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2:06
Canada Vignettes - Bluenose 1921-1946
Canada Vignettes - Bluenose 1921-1946
Canada Vignettes - Bluenose 1921-1946
A short history of the Bluenose schooners. Production Agency: National Film Board of Canada http://www.nfb.ca Production Year: 1979 Canada Vignettes: Compila...
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106:18
Canada A Peoples History 15of17 Comfort and Fear 1946 1964 DVD Divx 6 AC3
Canada A Peoples History 15of17 Comfort and Fear 1946 1964 DVD Divx 6 AC3
Canada A Peoples History 15of17 Comfort and Fear 1946 1964 DVD Divx 6 AC3
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106:19
Canada A Peoples History 14of17 The Crucible 1940 1946 DVD Divx 6 AC3
Canada A Peoples History 14of17 The Crucible 1940 1946 DVD Divx 6 AC3
Canada A Peoples History 14of17 The Crucible 1940 1946 DVD Divx 6 AC3
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3:57
Anthony Eden In Canada (1946)
Anthony Eden In Canada (1946)
Anthony Eden In Canada (1946)
Unissued / Unused Material. Ottawa, Canada. British Conservative politician Anthony Eden makes a speech at the Chateau Laurier to Canadian politicians and bu...
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12:24
Sam's Flight of Passage (1946 Piper J3 Cub flown across Canada)
Sam's Flight of Passage (1946 Piper J3 Cub flown across Canada)
Sam's Flight of Passage (1946 Piper J3 Cub flown across Canada)
Watching this video, you will fly across Canada in 12 mins! This is a little video i put together of photos and video clips of my flight across canada in a 1...
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6:48
Northern Canada (1946)
Northern Canada (1946)
Northern Canada (1946)
Canada. Panning shot along Canadian snowbound landscape with several houses scattered around. Dogs sleigh moving past camera. Men picking up boxes of supplie...
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1:43
Pete's ole' Truck 1946 Ford Ucluelet to Tofino,BC, Canada
Pete's ole' Truck 1946 Ford Ucluelet to Tofino,BC, Canada
Pete's ole' Truck 1946 Ford Ucluelet to Tofino,BC, Canada
Pete's 46' Ford pick-up truck, crusin' from Ucluelet towards Tofino, BC Canada, Oct 9 2001. music by the Bottomfeeders. This is one of those moments in life,...
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2:22
Canada Shares Meat AKA Canadian Luncheon Meat Coupons (1946)
Canada Shares Meat AKA Canadian Luncheon Meat Coupons (1946)
Canada Shares Meat AKA Canadian Luncheon Meat Coupons (1946)
Unused / unissued material - dates and locations may be unclear / unknown. Canada - 1946. Canadian Housewives make voluntary donations of meat coupons in ord...
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12:45
On Canadian Wings - Ep 7. Fast Times for the Golden Jets 1946-1958
On Canadian Wings - Ep 7. Fast Times for the Golden Jets 1946-1958
On Canadian Wings - Ep 7. Fast Times for the Golden Jets 1946-1958
On Canadian Wings is a ten episode documentary on the history of the Royal Canadian Air Force. Starting from early 1888, Canadian airmen and machines have be...
-
8:38
Tom Litzer Videos, Canada including Ottawa, circa 1946 (1:3)
Tom Litzer Videos, Canada including Ottawa, circa 1946 (1:3)
Tom Litzer Videos, Canada including Ottawa, circa 1946 (1:3)
Digitized 16mm footage originally shot by Thomas W. Litzer Sr. of Wausau, Wisconsin, circa 1946, while visiting relatives north of Otter Lake, Quebec, and in Ottawa, Ontario.
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4:13
Mackenzie King At Canadian Cemetery (1946)
Mackenzie King At Canadian Cemetery (1946)
Mackenzie King At Canadian Cemetery (1946)
Unissued / unused material. Prime Minister of Canada William Mackenzie King pays tribute to Canadian soldiers who fell in the Dieppe raid in 1942 by visiting...
-
1:52
Economical, Technological, and Social Changes of Canada (1946-1990) [Part 5]
Economical, Technological, and Social Changes of Canada (1946-1990) [Part 5]
Economical, Technological, and Social Changes of Canada (1946-1990) [Part 5]
Part 5 of a history project presentation containing Canadian inventions from 1946 to 1990. Music is "Revolution" by The Beatles.
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2:57
Canadian Loan To France (1946)
Canadian Loan To France (1946)
Canadian Loan To France (1946)
Unissued / Unused material. Signing the Canadian loan to France in the Finance Minister's Office in Ottawa. Canada. MS J L Ilsey, Minister of Finance, signin...
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2:06
1946 Chevy Panel Truck
1946 Chevy Panel Truck
1946 Chevy Panel Truck
1946 Chevy Panel Truck Filmed in Duncan Vancouver Island British Columbia Canada Playlist link Below of Beverly Corners Show & Shine 2012 http://www.youtube....
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2:54
Royal Canadian Air Force Dakota DC-3 1946 Plane Crash Site Crowsnest Pass
Royal Canadian Air Force Dakota DC-3 1946 Plane Crash Site Crowsnest Pass
Royal Canadian Air Force Dakota DC-3 1946 Plane Crash Site Crowsnest Pass
Royal Canadian Air Force Dakota DC-3 Crashes in the Mountains of the Crowsnest Pass while on it's way from Comox, BC to Greenwood NS, January 19 1946.
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0:16
Fur Farm In Canada (1946)
Fur Farm In Canada (1946)
Fur Farm In Canada (1946)
Unissued / Unused material. Fur farming in Calgary, Alberta. Canada. LS Rockies. MS foxes running through trees in the Colpitts fur farm with snow on ground....
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77:49
Meet the Navy 1946 - REMEMBRANCE DAY MUSICAL
Meet the Navy 1946 - REMEMBRANCE DAY MUSICAL
Meet the Navy 1946 - REMEMBRANCE DAY MUSICAL
Hollywood Producer Louis H. Jackson along with British National Films of the UK relied on the Royal Canadian Navy for Talent, Crew and Travel Expenses. Toget...
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3:07
Signing Deal For Canadian Food (1946)
Signing Deal For Canadian Food (1946)
Signing Deal For Canadian Food (1946)
Unissued / Unused material. Canada. M/S Canadian Minister of Agriculture, James Garfield Gardiner, sat with Minister of Food J. Llewellen, they look over the...
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0:56
1946 Canadian Silver Dollar and 1949 Matthew Silver Dollar
1946 Canadian Silver Dollar and 1949 Matthew Silver Dollar
1946 Canadian Silver Dollar and 1949 Matthew Silver Dollar
A view of a 1946 Canadian Voyageur Dollar and a 1949 Commemorative John Cabot Matthew Dollar. Both are 23.33 grams each with 18.66 grams or 0.6 Troy Oz each ...
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10:53
la Pelleterie du Canada (l'Office National du Film du Canada 1946)
la Pelleterie du Canada (l'Office National du Film du Canada 1946)
la Pelleterie du Canada (l'Office National du Film du Canada 1946)
réalisé par Harry Campbell produit par Laurence Hyde mettant vedette mon arrière grand-père: Donat Champoux.
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0:08
Panoramic view of Montreal, Canada, 1945 or 1946. Archive film 91957
Panoramic view of Montreal, Canada, 1945 or 1946. Archive film 91957
Panoramic view of Montreal, Canada, 1945 or 1946. Archive film 91957
Panoramic view of Montreal, Canada, 1945 or 1946.
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2:50
Canadian Pacific steam trains 1946 07 Sudbury to Chapleau
Canadian Pacific steam trains 1946 07 Sudbury to Chapleau
Canadian Pacific steam trains 1946 07 Sudbury to Chapleau
By Joe Morin, filmed from observation car on eastward train.
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2:39
1946 Citroen BL Exterior and Interior - 2012 Concours d'Elegance du Chambly, Quebec, Canada
1946 Citroen BL Exterior and Interior - 2012 Concours d'Elegance du Chambly, Quebec, Canada
1946 Citroen BL Exterior and Interior - 2012 Concours d'Elegance du Chambly, Quebec, Canada
1946 Citroen BL Exterior and Interior - 2012 Concours d'Elegance du Chambly VAQ - Fort Chambly, Quebec, Canada Welcome to AutoMotoTube!!! On this channel you...
Canada Vignettes - Bluenose 1921-1946
A short history of the Bluenose schooners. Production Agency: National Film Board of Canada http://www.nfb.ca Production Year: 1979 Canada Vignettes: Compila...
wn.com/Canada Vignettes Bluenose 1921 1946
A short history of the Bluenose schooners. Production Agency: National Film Board of Canada http://www.nfb.ca Production Year: 1979 Canada Vignettes: Compila...
Anthony Eden In Canada (1946)
Unissued / Unused Material. Ottawa, Canada. British Conservative politician Anthony Eden makes a speech at the Chateau Laurier to Canadian politicians and bu...
wn.com/Anthony Eden In Canada (1946)
Unissued / Unused Material. Ottawa, Canada. British Conservative politician Anthony Eden makes a speech at the Chateau Laurier to Canadian politicians and bu...
Sam's Flight of Passage (1946 Piper J3 Cub flown across Canada)
Watching this video, you will fly across Canada in 12 mins! This is a little video i put together of photos and video clips of my flight across canada in a 1...
wn.com/Sam's Flight Of Passage (1946 Piper J3 Cub Flown Across Canada)
Watching this video, you will fly across Canada in 12 mins! This is a little video i put together of photos and video clips of my flight across canada in a 1...
- published: 03 Nov 2010
- views: 13060
-
author:
samdaigle92
Northern Canada (1946)
Canada. Panning shot along Canadian snowbound landscape with several houses scattered around. Dogs sleigh moving past camera. Men picking up boxes of supplie...
wn.com/Northern Canada (1946)
Canada. Panning shot along Canadian snowbound landscape with several houses scattered around. Dogs sleigh moving past camera. Men picking up boxes of supplie...
Pete's ole' Truck 1946 Ford Ucluelet to Tofino,BC, Canada
Pete's 46' Ford pick-up truck, crusin' from Ucluelet towards Tofino, BC Canada, Oct 9 2001. music by the Bottomfeeders. This is one of those moments in life,...
wn.com/Pete's Ole' Truck 1946 Ford Ucluelet To Tofino,Bc, Canada
Pete's 46' Ford pick-up truck, crusin' from Ucluelet towards Tofino, BC Canada, Oct 9 2001. music by the Bottomfeeders. This is one of those moments in life,...
Canada Shares Meat AKA Canadian Luncheon Meat Coupons (1946)
Unused / unissued material - dates and locations may be unclear / unknown. Canada - 1946. Canadian Housewives make voluntary donations of meat coupons in ord...
wn.com/Canada Shares Meat Aka Canadian Luncheon Meat Coupons (1946)
Unused / unissued material - dates and locations may be unclear / unknown. Canada - 1946. Canadian Housewives make voluntary donations of meat coupons in ord...
