historic images ofthe Capitol Theatre, we'll have one of Sam the Record Man, Garden city. They've all changed of course," said Munn.

Munn says the outdoor exhibit reaches many more people than an exhibit in a gallery might. The exhibitwill be unveiled at the annualCity of Charlottetown Heritage Awardsceremony on Feb.16and will be on display until the end of the month.