Maritime Heritage · Atlantic Canada
Where the harbour meets history
A record of the fishing communities, shipbuilding yards, and lighthouse stations that shaped Canada's coastal identity from the eighteenth century to the present day.
Lunenburg Harbour, Nova Scotia — a UNESCO World Heritage Site and one of the best-preserved colonial British settlements in North America.
Featured Articles
Fishing Communities
The Working Harbors of Nova Scotia's South Shore
From the dory fleets of the nineteenth century to the inshore fisheries of today, the settlements along Nova Scotia's South Shore carry a detailed record of life built on the sea.
Shipbuilding
The Wooden Shipbuilding Tradition of Lunenburg
The Smith & Rhuland shipyard produced some of the most celebrated wooden vessels in Canadian history, including the racing schooner Bluenose, launched in 1921.
Lighthouses
Heritage Lighthouse Protection in Canada
The Heritage Lighthouse Protection Act, which came into force in 2010, established a formal process for designating and preserving Canada's aging lighthouse structures.
About this publication
Village Harbor Journal covers the documented history of Canada's maritime coastal towns. The focus is on primary-source material, publicly available records, and the physical heritage — buildings, vessels, and navigational infrastructure — that still exists in these communities.
The coverage area centres on Atlantic Canada, with particular attention to Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick, and Newfoundland and Labrador, where the marine economy shaped settlement patterns from the earliest colonial period.
All articles draw from publicly available historical records, Parks Canada documentation, and academic sources. No commercial relationships influence editorial content.
Contact
For questions about content, corrections, or historical records, use the form to submit an inquiry. Responses are provided on a best-effort basis.