On Canadian Wings - Ep 7. Fast Times for the Golden Jets 1946-1958
On Canadian Wings is a ten episode documentary on the history of the Royal Canadian Air Force. Starting from early 1888, Canadian airmen and machines have be...
wn.com/On Canadian Wings Ep 7. Fast Times For The Golden Jets 1946 1958
On Canadian Wings is a ten episode documentary on the history of the Royal Canadian Air Force. Starting from early 1888, Canadian airmen and machines have be...
- published: 20 Jul 2014
- views: 2268
-
author:
canmildoc
Tom Litzer Videos, Canada including Ottawa, circa 1946 (1:3)
Digitized 16mm footage originally shot by Thomas W. Litzer Sr. of Wausau, Wisconsin, circa 1946, while visiting relatives north of Otter Lake, Quebec, and in Ottawa, Ontario.
wn.com/Tom Litzer Videos, Canada Including Ottawa, Circa 1946 (1 3)
Digitized 16mm footage originally shot by Thomas W. Litzer Sr. of Wausau, Wisconsin, circa 1946, while visiting relatives north of Otter Lake, Quebec, and in Ottawa, Ontario.
- published: 04 Apr 2015
- views: 2
Mackenzie King At Canadian Cemetery (1946)
Unissued / unused material. Prime Minister of Canada William Mackenzie King pays tribute to Canadian soldiers who fell in the Dieppe raid in 1942 by visiting...
wn.com/Mackenzie King At Canadian Cemetery (1946)
Unissued / unused material. Prime Minister of Canada William Mackenzie King pays tribute to Canadian soldiers who fell in the Dieppe raid in 1942 by visiting...
Economical, Technological, and Social Changes of Canada (1946-1990) [Part 5]
Part 5 of a history project presentation containing Canadian inventions from 1946 to 1990. Music is "Revolution" by The Beatles.
wn.com/Economical, Technological, And Social Changes Of Canada (1946 1990) Part 5
Part 5 of a history project presentation containing Canadian inventions from 1946 to 1990. Music is "Revolution" by The Beatles.
- published: 26 May 2009
- views: 238
-
author:
Rishi K
Canadian Loan To France (1946)
Unissued / Unused material. Signing the Canadian loan to France in the Finance Minister's Office in Ottawa. Canada. MS J L Ilsey, Minister of Finance, signin...
wn.com/Canadian Loan To France (1946)
Unissued / Unused material. Signing the Canadian loan to France in the Finance Minister's Office in Ottawa. Canada. MS J L Ilsey, Minister of Finance, signin...
1946 Chevy Panel Truck
1946 Chevy Panel Truck Filmed in Duncan Vancouver Island British Columbia Canada Playlist link Below of Beverly Corners Show & Shine 2012 http://www.youtube....
wn.com/1946 Chevy Panel Truck
1946 Chevy Panel Truck Filmed in Duncan Vancouver Island British Columbia Canada Playlist link Below of Beverly Corners Show & Shine 2012 http://www.youtube....
Royal Canadian Air Force Dakota DC-3 1946 Plane Crash Site Crowsnest Pass
Royal Canadian Air Force Dakota DC-3 Crashes in the Mountains of the Crowsnest Pass while on it's way from Comox, BC to Greenwood NS, January 19 1946.
wn.com/Royal Canadian Air Force Dakota DC 3 1946 Plane Crash Site Crowsnest Pass
Royal Canadian Air Force Dakota DC-3 Crashes in the Mountains of the Crowsnest Pass while on it's way from Comox, BC to Greenwood NS, January 19 1946.
Fur Farm In Canada (1946)
Unissued / Unused material. Fur farming in Calgary, Alberta. Canada. LS Rockies. MS foxes running through trees in the Colpitts fur farm with snow on ground....
wn.com/Fur Farm In Canada (1946)
Unissued / Unused material. Fur farming in Calgary, Alberta. Canada. LS Rockies. MS foxes running through trees in the Colpitts fur farm with snow on ground....
Meet the Navy 1946 - REMEMBRANCE DAY MUSICAL
Hollywood Producer Louis H. Jackson along with British National Films of the UK relied on the Royal Canadian Navy for Talent, Crew and Travel Expenses. Toget...
wn.com/Meet The Navy 1946 Remembrance Day Musical
Hollywood Producer Louis H. Jackson along with British National Films of the UK relied on the Royal Canadian Navy for Talent, Crew and Travel Expenses. Toget...
Signing Deal For Canadian Food (1946)
Unissued / Unused material. Canada. M/S Canadian Minister of Agriculture, James Garfield Gardiner, sat with Minister of Food J. Llewellen, they look over the...
wn.com/Signing Deal For Canadian Food (1946)
Unissued / Unused material. Canada. M/S Canadian Minister of Agriculture, James Garfield Gardiner, sat with Minister of Food J. Llewellen, they look over the...
1946 Canadian Silver Dollar and 1949 Matthew Silver Dollar
A view of a 1946 Canadian Voyageur Dollar and a 1949 Commemorative John Cabot Matthew Dollar. Both are 23.33 grams each with 18.66 grams or 0.6 Troy Oz each ...
wn.com/1946 Canadian Silver Dollar And 1949 Matthew Silver Dollar
A view of a 1946 Canadian Voyageur Dollar and a 1949 Commemorative John Cabot Matthew Dollar. Both are 23.33 grams each with 18.66 grams or 0.6 Troy Oz each ...
1946 Citroen BL Exterior and Interior - 2012 Concours d'Elegance du Chambly, Quebec, Canada
1946 Citroen BL Exterior and Interior - 2012 Concours d'Elegance du Chambly VAQ - Fort Chambly, Quebec, Canada Welcome to AutoMotoTube!!! On this channel you...
wn.com/1946 Citroen Bl Exterior And Interior 2012 Concours D'Elegance Du Chambly, Quebec, Canada
1946 Citroen BL Exterior and Interior - 2012 Concours d'Elegance du Chambly VAQ - Fort Chambly, Quebec, Canada Welcome to AutoMotoTube!!! On this channel you...
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51:34
Canada Travel Video Guide
Canada Travel Video Guide
Canada Travel Video Guide
Travel video about destination Canada.
The journey starts in Halifax and stretches right across Canada, from east to west and from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Halifax is situated in a deep, well-defined bay on the Atlantic coastline and has one of the most beautiful natural harbours in the world.Ville De Quebec is the capital of the likewise-named province of Canada. In this European-orientated city on the St. Laurence river, French is the main language. In 1608, Samuel De Champlain established it as a centre for the fur trade. The massive and world famous Chateau Frontenac is the city’s best known landmark. In Montreal, Canada’s second larg
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5:36
Montreal Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
Montreal Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
Montreal Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
http://www.expedia.com/Montreal-and-vicinity.d178288.Destination-Travel-Guides
Montreal is located in the middle of the St. Lawrence river in southwest Quebec. It is Canada’s second largest city and has the largest population of French speakers outside of Paris.
Here is a Canadian city with a French soul, a big heart and a very hip attitude. A city that enchants visitors with an old-world charm and an unpretentious love of good food and festivals.
The first Europeans to arrive here were from France and while the British later claimed ownership, an elegant sophistication lingers like a perfume.
Order un cafe, stroll the cobblestone stree
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4:34
Toronto Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
Toronto Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
Toronto Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
http://www.expedia.com/Toronto.d178314.Destination-Travel-Guides
Welcome to Toronto, the largest city in Canada and a hub of trade and culture.
“The City That Works” is full of a can-do spirit that is reflected in its buildings. From the famous CN Tower to the castle-like Casa Loma, there’s all sorts of eye candy for the architecture enthusiast. Your Toronto tour should include a trip to Edward Gardens in Hyde Park, or one of the many other green spaces located in the city. Take a bike ride along the trails, or enjoy a picnic while the local chipmunks look on. Don’t drop anything; they’ll grab it.
Your Toronto sightseeing can continue at t
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6:28
Vancouver, Canada Travel Guide - Must-See Attractions
Vancouver, Canada Travel Guide - Must-See Attractions
Vancouver, Canada Travel Guide - Must-See Attractions
http://bookinghunter.com
Vancouver is a coastal seaport city on the mainland of British Columbia, Canada. The 2011 census recorded 603,502 people in the city, making it the eighth largest Canadian municipality. Vancouver is one of the most ethnically and linguistically diverse cities in Canada; 52% of its residents do not speak English as their first language.
The most important places to visit in Vancouver are: Granville Island (a popular peninsula connected to Vancouver. With it's colorful market, it's a draw amongst locals and visitors alike), Stanley Park (Vancouver wouldn't be the same without Stanley Park, one of the great urban parks
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3:50
Niagara Falls Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
Niagara Falls Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
Niagara Falls Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
http://www.expedia.com/Niagara-Falls.d6023515.Destination-Travel-Guides
Niagara Falls has long been a symbol of natural power and beauty. Visit this hallmark of Canadian and American tourism and see its majesty from a helicopter, boat, or walkway.
Your Niagara Falls tour begins with a little bit of information: more than six million cubic feet of water spill over the sides per minute. You can explore three waterfalls, the most famous being the Canadian Horseshoe Falls, which are the widest and most powerful. Take a half-hour boat cruise and bask in the falls’ mist, or enter a special set of walkways behind the falls and see the strength and
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4:38
Toronto, Canada Travel Guide - "Go or No" Review
Toronto, Canada Travel Guide - "Go or No" Review
Toronto, Canada Travel Guide - "Go or No" Review
Tips for traveling Toronto, Canada with Andrea Feczko and Rachel Rudwall
Watch more @How2Travelers videos!
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=andreafeczko
Toronto is the capital of Ontario, and its most populated and multi-cultural city. But is it worth a trip?
- DO & SEE: CN Tower, EdgeWalk, Harbor Kayak or Boat, Sports Events, Blue Jays Baseball, Maple Leafs Hockey, Ripley's Aquarium, St. Lawrence Market
- EAT & DRINK: Poutine, Smoke's Poutinerie, Ceasar/Bloody Mary, T Bar at Chelsea Hotel, Old Town & Historic Distillery District for Beer, Sassafrass, Ninutik Maple Sugar and Syrup
- STAY: Hotel Le Germain Maple Leaf Squa
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4:06
Ottawa, Canada Travel Guide - Must-See Attractions
Ottawa, Canada Travel Guide - Must-See Attractions
Ottawa, Canada Travel Guide - Must-See Attractions
http://bookinghunter.com
Ottawa is the capital of Canada, and the fourth largest city in the country. Ottawa is situated on the south bank of the Ottawa River, and contains the mouths of the Rideau River and Rideau Canal. The older part of the city (including what remains of Bytown) is known as Lower Town, and occupies an area between the canal and the rivers.
