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Culture Days will return September 20 – October 13, 2024.

Fourth Friday: Kim & Rajan Anderson

In-person

History & heritage Indigenous Museum Music Performance
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Date and time

Location

Guelph Civic Museum

52 Norfolk Street

Guelph, ON

Directions: Entrance to our free parking lot is located off of Cork Street.

Access

Free, and accepts optional pay-what-you-may donations for admission.

Offered in English.

Wheelchair accessible and has gender-neutral washrooms.

About

Kick off your weekend and celebrate Culture Days with a performance by Kim and Rajan Anderson. On the Fourth Friday of each month, enjoy free admission and an outdoor concert on the patio of the Civic Museum from 7 to 9 p.m. Performances start at 7 p.m. 19+ Cash bar.

While admission is free, advanced registration is required at guelphmuseums.ca. Individual and family/social circle seating will be assigned, respecting physical distancing protocols. Please book tickets together with your family/social circle.

Sponsored by Beth and Ryan Waller, Real Estate Representatives

Links

Organizer

Guelph Museums

Guelph Museums consists of three heritage sites -- Guelph Civic Museum, McCrae House, and Locomotive 6167 -- where we explore our local histories through permanent and changing exhibitions, interactive galleries, as well as special events and engagement activities. Located in an historic building (established 1856), the Guelph Civic Museum is home to a collection of over 40,000 artifacts that bring our regional narratives, past and present, to life. McCrae House (designated 1966) is the birthplace of Lieutenant Colonel John McCrae (1872-1918), the First World War doctor, soldier and poet who penned “In Flanders Fields” (1915). Locomotive 6167 (built in 1940) is one of 203 “Northern” locomotives used by Canadian National Railways during the Second World War and for special excursion trips (1960-1964). Guelph is steeped in rich Indigenous history and home to many First Nations, Inuit and Métis People today. Guelph Museums is situated on the Between the Lakes Purchase, No. 3 Treaty territory. We respectfully acknowledge the Attawandaron, Anishinaabek, Haudenosaunee and Métis Peoples as the traditional stewards of the land, as well as our treaty partners the Mississauga of the Credit First Nation. We continue to strengthen our relationships with the Original Peoples of Turtle Island, as we move forward together in the search for collective truth and healing. Guelph Museums is committed to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s Calls to Action and we strive to initiate dialogues and create safe spaces for truth telling. These guiding principles inform all that we do at Guelph Museums.

Contact

Guelph Museums

museum@guelph.ca

519-836-1221