The most important places to visit in Ottawa are: Parliament building (undoubtedly among the most beautiful parliament buildings in the world. It should be a must see for all visitors to Ottawa), Chateau Laurier (now part of a hotel. This famous Ottawa landmark retains much of its gra
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4:15
Ottawa Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
Ottawa Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
Ottawa Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
http://www.expedia.com/Ottawa.d178296.Destination-Travel-Guides
Welcome to Ottawa, Ontario, where you’ll find charming old-world buildings surrounded by picturesque natural beauty.
The first stop on an Ottawa tour should be the Rideau Canal. This waterway cuts the city in half, and it provides places for boating and paddleboarding during the summer. Visiting in winter? Not a problem—you can go ice skating along the Rideau when it ices over. On the south side of the river, you can see the Changing of the Guard Ceremony at Parliament Hill. A few blocks to the north is the National Gallery of Canada, a stunning glass-and-granite building ful
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4:54
Quebec Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
Quebec Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
Quebec Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
http://www.expedia.com/Quebec.d180017.Destination-Travel-Guides
When you arrive in Quebec, you’ll immediately notice its unique combination of old-world architecture, French elegance, and North American friendliness. Throw in a penchant for winter sports and a rich historical past, and you’ll have plenty to do in its capital, Quebec City.
The walled Upper Town is on the to-see list of most Quebec tours. This is part of the historic Old Quebec, first settled by Europeans in 1608. You’ll find a fantastic view of the St. Lawrence River, along with winding streets filled with historic buildings housing restaurants, pubs, and small shops.
Ventu
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18:38
Toronto Travel Guide | Canada | December 2014
Toronto Travel Guide | Canada | December 2014
Toronto Travel Guide | Canada | December 2014
The essential Toronto Travel Guide - Emily Agard tours us around the best places to eat, drink, shop, and play in Toronto.
What to do in Toronto in the month of December 2014.
There's so much to do in December this month! Emily tours you to the hippest places and events in the city. First stop in this month's adventure is the Christmas Market in Distillery District, a haven for great fashion finds and holiday spirit.
Get know to Michelangelo up close and personal through his exhibit at the Art Gallery of Ontario titled ‘Quest for Genius: Michelangelo’ which runs until January 2015. This exhibit showcases the trials and frustrations of M
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4:21
Toronto, Canada Travel Guide - Must-See Attractions
Toronto, Canada Travel Guide - Must-See Attractions
Toronto, Canada Travel Guide - Must-See Attractions
http://bookinghunter.com
Toronto is the largest city in Canada and the provincial capital of Ontario. It is located in Southern Ontario on the northwestern shore of Lake Ontario. The history of Toronto began in the late 18th century when the British Crown purchased its land from the Mississaugas of the New Credit. The British established a settlement there, called the Town of York, which its lieutenant governor, John Graves Simcoe, designated as the capital of Upper Canada. The city was ransacked in the Battle of York during the War of 1812. In 1834, York was incorporated as a city and renamed Toronto.
The most important places to visit in
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2:31
Travel Guide - Ottawa, Canada
Travel Guide - Ottawa, Canada
Travel Guide - Ottawa, Canada
http://www.WatchMojo.com presents... A handy travel guide for anyone planning on visiting the capital city of Canada, Ottawa.
Subscribe to our new dedicated WatchMojo Travel channel, http://www.youtube.com/user/WatchMojoTravel
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25:34
Montréal Travel Video Guide
Montréal Travel Video Guide
Montréal Travel Video Guide
Travel video about destination Montréal in Canada.
Canada's second largest city, Montreal is a fascinating blend of European charm and the American way of life.
In Vieux-Montreal, narrow lanes and small houses recall the past and also the lifestyle of the original settlers. In the old fire station at Place d'Youville - one of the oldest markets in Montreal -- is the Centre d'Histoire in which the 350 year cultural history of the city is on display, from the development of the Irokese Settlement, its prolific fur trade, and right up to today's shining, energetic Metropolis.
Although Montreal is located 1,600 kilometres from the open sea, it
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6:43
Travel Tips for Canada [SkyAndShoe]
Travel Tips for Canada [SkyAndShoe]
Travel Tips for Canada [SkyAndShoe]
Music: A by Got7 (Remix)
Heeello!
Hope this video was helpful to y'all. If you have any other video suggestions please leave it in the comments below.
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7:39
Travel Guide to Quebec City
Travel Guide to Quebec City
Travel Guide to Quebec City
In this travel video guide to Quebec City, I travel around Quebec City including its historic Old Town (a UNESCO World Heritage Site), stop in at the famed I...
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4:32
Calgary Alberta - Top Calgary Attractions | Travel Guide - Downtown Calgary - Canada Tourism
Calgary Alberta - Top Calgary Attractions | Travel Guide - Downtown Calgary - Canada Tourism
Calgary Alberta - Top Calgary Attractions | Travel Guide - Downtown Calgary - Canada Tourism
Visit Calgary Alberta Canada and Downtown Calgary in this Calgary travel guide. Enjoy top Calgary attractions, things to do in Calgary, places to see and places to visit in this Calgary tourism travel guide.
Discover Calgary best top 10 (top ten) attractions Travel Alberta and you'll never forget Calgary and other top attractions in this vacation tour video.
Don't forget to subscribe to my channel. For more travel stories and photographs, visit me at www.travelingwithkrushworth.com.
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12:38
30 Things to do in Montreal | Top Attractions Travel Guide
30 Things to do in Montreal | Top Attractions Travel Guide
30 Things to do in Montreal | Top Attractions Travel Guide
When visiting Montreal consider the following top 35 things to do in Montreal as a travel video guide for all of the best attractions in the city. There is no other city in Canada or the United States of America that can compare with Montreal in terms of its diversity and European flare. As a city of festivals (during the winter, fall, spring and summer) you're left with an inexhaustible amount of things to see and do in the city during all four seasons. Compared to other Canadian cities, Montreal offers world class arts, dining, architecture, entertainment, arts and festivals showcasing the best of Canadian culture and Canadian food. Eat
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3:51
Video Travel Guide: Canada - 10 Top Tourist Attractions
Video Travel Guide: Canada - 10 Top Tourist Attractions
Video Travel Guide: Canada - 10 Top Tourist Attractions
Copyright: Video created by Omegatours.vn
Omega Tours Co., LTD
Add: 176 Tran Phu Str - Hai Chau Dist - Da Nang City, Vietnam
Published by : Omegatours.vn
Website: http://Omegatours.vn
Disclaimer: All audio in this video, We was used free audio in Youtube Library.
About Us:
Omega Tours has now become a familiar brand for tourists from all over the world. We provide many kind of services with high quality to those who join daily typical tour with others, to travelers who want a customized tour, to those who want to get something special and have the travel experience they desire. We care about every customer’s demand and do our best on ever
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25:34
Toronto Travel Video Guide
Toronto Travel Video Guide
Toronto Travel Video Guide
Travel video about destination Toronto in Canada.
Toronto is a sensational city. Canada’s ‘secret’ capital: boomtown, show town and financial metropolis, clean, safe and with five million inhabitants.Gigantic skyscrapers and with a frenetic lifestyle, Toronto is where many Canadian banks and multi-national companies have their palatial offices of steel and glass built in what was once a waterfront wilderness. The old City Hall was built in 1899 in Victorian style and consists mainly of sandstone. Its Venetian clock tower faces an array of modern skyscrapers and almost opposite is the futuristic looking new City Hall, a symbol of the city’s c
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3:44
Niagara Falls, Canada Travel Guide - Must-See Attractions
Niagara Falls, Canada Travel Guide - Must-See Attractions
Niagara Falls, Canada Travel Guide - Must-See Attractions
http://bookinghunter.com
Niagara Falls is the collective name for three waterfalls that straddle the international border between Canada and the United States; more specifically, between the province of Ontario and the state of New York. They form the southern end of the Niagara Gorge.
From largest to smallest, the three waterfalls are the Horseshoe Falls, the American Falls and the Bridal Veil Falls. The Horseshoe Falls lie on the Canadian side and the American Falls on the American side, separated by Goat Island. The smaller Bridal Veil Falls are also located on the American side, separated from the other waterfalls by Luna Island. The int
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25:34
Vancouver Travel Video Guide
Vancouver Travel Video Guide
Vancouver Travel Video Guide
Travel video about destination Vancouver in Canada.
Vancouver is the third largest city in Canada and one of the most beautiful on the American continent, a dynamic metropolis set in a beautiful location with a temperate climate throughout the year.
Close to the harbor area, the city's skyscrapers have proliferated in recent years. The capital of the southwestern province of British Columbia has developed into an economic centre of renown.
The city's oldest buildings were built less than 100 years ago because the former wooden houses of old Vancouver were destroyed by fire. Several buildings reflect the origin of their inhabitants and are s
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22:25
✈Vancouver, Canada ►Vacation Travel Guide
✈Vancouver, Canada ►Vacation Travel Guide
✈Vancouver, Canada ►Vacation Travel Guide
Vancouver, Canada ▻Vacation Travel Guide.
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3:41
Montreal City Guide - Lonely Planet travel video
Montreal City Guide - Lonely Planet travel video
Montreal City Guide - Lonely Planet travel video
Learn more about Montreal: http://www.lonelyplanet.com/canada/montreal
Canada Travel Video Guide
Travel video about destination Canada.
The journey starts in Halifax and stretches right across Canada, from east to west and from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Halifax is situated in a deep, well-defined bay on the Atlantic coastline and has one of the most beautiful natural harbours in the world.Ville De Quebec is the capital of the likewise-named province of Canada. In this European-orientated city on the St. Laurence river, French is the main language. In 1608, Samuel De Champlain established it as a centre for the fur trade. The massive and world famous Chateau Frontenac is the city’s best known landmark. In Montreal, Canada’s second largest city, the massive Basilica, the Oratoire Saint-Joseph, is an important pilgrimage destination and in the charming French-style area of the city which is located between the harbour and the modern banking quarter, numerous old buildings have been restored. Although Montreal is located 1600 kilometres from the open sea, it owes its wealth to its waterways which stretch from the country’s interior, to the ocean. In Native American, Toronto means, ‘Meeting Place’ an accurate description for the capital of Ontario Province and Canada’s largest city, a multi-cultural city with giant skyscrapers and noisy streets. The CN Tower is the tallest free-standing building in the world and in less than a minute its lift ascends 335 metres to the top. Niagara Falls lies between Lake Erie and Lake Ontario on the Canadian-American border. A trip on the ‘Maid Of The Mist’ is a magnificent experience where the tremendous power of the water is awesome. Three times a week, the Canadian, with its 30 wagons, 2 locomotives and total length of more than a kilometre, winds its way through the Rocky Mountains the water from which accumulates from mountain glaciers and flows into three oceans: the Atlantic, the Pacific and the Arctic. The capital of the south west province of British Columbia, Vancouver, is located beside the Pacific Ocean and is the third largest city in Canada and one of the most beautiful on the North American continent. A fitting final destination for a tour of Canada’s wonderworld of magnificent contrasts.
wn.com/Canada Travel Video Guide
Travel video about destination Canada.
The journey starts in Halifax and stretches right across Canada, from east to west and from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Halifax is situated in a deep, well-defined bay on the Atlantic coastline and has one of the most beautiful natural harbours in the world.Ville De Quebec is the capital of the likewise-named province of Canada. In this European-orientated city on the St. Laurence river, French is the main language. In 1608, Samuel De Champlain established it as a centre for the fur trade. The massive and world famous Chateau Frontenac is the city’s best known landmark. In Montreal, Canada’s second largest city, the massive Basilica, the Oratoire Saint-Joseph, is an important pilgrimage destination and in the charming French-style area of the city which is located between the harbour and the modern banking quarter, numerous old buildings have been restored. Although Montreal is located 1600 kilometres from the open sea, it owes its wealth to its waterways which stretch from the country’s interior, to the ocean. In Native American, Toronto means, ‘Meeting Place’ an accurate description for the capital of Ontario Province and Canada’s largest city, a multi-cultural city with giant skyscrapers and noisy streets. The CN Tower is the tallest free-standing building in the world and in less than a minute its lift ascends 335 metres to the top. Niagara Falls lies between Lake Erie and Lake Ontario on the Canadian-American border. A trip on the ‘Maid Of The Mist’ is a magnificent experience where the tremendous power of the water is awesome. Three times a week, the Canadian, with its 30 wagons, 2 locomotives and total length of more than a kilometre, winds its way through the Rocky Mountains the water from which accumulates from mountain glaciers and flows into three oceans: the Atlantic, the Pacific and the Arctic. The capital of the south west province of British Columbia, Vancouver, is located beside the Pacific Ocean and is the third largest city in Canada and one of the most beautiful on the North American continent. A fitting final destination for a tour of Canada’s wonderworld of magnificent contrasts.
- published: 14 Aug 2013
- views: 78047
Montreal Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
http://www.expedia.com/Montreal-and-vicinity.d178288.Destination-Travel-Guides
Montreal is located in the middle of the St. Lawrence river in southwest Quebec. It is Canada’s second largest city and has the largest population of French speakers outside of Paris.
Here is a Canadian city with a French soul, a big heart and a very hip attitude. A city that enchants visitors with an old-world charm and an unpretentious love of good food and festivals.
The first Europeans to arrive here were from France and while the British later claimed ownership, an elegant sophistication lingers like a perfume.
Order un cafe, stroll the cobblestone streets of the Old City and soak up the history and architecture of the area. Some of the buildings here date back to the 17th century, making it one of the oldest urban areas in North America.
Discover Montreal’s famous food scene. Try Poutine - or, follow your nose to one of the city’s many wood fired ovens and try a real Montreal bagel.
Montreal is also thoroughly hip. The city hosts more than 100 festivals throughout the year but even if you happen to be here between events, there is always something cool going on.
And of course, you can’t leave town without a trip to La Ronde, the city’s beloved amusement park.
As the sun sets on your adventures, head back downtown and discover Montreal after dark. Enjoy cool jazz, smoky blues or wind down with something a little more quirky.
European…Canadian….traditional…. cutting edge. Montreal is all of these things but it is also so much more.
With its french past and funky present, Montreal is a city with a certain je ne sais quoi. A flavour and a feeling that is hard to define but very easy to love.
wn.com/Montreal Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
http://www.expedia.com/Montreal-and-vicinity.d178288.Destination-Travel-Guides
Montreal is located in the middle of the St. Lawrence river in southwest Quebec. It is Canada’s second largest city and has the largest population of French speakers outside of Paris.
Here is a Canadian city with a French soul, a big heart and a very hip attitude. A city that enchants visitors with an old-world charm and an unpretentious love of good food and festivals.
The first Europeans to arrive here were from France and while the British later claimed ownership, an elegant sophistication lingers like a perfume.
Order un cafe, stroll the cobblestone streets of the Old City and soak up the history and architecture of the area. Some of the buildings here date back to the 17th century, making it one of the oldest urban areas in North America.
Discover Montreal’s famous food scene. Try Poutine - or, follow your nose to one of the city’s many wood fired ovens and try a real Montreal bagel.
Montreal is also thoroughly hip. The city hosts more than 100 festivals throughout the year but even if you happen to be here between events, there is always something cool going on.
And of course, you can’t leave town without a trip to La Ronde, the city’s beloved amusement park.
As the sun sets on your adventures, head back downtown and discover Montreal after dark. Enjoy cool jazz, smoky blues or wind down with something a little more quirky.
European…Canadian….traditional…. cutting edge. Montreal is all of these things but it is also so much more.
With its french past and funky present, Montreal is a city with a certain je ne sais quoi. A flavour and a feeling that is hard to define but very easy to love.
- published: 25 Feb 2015
- views: 126
Toronto Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
http://www.expedia.com/Toronto.d178314.Destination-Travel-Guides
Welcome to Toronto, the largest city in Canada and a hub of trade and culture.
“The City That Works” is full of a can-do spirit that is reflected in its buildings. From the famous CN Tower to the castle-like Casa Loma, there’s all sorts of eye candy for the architecture enthusiast. Your Toronto tour should include a trip to Edward Gardens in Hyde Park, or one of the many other green spaces located in the city. Take a bike ride along the trails, or enjoy a picnic while the local chipmunks look on. Don’t drop anything; they’ll grab it.
Your Toronto sightseeing can continue at the Harborfront Center. Go for a walk along the marina, or grab a pint at a brewhouse. And no trip to Toronto is complete without a visit to the Hockey Hall of Fame, so make sure you’ve got your team paraphernalia in order before you venture inside. Looking for shopping? You’ll find the Underground City and Kensington Market ready to welcome you and your credit card – or several credit cards, as the case may be. After a day of madcap purchasing, why not stock up on fresh, healthy food at the St. Lawrence Market? You’ll have worked up quite an appetite for delicious local produce.
Before you leave, head to Niagara Falls and take in the spectacle of nature’s power. You’ll never forget the sight and sound of all that water pouring over the falls, nor will you ever forget your trip to Toronto.
Visit our Toronto travel guide page for more information or to plan your next vacation!
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wn.com/Toronto Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
http://www.expedia.com/Toronto.d178314.Destination-Travel-Guides
Welcome to Toronto, the largest city in Canada and a hub of trade and culture.
“The City That Works” is full of a can-do spirit that is reflected in its buildings. From the famous CN Tower to the castle-like Casa Loma, there’s all sorts of eye candy for the architecture enthusiast. Your Toronto tour should include a trip to Edward Gardens in Hyde Park, or one of the many other green spaces located in the city. Take a bike ride along the trails, or enjoy a picnic while the local chipmunks look on. Don’t drop anything; they’ll grab it.
Your Toronto sightseeing can continue at the Harborfront Center. Go for a walk along the marina, or grab a pint at a brewhouse. And no trip to Toronto is complete without a visit to the Hockey Hall of Fame, so make sure you’ve got your team paraphernalia in order before you venture inside. Looking for shopping? You’ll find the Underground City and Kensington Market ready to welcome you and your credit card – or several credit cards, as the case may be. After a day of madcap purchasing, why not stock up on fresh, healthy food at the St. Lawrence Market? You’ll have worked up quite an appetite for delicious local produce.
Before you leave, head to Niagara Falls and take in the spectacle of nature’s power. You’ll never forget the sight and sound of all that water pouring over the falls, nor will you ever forget your trip to Toronto.
Visit our Toronto travel guide page for more information or to plan your next vacation!
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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- published: 09 Oct 2013
- views: 116714
Vancouver, Canada Travel Guide - Must-See Attractions
http://bookinghunter.com
Vancouver is a coastal seaport city on the mainland of British Columbia, Canada. The 2011 census recorded 603,502 people in the city, making it the eighth largest Canadian municipality. Vancouver is one of the most ethnically and linguistically diverse cities in Canada; 52% of its residents do not speak English as their first language.
The most important places to visit in Vancouver are: Granville Island (a popular peninsula connected to Vancouver. With it's colorful market, it's a draw amongst locals and visitors alike), Stanley Park (Vancouver wouldn't be the same without Stanley Park, one of the great urban parks. It's a perfect city escape), Chinatown (the second largest Chinatown in North America after San Francisco. It has many unique, as well as traditional shops), Gastown (a national historic site. Explore the cobbled streets, shopping, dining and unique architecture), Grouse Mountain (overlooking Vancouver city, this recreational has winter skiing and even an excellent wildlife refuge) and many more.
This video offers a lot of tips to help you plan the perfect vacation. If you want to save time and money, the most important Vancouver travel tip is to compare prices before booking a hotel room or a flight. You can do this for free on http://bookinghunter.com, a site that searches through hundreds of other travel websites in real time for the best travel deals available.
wn.com/Vancouver, Canada Travel Guide Must See Attractions
http://bookinghunter.com
Vancouver is a coastal seaport city on the mainland of British Columbia, Canada. The 2011 census recorded 603,502 people in the city, making it the eighth largest Canadian municipality. Vancouver is one of the most ethnically and linguistically diverse cities in Canada; 52% of its residents do not speak English as their first language.
The most important places to visit in Vancouver are: Granville Island (a popular peninsula connected to Vancouver. With it's colorful market, it's a draw amongst locals and visitors alike), Stanley Park (Vancouver wouldn't be the same without Stanley Park, one of the great urban parks. It's a perfect city escape), Chinatown (the second largest Chinatown in North America after San Francisco. It has many unique, as well as traditional shops), Gastown (a national historic site. Explore the cobbled streets, shopping, dining and unique architecture), Grouse Mountain (overlooking Vancouver city, this recreational has winter skiing and even an excellent wildlife refuge) and many more.
This video offers a lot of tips to help you plan the perfect vacation. If you want to save time and money, the most important Vancouver travel tip is to compare prices before booking a hotel room or a flight. You can do this for free on http://bookinghunter.com, a site that searches through hundreds of other travel websites in real time for the best travel deals available.
- published: 23 Aug 2013
- views: 195372
Niagara Falls Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
http://www.expedia.com/Niagara-Falls.d6023515.Destination-Travel-Guides
Niagara Falls has long been a symbol of natural power and beauty. Visit this hallmark of Canadian and American tourism and see its majesty from a helicopter, boat, or walkway.
Your Niagara Falls tour begins with a little bit of information: more than six million cubic feet of water spill over the sides per minute. You can explore three waterfalls, the most famous being the Canadian Horseshoe Falls, which are the widest and most powerful. Take a half-hour boat cruise and bask in the falls’ mist, or enter a special set of walkways behind the falls and see the strength and might of the rushing water right in front of you.
No Niagara Falls sightseeing trip is complete without exploring the Botanical Gardens or Niagara on the Lake. The latter attraction offers boutiques, eateries, and picturesque views of the water you won’t soon forget.
Visit our Niagara Falls travel guide page for more information or to plan your next vacation!
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wn.com/Niagara Falls Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
http://www.expedia.com/Niagara-Falls.d6023515.Destination-Travel-Guides
Niagara Falls has long been a symbol of natural power and beauty. Visit this hallmark of Canadian and American tourism and see its majesty from a helicopter, boat, or walkway.
Your Niagara Falls tour begins with a little bit of information: more than six million cubic feet of water spill over the sides per minute. You can explore three waterfalls, the most famous being the Canadian Horseshoe Falls, which are the widest and most powerful. Take a half-hour boat cruise and bask in the falls’ mist, or enter a special set of walkways behind the falls and see the strength and might of the rushing water right in front of you.
No Niagara Falls sightseeing trip is complete without exploring the Botanical Gardens or Niagara on the Lake. The latter attraction offers boutiques, eateries, and picturesque views of the water you won’t soon forget.
Visit our Niagara Falls travel guide page for more information or to plan your next vacation!
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Follow us on our travel blog, Viewfinder:
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- published: 04 Dec 2013
- views: 70736
Toronto, Canada Travel Guide - "Go or No" Review
Tips for traveling Toronto, Canada with Andrea Feczko and Rachel Rudwall
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Toronto is the capital of Ontario, and its most populated and multi-cultural city. But is it worth a trip?
- DO & SEE: CN Tower, EdgeWalk, Harbor Kayak or Boat, Sports Events, Blue Jays Baseball, Maple Leafs Hockey, Ripley's Aquarium, St. Lawrence Market
- EAT & DRINK: Poutine, Smoke's Poutinerie, Ceasar/Bloody Mary, T Bar at Chelsea Hotel, Old Town & Historic Distillery District for Beer, Sassafrass, Ninutik Maple Sugar and Syrup
- STAY: Hotel Le Germain Maple Leaf Square, Chelsea Hotel
- SHOP: Yorkville, Holt Renfrew, Kensington Market
- BONUS: Drake! Jim Carey! Deadmau5! Tim Horton's! Bunnies! Water slides! Montreal! Vancouver!
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wn.com/Toronto, Canada Travel Guide Go Or No Review
Tips for traveling Toronto, Canada with Andrea Feczko and Rachel Rudwall
Watch more @How2Travelers videos!
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=andreafeczko
Toronto is the capital of Ontario, and its most populated and multi-cultural city. But is it worth a trip?
- DO & SEE: CN Tower, EdgeWalk, Harbor Kayak or Boat, Sports Events, Blue Jays Baseball, Maple Leafs Hockey, Ripley's Aquarium, St. Lawrence Market
- EAT & DRINK: Poutine, Smoke's Poutinerie, Ceasar/Bloody Mary, T Bar at Chelsea Hotel, Old Town & Historic Distillery District for Beer, Sassafrass, Ninutik Maple Sugar and Syrup
- STAY: Hotel Le Germain Maple Leaf Square, Chelsea Hotel
- SHOP: Yorkville, Holt Renfrew, Kensington Market
- BONUS: Drake! Jim Carey! Deadmau5! Tim Horton's! Bunnies! Water slides! Montreal! Vancouver!
Follow How 2 Travelers on Twitter!
http://www.twitter.com/How2Travelers
http://www.twitter.com/RachelRoams
http://www.twitter.com/AndreaFeczko
Like us on Facebook!
https://www.facebook.com/How2Travelers
http://www.facebook.com/RachelRoams
http://www.facebook.com/AndreaFeczko
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- published: 03 Sep 2015
- views: 3466
Ottawa, Canada Travel Guide - Must-See Attractions
http://bookinghunter.com
Ottawa is the capital of Canada, and the fourth largest city in the country. Ottawa is situated on the south bank of the Ottawa River, and contains the mouths of the Rideau River and Rideau Canal. The older part of the city (including what remains of Bytown) is known as Lower Town, and occupies an area between the canal and the rivers.
The most important places to visit in Ottawa are: Parliament building (undoubtedly among the most beautiful parliament buildings in the world. It should be a must see for all visitors to Ottawa), Chateau Laurier (now part of a hotel. This famous Ottawa landmark retains much of its grandeur, inside you'll find luxurious settings and ornate decor), Supreme Court of Canada (take a tour of this important building. You can even attend the hearings here), Notre Dame Basilica (constructed in the 19th century this beautiful church is among the surviving churches of Ottawa), Rideau Canal (it's a UNESCO world heritage site. The canals offers excellent views of the city. In winter time, it's transformed into a massive skating rink) and many more.
This video offers a lot of tips to help you plan the perfect vacation. If you want to save time and money, the most important Ottawa travel tip is to compare prices before booking a hotel room or a flight. You can do this for free on http://bookinghunter.com, a site that searches through hundreds of other travel websites in real time for the best travel deals available.
wn.com/Ottawa, Canada Travel Guide Must See Attractions
http://bookinghunter.com
Ottawa is the capital of Canada, and the fourth largest city in the country. Ottawa is situated on the south bank of the Ottawa River, and contains the mouths of the Rideau River and Rideau Canal. The older part of the city (including what remains of Bytown) is known as Lower Town, and occupies an area between the canal and the rivers.
The most important places to visit in Ottawa are: Parliament building (undoubtedly among the most beautiful parliament buildings in the world. It should be a must see for all visitors to Ottawa), Chateau Laurier (now part of a hotel. This famous Ottawa landmark retains much of its grandeur, inside you'll find luxurious settings and ornate decor), Supreme Court of Canada (take a tour of this important building. You can even attend the hearings here), Notre Dame Basilica (constructed in the 19th century this beautiful church is among the surviving churches of Ottawa), Rideau Canal (it's a UNESCO world heritage site. The canals offers excellent views of the city. In winter time, it's transformed into a massive skating rink) and many more.
This video offers a lot of tips to help you plan the perfect vacation. If you want to save time and money, the most important Ottawa travel tip is to compare prices before booking a hotel room or a flight. You can do this for free on http://bookinghunter.com, a site that searches through hundreds of other travel websites in real time for the best travel deals available.
- published: 21 Feb 2014
- views: 5921
Ottawa Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
http://www.expedia.com/Ottawa.d178296.Destination-Travel-Guides
Welcome to Ottawa, Ontario, where you’ll find charming old-world buildings surrounded by picturesque natural beauty.
The first stop on an Ottawa tour should be the Rideau Canal. This waterway cuts the city in half, and it provides places for boating and paddleboarding during the summer. Visiting in winter? Not a problem—you can go ice skating along the Rideau when it ices over. On the south side of the river, you can see the Changing of the Guard Ceremony at Parliament Hill. A few blocks to the north is the National Gallery of Canada, a stunning glass-and-granite building full of art from Canadian, European, and other North American artists.
You’ll be hungry after all this walking around, so head to ByWard Market. If you see beavertails, don’t worry; they’re a pastry, not part of an actual beaver—and they’re delicious. ByWard Market also has some of the best fresh produce you’ll ever taste, so stock up on fruits and vegetables while you’re there.
After sampling the fare at ByWard Market, cross the river to visit the Canadian Museum of History in Quebec. This is where you can tour recreations of Old Canada: explore 1800s storefronts, wander into log cabins, and learn about the First Nations people who inhabited Canada for thousands of years prior to European settlement.
Round out your trip with a venture to Gatineau Park, where you can relax by the lake or take tea in the MacKenzie King estate.
What’s your favorite part of Ottawa?
Visit our Ottawa travel guide page for more information or to plan your next vacation!
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wn.com/Ottawa Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
http://www.expedia.com/Ottawa.d178296.Destination-Travel-Guides
Welcome to Ottawa, Ontario, where you’ll find charming old-world buildings surrounded by picturesque natural beauty.
The first stop on an Ottawa tour should be the Rideau Canal. This waterway cuts the city in half, and it provides places for boating and paddleboarding during the summer. Visiting in winter? Not a problem—you can go ice skating along the Rideau when it ices over. On the south side of the river, you can see the Changing of the Guard Ceremony at Parliament Hill. A few blocks to the north is the National Gallery of Canada, a stunning glass-and-granite building full of art from Canadian, European, and other North American artists.
You’ll be hungry after all this walking around, so head to ByWard Market. If you see beavertails, don’t worry; they’re a pastry, not part of an actual beaver—and they’re delicious. ByWard Market also has some of the best fresh produce you’ll ever taste, so stock up on fruits and vegetables while you’re there.
After sampling the fare at ByWard Market, cross the river to visit the Canadian Museum of History in Quebec. This is where you can tour recreations of Old Canada: explore 1800s storefronts, wander into log cabins, and learn about the First Nations people who inhabited Canada for thousands of years prior to European settlement.
Round out your trip with a venture to Gatineau Park, where you can relax by the lake or take tea in the MacKenzie King estate.
What’s your favorite part of Ottawa?
Visit our Ottawa travel guide page for more information or to plan your next vacation!
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- published: 20 Feb 2014
- views: 56396
Quebec Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
http://www.expedia.com/Quebec.d180017.Destination-Travel-Guides
When you arrive in Quebec, you’ll immediately notice its unique combination of old-world architecture, French elegance, and North American friendliness. Throw in a penchant for winter sports and a rich historical past, and you’ll have plenty to do in its capital, Quebec City.
The walled Upper Town is on the to-see list of most Quebec tours. This is part of the historic Old Quebec, first settled by Europeans in 1608. You’ll find a fantastic view of the St. Lawrence River, along with winding streets filled with historic buildings housing restaurants, pubs, and small shops.
Venture out into the oldest retail center on the continent and enjoy a croissant and a coffee, then go for a bike ride along the Old Port. This used to be one of the world’s largest shipping thoroughfares, though now it’s known primarily as a cruise ship destination.
If you’re in the mood to meet some of the local wildlife, head to the Quebec Aquarium, where you can see polar bears, seals, and other animals that inhabit the Arctic. Feeling like reaching great heights? Stop by Montmorency Falls, where you can hike up to an observation point and marvel at the beauty of the natural landscape.
All this walking and hiking will make you hungry, so at dusk, visit Rue St. Paul’s many restaurants to pick out the perfect place for dinner. The city is buzzing late into the night; if you’re up for dancing, a drink, or a cup of coffee after dinner, you’ll be in good company.
What part of Quebec do you want to see?
Visit our Quebec travel guide page for more information or to plan your next vacation!
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wn.com/Quebec Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
http://www.expedia.com/Quebec.d180017.Destination-Travel-Guides
When you arrive in Quebec, you’ll immediately notice its unique combination of old-world architecture, French elegance, and North American friendliness. Throw in a penchant for winter sports and a rich historical past, and you’ll have plenty to do in its capital, Quebec City.
The walled Upper Town is on the to-see list of most Quebec tours. This is part of the historic Old Quebec, first settled by Europeans in 1608. You’ll find a fantastic view of the St. Lawrence River, along with winding streets filled with historic buildings housing restaurants, pubs, and small shops.
Venture out into the oldest retail center on the continent and enjoy a croissant and a coffee, then go for a bike ride along the Old Port. This used to be one of the world’s largest shipping thoroughfares, though now it’s known primarily as a cruise ship destination.
If you’re in the mood to meet some of the local wildlife, head to the Quebec Aquarium, where you can see polar bears, seals, and other animals that inhabit the Arctic. Feeling like reaching great heights? Stop by Montmorency Falls, where you can hike up to an observation point and marvel at the beauty of the natural landscape.
All this walking and hiking will make you hungry, so at dusk, visit Rue St. Paul’s many restaurants to pick out the perfect place for dinner. The city is buzzing late into the night; if you’re up for dancing, a drink, or a cup of coffee after dinner, you’ll be in good company.
What part of Quebec do you want to see?
Visit our Quebec travel guide page for more information or to plan your next vacation!
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- published: 11 Apr 2014
- views: 54721
Toronto Travel Guide | Canada | December 2014
The essential Toronto Travel Guide - Emily Agard tours us around the best places to eat, drink, shop, and play in Toronto.
What to do in Toronto in the month of December 2014.
There's so much to do in December this month! Emily tours you to the hippest places and events in the city. First stop in this month's adventure is the Christmas Market in Distillery District, a haven for great fashion finds and holiday spirit.
Get know to Michelangelo up close and personal through his exhibit at the Art Gallery of Ontario titled ‘Quest for Genius: Michelangelo’ which runs until January 2015. This exhibit showcases the trials and frustrations of Michelangelo which ultimately led to genius.
There are definitely lots of things to do and see on your next visit to Toronto! If you're in town this month of December catch:
• Toronto Christmas Market — Nov 28 — December 21
• Quest for Genius: Michelangelo —18 October - 11 January
• New Years Eve Celebrations at Nathan Phillip Square — Midnight New Years Eve
• The Nutcracker - 14 December - 4 January
While in Toronto, make sure you check out:
• CN Tower Edgewalk
• Toronto Zoo
• Allen Gardens
• Casaloma
• Hockey Hall of Fame
• Art Gallery of Ontario
• Royal Ontario Museum
• Toronto Islands
• Ripley’s Aquarium of Canada
While at the CN Tower, check out the 360 restaurant for dinner with a great views of the city, or the AGO Frank restaurant for an artistic side to dinner.
There are a host of Museums in Toronto such as the Art Gallery of Ontario and the Royal Ontario Museum.
Want to try something different, check out EdgeWalk. Walk and lean above the clouds on the top of the CN Tower. At 152 stories high, this is something you need to check out.
You can't go past Eaton Centre, Bloor Street, and Queen Street when it comes to shopping in Toronto and, of course, Yorkville Road in general.
Check out http://www.vaycaytv.com or explore our YouTube Channel for more information. Have a great stay in Toronto!
Follow INSIDE Toronto host, Emily Agard on twitter @emilyagard and Facebook at facebook.com/emilyagard
wn.com/Toronto Travel Guide | Canada | December 2014
The essential Toronto Travel Guide - Emily Agard tours us around the best places to eat, drink, shop, and play in Toronto.
What to do in Toronto in the month of December 2014.
There's so much to do in December this month! Emily tours you to the hippest places and events in the city. First stop in this month's adventure is the Christmas Market in Distillery District, a haven for great fashion finds and holiday spirit.
Get know to Michelangelo up close and personal through his exhibit at the Art Gallery of Ontario titled ‘Quest for Genius: Michelangelo’ which runs until January 2015. This exhibit showcases the trials and frustrations of Michelangelo which ultimately led to genius.
There are definitely lots of things to do and see on your next visit to Toronto! If you're in town this month of December catch:
• Toronto Christmas Market — Nov 28 — December 21
• Quest for Genius: Michelangelo —18 October - 11 January
• New Years Eve Celebrations at Nathan Phillip Square — Midnight New Years Eve
• The Nutcracker - 14 December - 4 January
While in Toronto, make sure you check out:
• CN Tower Edgewalk
• Toronto Zoo
• Allen Gardens
• Casaloma
• Hockey Hall of Fame
• Art Gallery of Ontario
• Royal Ontario Museum
• Toronto Islands
• Ripley’s Aquarium of Canada
While at the CN Tower, check out the 360 restaurant for dinner with a great views of the city, or the AGO Frank restaurant for an artistic side to dinner.
There are a host of Museums in Toronto such as the Art Gallery of Ontario and the Royal Ontario Museum.
Want to try something different, check out EdgeWalk. Walk and lean above the clouds on the top of the CN Tower. At 152 stories high, this is something you need to check out.
You can't go past Eaton Centre, Bloor Street, and Queen Street when it comes to shopping in Toronto and, of course, Yorkville Road in general.
Check out http://www.vaycaytv.com or explore our YouTube Channel for more information. Have a great stay in Toronto!
Follow INSIDE Toronto host, Emily Agard on twitter @emilyagard and Facebook at facebook.com/emilyagard
- published: 01 Dec 2014
- views: 1067
Toronto, Canada Travel Guide - Must-See Attractions
http://bookinghunter.com
Toronto is the largest city in Canada and the provincial capital of Ontario. It is located in Southern Ontario on the northwestern shore of Lake Ontario. The history of Toronto began in the late 18th century when the British Crown purchased its land from the Mississaugas of the New Credit. The British established a settlement there, called the Town of York, which its lieutenant governor, John Graves Simcoe, designated as the capital of Upper Canada. The city was ransacked in the Battle of York during the War of 1812. In 1834, York was incorporated as a city and renamed Toronto.
The most important places to visit in Toronto are: Niagara Falls (located an hour and a half away from Toronto, awe-inspiring Niagara Falls attracts visitors from around the world), CN Tower (dominating Toronto's skyline, this communication tower stands at a staggering 1,815 feet. Spectacular Toronto views await you at the top), Old City Hall (an important historic landmark of Toronto. It too nearly 20 years to complete its construction in 1899), Royal Ontario Museum (Canada's largest museum of world culture. You can see impressive artifacts and archeological objects from around the world), Casa Loma (a magnificent castle on a hill in the north end of Toronto. Visitors are treated well in restored rooms and gardens) and many more.
This video offers a lot of tips to help you plan the perfect vacation. If you want to save time and money, the most important Toronto travel tip is to compare prices before booking a hotel room or a flight. You can do this for free on http://bookinghunter.com, a site that searches through hundreds of other travel websites in real time for the best travel deals available.
wn.com/Toronto, Canada Travel Guide Must See Attractions
http://bookinghunter.com
Toronto is the largest city in Canada and the provincial capital of Ontario. It is located in Southern Ontario on the northwestern shore of Lake Ontario. The history of Toronto began in the late 18th century when the British Crown purchased its land from the Mississaugas of the New Credit. The British established a settlement there, called the Town of York, which its lieutenant governor, John Graves Simcoe, designated as the capital of Upper Canada. The city was ransacked in the Battle of York during the War of 1812. In 1834, York was incorporated as a city and renamed Toronto.
The most important places to visit in Toronto are: Niagara Falls (located an hour and a half away from Toronto, awe-inspiring Niagara Falls attracts visitors from around the world), CN Tower (dominating Toronto's skyline, this communication tower stands at a staggering 1,815 feet. Spectacular Toronto views await you at the top), Old City Hall (an important historic landmark of Toronto. It too nearly 20 years to complete its construction in 1899), Royal Ontario Museum (Canada's largest museum of world culture. You can see impressive artifacts and archeological objects from around the world), Casa Loma (a magnificent castle on a hill in the north end of Toronto. Visitors are treated well in restored rooms and gardens) and many more.
This video offers a lot of tips to help you plan the perfect vacation. If you want to save time and money, the most important Toronto travel tip is to compare prices before booking a hotel room or a flight. You can do this for free on http://bookinghunter.com, a site that searches through hundreds of other travel websites in real time for the best travel deals available.
- published: 11 Oct 2013
- views: 93910
Travel Guide - Ottawa, Canada
http://www.WatchMojo.com presents... A handy travel guide for anyone planning on visiting the capital city of Canada, Ottawa.
Subscribe to our new dedicated WatchMojo Travel channel, http://www.youtube.com/user/WatchMojoTravel
wn.com/Travel Guide Ottawa, Canada
http://www.WatchMojo.com presents... A handy travel guide for anyone planning on visiting the capital city of Canada, Ottawa.
Subscribe to our new dedicated WatchMojo Travel channel, http://www.youtube.com/user/WatchMojoTravel
- published: 18 Aug 2008
- views: 179117
Montréal Travel Video Guide
Travel video about destination Montréal in Canada.
Canada's second largest city, Montreal is a fascinating blend of European charm and the American way of life.
In Vieux-Montreal, narrow lanes and small houses recall the past and also the lifestyle of the original settlers. In the old fire station at Place d'Youville - one of the oldest markets in Montreal -- is the Centre d'Histoire in which the 350 year cultural history of the city is on display, from the development of the Irokese Settlement, its prolific fur trade, and right up to today's shining, energetic Metropolis.
Although Montreal is located 1,600 kilometres from the open sea, it owes its wealth to its waterways which stretch from the country's interior, to the ocean. A trip on the Saint Lawrence River with the pleasure boat, BATEAU-MOUCHE, contrasts old, historic warehouses with the highly contemporary apartment block of the Cité du Havre Habitat.
Le Tour Olympique, Montreal's "Crooked Tower", offers panoramic views which extend more than 80 kilometres from its 175 metre tall viewing platform. Next to the Olympic Stadium, the Biodome, in which exotic animals from many corners of the world roam among waterfalls and tropical forests.
Next to the gleaming skyscrapers of the inner city, there are museums, churches and art galleries and in the old quarter, there are more historic buildings than in any other North American city, not forgetting the parks and the romantic harbor. Montreal is a gem!
wn.com/Montréal Travel Video Guide
Travel video about destination Montréal in Canada.
Canada's second largest city, Montreal is a fascinating blend of European charm and the American way of life.
In Vieux-Montreal, narrow lanes and small houses recall the past and also the lifestyle of the original settlers. In the old fire station at Place d'Youville - one of the oldest markets in Montreal -- is the Centre d'Histoire in which the 350 year cultural history of the city is on display, from the development of the Irokese Settlement, its prolific fur trade, and right up to today's shining, energetic Metropolis.
Although Montreal is located 1,600 kilometres from the open sea, it owes its wealth to its waterways which stretch from the country's interior, to the ocean. A trip on the Saint Lawrence River with the pleasure boat, BATEAU-MOUCHE, contrasts old, historic warehouses with the highly contemporary apartment block of the Cité du Havre Habitat.
Le Tour Olympique, Montreal's "Crooked Tower", offers panoramic views which extend more than 80 kilometres from its 175 metre tall viewing platform. Next to the Olympic Stadium, the Biodome, in which exotic animals from many corners of the world roam among waterfalls and tropical forests.
Next to the gleaming skyscrapers of the inner city, there are museums, churches and art galleries and in the old quarter, there are more historic buildings than in any other North American city, not forgetting the parks and the romantic harbor. Montreal is a gem!
- published: 12 Aug 2013
- views: 29278
Travel Tips for Canada [SkyAndShoe]
Music: A by Got7 (Remix)
Heeello!
Hope this video was helpful to y'all. If you have any other video suggestions please leave it in the comments below.
wn.com/Travel Tips For Canada Skyandshoe
Music: A by Got7 (Remix)
Heeello!
Hope this video was helpful to y'all. If you have any other video suggestions please leave it in the comments below.
- published: 01 Feb 2015
- views: 11
Travel Guide to Quebec City
In this travel video guide to Quebec City, I travel around Quebec City including its historic Old Town (a UNESCO World Heritage Site), stop in at the famed I...
wn.com/Travel Guide To Quebec City
In this travel video guide to Quebec City, I travel around Quebec City including its historic Old Town (a UNESCO World Heritage Site), stop in at the famed I...
Calgary Alberta - Top Calgary Attractions | Travel Guide - Downtown Calgary - Canada Tourism
Visit Calgary Alberta Canada and Downtown Calgary in this Calgary travel guide. Enjoy top Calgary attractions, things to do in Calgary, places to see and places to visit in this Calgary tourism travel guide.
Discover Calgary best top 10 (top ten) attractions Travel Alberta and you'll never forget Calgary and other top attractions in this vacation tour video.
Don't forget to subscribe to my channel. For more travel stories and photographs, visit me at www.travelingwithkrushworth.com.
wn.com/Calgary Alberta Top Calgary Attractions | Travel Guide Downtown Calgary Canada Tourism
Visit Calgary Alberta Canada and Downtown Calgary in this Calgary travel guide. Enjoy top Calgary attractions, things to do in Calgary, places to see and places to visit in this Calgary tourism travel guide.
Discover Calgary best top 10 (top ten) attractions Travel Alberta and you'll never forget Calgary and other top attractions in this vacation tour video.
Don't forget to subscribe to my channel. For more travel stories and photographs, visit me at www.travelingwithkrushworth.com.
- published: 20 May 2013
- views: 12299
30 Things to do in Montreal | Top Attractions Travel Guide
When visiting Montreal consider the following top 35 things to do in Montreal as a travel video guide for all of the best attractions in the city. There is no other city in Canada or the United States of America that can compare with Montreal in terms of its diversity and European flare. As a city of festivals (during the winter, fall, spring and summer) you're left with an inexhaustible amount of things to see and do in the city during all four seasons. Compared to other Canadian cities, Montreal offers world class arts, dining, architecture, entertainment, arts and festivals showcasing the best of Canadian culture and Canadian food. Eating poutine, watching a Montreal Canadiens hockey game for fun and taking in a mesmerizing Cirque du Soleil were the highlights of our visit. If you only have time to one destination in Canada let it be Montréal, Québec:
http://nomadicsamuel.com/photo-essays/30-things-to-do-in-montreal
1) Visit the Museum of Fine Arts - Musée des beaux-arts de Montréal
2) Hike up Mount Royal Park - Mont Royal
3) Check out Le Plateau Neighborliness - Le Plateau-Mont-Royal
4) Tam Tams drumming on Sundays in Mount Royal Park - Les Tam-Tams du Mont Royal
5) Wander around the campus area of McGill University - l'Université McGill
6) Eat poutine - cantines or casse-croûtes
7) Visit the historic area of Old Montreal - Vieux-Montréal
8) Lookout point from Mount Royal Park - Parc du Mont-Royal
9) Go shopping at Bonsecours Market - Marché Bonsecours
10) Habitat 67 - Expo 67
11) Check out the many summer and winter festivals in Montreal including the Highlands games, Rogers cup, Tango events and Blues festival.
12) Saint Joseph's Oratory of Mount Royal - Oratoire Saint-Joseph du Mont-Royal
13) Visit the Montreal Biodome - Biodôme de Montréal
14) Montreal's Olympic Stadium 'The Big O' - Stade Olympique de Montréal
15) Montreal Botanical Garden - Jardin botanique de Montréal
16) Watch a Habs game the Montreal Canadiens - Les Canadiens de Montréal
17) Eat Montreal smoked meat at Schwartz's - viande fumée
18) Notre-Dame Cathedral - Notre-Dame Basilica
19) Cirque du Soleil 'Circus of the sun'
20) Montreal street art and graffiti
21) Go shopping and people watching along Saint Catherine Street - Rue Sainte-Catherine
22) Go shopping or warm up under Montreal's Underground City - RÉSO or La Ville Souterraine
23) Relax, exercise or have a picnic at La Fontaine Park - Parc La Fontaine)
24) Montreal's Gay Village - Le Village gai
25) Eat Montreal bagels at St-Viateur Bagel - petit pain
26) Ride a bicycle around the city
27) Visit Mary, Queen of the World Cathedral - Cathédrale Marie-Reine-du-Monde
28) Visit the Old Port of Montreal - Vieux-Port de Montréal
29) Take the Metro around Montreal - Métro de Montréal
30) In-line skate or bicycle around Lachine Canal - Canal de Lachine
Head to the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts for a look at some of the free current exhibitions. We're here at Park Mount Royal to walk around and head to the lookout point for amazing city views. We chose to stay in the neighborhood of Le Plateau-Mont Royal. On Sunday afternoons you'll find a huge drumming circle on the east end of Mount Royal called Tam Tams. McGill University is one of the most prestigious universities in all of Canada. Poutine, a French Canadian dish, it is basically french fries with gravy and cheese curds on top. For a taste of French charm, wander down the cobbled streets of Old Montreal. For fine dining and shopping in trendy boutiques, you can pop into the Bonsecours Market. Habitat 67 is a unique housing complex and is an architectural landmark. Whether you visit Montreal in the summer or winter, there are always festivals going on. Tonight we're at the Cirque du Soleil for a circus performance. The biodome is a popular attraction for families with children. Olympic Stadium is the former home of the Montreal Expos. The botanical gardens are home to beautiful gardens. Bell Center is home to the Montreal Canadiens, one of the most celebrated NHL franchises. There is no better place ot eat smoked meat in Montreal than Schwartz. The Notre Dame Basilica is located in the historic district of Old Montreal. If you enjoy checking out graffiti around Saint Catherine street which is also a shopping district. Most of the downtown area is interconnected by underground shopping areas so you don't have to be out in the cold. Parc Lafontaine is located in the borough of Le Plateau Mont-Royal and it's a popular hangout spot on weekends. Le Village is a vibrant neighbourhood which is home to many gay bars and clubs. Eat St. Viateur bagels, which are really famous here in Montreal. This store is so popular that they actually produce twelve thousand bagels a day. A great way to get around the city is by Bixi bike. Montreal's Old Port is worth a wander. This video features songs available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Commercial license.
wn.com/30 Things To Do In Montreal | Top Attractions Travel Guide
When visiting Montreal consider the following top 35 things to do in Montreal as a travel video guide for all of the best attractions in the city. There is no other city in Canada or the United States of America that can compare with Montreal in terms of its diversity and European flare. As a city of festivals (during the winter, fall, spring and summer) you're left with an inexhaustible amount of things to see and do in the city during all four seasons. Compared to other Canadian cities, Montreal offers world class arts, dining, architecture, entertainment, arts and festivals showcasing the best of Canadian culture and Canadian food. Eating poutine, watching a Montreal Canadiens hockey game for fun and taking in a mesmerizing Cirque du Soleil were the highlights of our visit. If you only have time to one destination in Canada let it be Montréal, Québec:
http://nomadicsamuel.com/photo-essays/30-things-to-do-in-montreal
1) Visit the Museum of Fine Arts - Musée des beaux-arts de Montréal
2) Hike up Mount Royal Park - Mont Royal
3) Check out Le Plateau Neighborliness - Le Plateau-Mont-Royal
4) Tam Tams drumming on Sundays in Mount Royal Park - Les Tam-Tams du Mont Royal
5) Wander around the campus area of McGill University - l'Université McGill
6) Eat poutine - cantines or casse-croûtes
7) Visit the historic area of Old Montreal - Vieux-Montréal
8) Lookout point from Mount Royal Park - Parc du Mont-Royal
9) Go shopping at Bonsecours Market - Marché Bonsecours
10) Habitat 67 - Expo 67
11) Check out the many summer and winter festivals in Montreal including the Highlands games, Rogers cup, Tango events and Blues festival.
12) Saint Joseph's Oratory of Mount Royal - Oratoire Saint-Joseph du Mont-Royal
13) Visit the Montreal Biodome - Biodôme de Montréal
14) Montreal's Olympic Stadium 'The Big O' - Stade Olympique de Montréal
15) Montreal Botanical Garden - Jardin botanique de Montréal
16) Watch a Habs game the Montreal Canadiens - Les Canadiens de Montréal
17) Eat Montreal smoked meat at Schwartz's - viande fumée
18) Notre-Dame Cathedral - Notre-Dame Basilica
19) Cirque du Soleil 'Circus of the sun'
20) Montreal street art and graffiti
21) Go shopping and people watching along Saint Catherine Street - Rue Sainte-Catherine
22) Go shopping or warm up under Montreal's Underground City - RÉSO or La Ville Souterraine
23) Relax, exercise or have a picnic at La Fontaine Park - Parc La Fontaine)
24) Montreal's Gay Village - Le Village gai
25) Eat Montreal bagels at St-Viateur Bagel - petit pain
26) Ride a bicycle around the city
27) Visit Mary, Queen of the World Cathedral - Cathédrale Marie-Reine-du-Monde
28) Visit the Old Port of Montreal - Vieux-Port de Montréal
29) Take the Metro around Montreal - Métro de Montréal
30) In-line skate or bicycle around Lachine Canal - Canal de Lachine
Head to the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts for a look at some of the free current exhibitions. We're here at Park Mount Royal to walk around and head to the lookout point for amazing city views. We chose to stay in the neighborhood of Le Plateau-Mont Royal. On Sunday afternoons you'll find a huge drumming circle on the east end of Mount Royal called Tam Tams. McGill University is one of the most prestigious universities in all of Canada. Poutine, a French Canadian dish, it is basically french fries with gravy and cheese curds on top. For a taste of French charm, wander down the cobbled streets of Old Montreal. For fine dining and shopping in trendy boutiques, you can pop into the Bonsecours Market. Habitat 67 is a unique housing complex and is an architectural landmark. Whether you visit Montreal in the summer or winter, there are always festivals going on. Tonight we're at the Cirque du Soleil for a circus performance. The biodome is a popular attraction for families with children. Olympic Stadium is the former home of the Montreal Expos. The botanical gardens are home to beautiful gardens. Bell Center is home to the Montreal Canadiens, one of the most celebrated NHL franchises. There is no better place ot eat smoked meat in Montreal than Schwartz. The Notre Dame Basilica is located in the historic district of Old Montreal. If you enjoy checking out graffiti around Saint Catherine street which is also a shopping district. Most of the downtown area is interconnected by underground shopping areas so you don't have to be out in the cold. Parc Lafontaine is located in the borough of Le Plateau Mont-Royal and it's a popular hangout spot on weekends. Le Village is a vibrant neighbourhood which is home to many gay bars and clubs. Eat St. Viateur bagels, which are really famous here in Montreal. This store is so popular that they actually produce twelve thousand bagels a day. A great way to get around the city is by Bixi bike. Montreal's Old Port is worth a wander. This video features songs available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Commercial license.
- published: 13 Jul 2014
- views: 29596
Video Travel Guide: Canada - 10 Top Tourist Attractions
Copyright: Video created by Omegatours.vn
Omega Tours Co., LTD
Add: 176 Tran Phu Str - Hai Chau Dist - Da Nang City, Vietnam
Published by : Omegatours.vn
Website: http://Omegatours.vn
Disclaimer: All audio in this video, We was used free audio in Youtube Library.
About Us:
Omega Tours has now become a familiar brand for tourists from all over the world. We provide many kind of services with high quality to those who join daily typical tour with others, to travelers who want a customized tour, to those who want to get something special and have the travel experience they desire. We care about every customer’s demand and do our best on every tour to offer customers from all walk of life enjoyable trips with us.
We assure that you will have memorable tour in everywhere far and wide in Vietnam country. We are committed to offer you the best price for each tour.
Our business focuses on:
Visa service
Daily tours
Customized tours/packages for group of customer;
Air, train ticketing service;
Hotel reservation;
Car/ bus rental
Omega Tours owns a team of young, dynamic and skilled staff working from day and night on every channel of communication from directly at the offices to live chat and hotline support. We are expecting to get your moments of happiness, your great stories from your trips with Omega Tours. Any of your request and inquiry about tours and service in Vietnam and neighboring countries will be promptly processed and replied at soon as possible.
Video Travel Guide: 10 Top Tourist Attractions in Canada
List of Attractions in Canada :
1. Moraine Lake
2. Vieux-Quebec
3. The Canadian
4. Niagara Falls
5. Churchill
6. Athabasca Falls
7. Bay of Fundy
8. Victoria's Inner Harbour
9. Calgary Stampede
10. Gros Morne National Park
wn.com/Video Travel Guide Canada 10 Top Tourist Attractions
Copyright: Video created by Omegatours.vn
Omega Tours Co., LTD
Add: 176 Tran Phu Str - Hai Chau Dist - Da Nang City, Vietnam
Published by : Omegatours.vn
Website: http://Omegatours.vn
Disclaimer: All audio in this video, We was used free audio in Youtube Library.
About Us:
Omega Tours has now become a familiar brand for tourists from all over the world. We provide many kind of services with high quality to those who join daily typical tour with others, to travelers who want a customized tour, to those who want to get something special and have the travel experience they desire. We care about every customer’s demand and do our best on every tour to offer customers from all walk of life enjoyable trips with us.
We assure that you will have memorable tour in everywhere far and wide in Vietnam country. We are committed to offer you the best price for each tour.
Our business focuses on:
Visa service
Daily tours
Customized tours/packages for group of customer;
Air, train ticketing service;
Hotel reservation;
Car/ bus rental
Omega Tours owns a team of young, dynamic and skilled staff working from day and night on every channel of communication from directly at the offices to live chat and hotline support. We are expecting to get your moments of happiness, your great stories from your trips with Omega Tours. Any of your request and inquiry about tours and service in Vietnam and neighboring countries will be promptly processed and replied at soon as possible.
Video Travel Guide: 10 Top Tourist Attractions in Canada
List of Attractions in Canada :
1. Moraine Lake
2. Vieux-Quebec
3. The Canadian
4. Niagara Falls
5. Churchill
6. Athabasca Falls
7. Bay of Fundy
8. Victoria's Inner Harbour
9. Calgary Stampede
10. Gros Morne National Park
- published: 19 Nov 2014
- views: 6
Toronto Travel Video Guide
Travel video about destination Toronto in Canada.
Toronto is a sensational city. Canada’s ‘secret’ capital: boomtown, show town and financial metropolis, clean, safe and with five million inhabitants.Gigantic skyscrapers and with a frenetic lifestyle, Toronto is where many Canadian banks and multi-national companies have their palatial offices of steel and glass built in what was once a waterfront wilderness. The old City Hall was built in 1899 in Victorian style and consists mainly of sandstone. Its Venetian clock tower faces an array of modern skyscrapers and almost opposite is the futuristic looking new City Hall, a symbol of the city’s cosmopolitan flair. It’s easy to become disorientated in Toronto’s Underground City. Most of this subterranean complex extends beneath the financial district and is the largest of its type in the world with countless shops, restaurants and subway stations. An endless network of corridors and passages connects these vast shopping centres and offices to the Central Business District.Since 1975 the city has possessed a unique monument, the Canadian National Tower or, the C.N.Tower. At a speed of six metres a second four external elevators zoom to the top of the building and it takes only fifty-eight seconds to reach the Skypod platform.The massive Skydome stadium is home to the Blue Jays baseball team. The huge pitch contains a hundred and six rolls of light green turf and is illuminated by more than seven hundred two thousand watt spotlights. The building is multi-functional and has a movable dome that can be opened and closed as necessary depending upon the weather. Niagara Falls, although extremely touristy, is an unforgettable experience. For the adventurous there are bridges and platforms close to the raging waters and the roar of the mighty torrent can be heard from a great distance while the awe-inspiring view of the waterfalls make it easy to forget the surrounding hustle and bustle of fellow sightseers.The Indian meeting place of bygone times has been transformed into a huge city that is a true gem among Canada’s other great cities. Toronto is without a doubt the most multicultural city in the world!
wn.com/Toronto Travel Video Guide
Travel video about destination Toronto in Canada.
Toronto is a sensational city. Canada’s ‘secret’ capital: boomtown, show town and financial metropolis, clean, safe and with five million inhabitants.Gigantic skyscrapers and with a frenetic lifestyle, Toronto is where many Canadian banks and multi-national companies have their palatial offices of steel and glass built in what was once a waterfront wilderness. The old City Hall was built in 1899 in Victorian style and consists mainly of sandstone. Its Venetian clock tower faces an array of modern skyscrapers and almost opposite is the futuristic looking new City Hall, a symbol of the city’s cosmopolitan flair. It’s easy to become disorientated in Toronto’s Underground City. Most of this subterranean complex extends beneath the financial district and is the largest of its type in the world with countless shops, restaurants and subway stations. An endless network of corridors and passages connects these vast shopping centres and offices to the Central Business District.Since 1975 the city has possessed a unique monument, the Canadian National Tower or, the C.N.Tower. At a speed of six metres a second four external elevators zoom to the top of the building and it takes only fifty-eight seconds to reach the Skypod platform.The massive Skydome stadium is home to the Blue Jays baseball team. The huge pitch contains a hundred and six rolls of light green turf and is illuminated by more than seven hundred two thousand watt spotlights. The building is multi-functional and has a movable dome that can be opened and closed as necessary depending upon the weather. Niagara Falls, although extremely touristy, is an unforgettable experience. For the adventurous there are bridges and platforms close to the raging waters and the roar of the mighty torrent can be heard from a great distance while the awe-inspiring view of the waterfalls make it easy to forget the surrounding hustle and bustle of fellow sightseers.The Indian meeting place of bygone times has been transformed into a huge city that is a true gem among Canada’s other great cities. Toronto is without a doubt the most multicultural city in the world!
- published: 12 Aug 2013
- views: 23471
Niagara Falls, Canada Travel Guide - Must-See Attractions
http://bookinghunter.com
Niagara Falls is the collective name for three waterfalls that straddle the international border between Canada and the United States; more specifically, between the province of Ontario and the state of New York. They form the southern end of the Niagara Gorge.
From largest to smallest, the three waterfalls are the Horseshoe Falls, the American Falls and the Bridal Veil Falls. The Horseshoe Falls lie on the Canadian side and the American Falls on the American side, separated by Goat Island. The smaller Bridal Veil Falls are also located on the American side, separated from the other waterfalls by Luna Island. The international boundary line was originally drawn through Horseshoe Falls in 1819, but the boundary has long been in dispute due to natural erosion and construction.
Located on the Niagara River, which drains Lake Erie into Lake Ontario, the combined falls form the highest flow rate of any waterfall in the world, with a vertical drop of more than 165 feet (50 m). Horseshoe Falls is the most powerful waterfall in North America, as measured by vertical height and also by flow rate. The falls are located 17 miles (27 km) north-northwest of Buffalo, New York and 75 miles (121 km) south-southeast of Toronto, between the twin cities of Niagara Falls, Ontario, and Niagara Falls, New York.
This video offers a lot of tips to help you plan the perfect vacation. If you want to save time and money, the most important Niagara Falls travel tip is to compare prices before booking a hotel room or a flight. You can do this for free on http://bookinghunter.com, a site that searches through hundreds of other travel websites in real time for the best travel deals available.
wn.com/Niagara Falls, Canada Travel Guide Must See Attractions
http://bookinghunter.com
Niagara Falls is the collective name for three waterfalls that straddle the international border between Canada and the United States; more specifically, between the province of Ontario and the state of New York. They form the southern end of the Niagara Gorge.
From largest to smallest, the three waterfalls are the Horseshoe Falls, the American Falls and the Bridal Veil Falls. The Horseshoe Falls lie on the Canadian side and the American Falls on the American side, separated by Goat Island. The smaller Bridal Veil Falls are also located on the American side, separated from the other waterfalls by Luna Island. The international boundary line was originally drawn through Horseshoe Falls in 1819, but the boundary has long been in dispute due to natural erosion and construction.
Located on the Niagara River, which drains Lake Erie into Lake Ontario, the combined falls form the highest flow rate of any waterfall in the world, with a vertical drop of more than 165 feet (50 m). Horseshoe Falls is the most powerful waterfall in North America, as measured by vertical height and also by flow rate. The falls are located 17 miles (27 km) north-northwest of Buffalo, New York and 75 miles (121 km) south-southeast of Toronto, between the twin cities of Niagara Falls, Ontario, and Niagara Falls, New York.
This video offers a lot of tips to help you plan the perfect vacation. If you want to save time and money, the most important Niagara Falls travel tip is to compare prices before booking a hotel room or a flight. You can do this for free on http://bookinghunter.com, a site that searches through hundreds of other travel websites in real time for the best travel deals available.
- published: 05 Dec 2013
- views: 9516
Vancouver Travel Video Guide
Travel video about destination Vancouver in Canada.
Vancouver is the third largest city in Canada and one of the most beautiful on the American continent, a dynamic metropolis set in a beautiful location with a temperate climate throughout the year.
Close to the harbor area, the city's skyscrapers have proliferated in recent years. The capital of the southwestern province of British Columbia has developed into an economic centre of renown.
The city's oldest buildings were built less than 100 years ago because the former wooden houses of old Vancouver were destroyed by fire. Several buildings reflect the origin of their inhabitants and are similar to those in the United States and Europe.
Inspired by the Colosseum in Rome, an elegant structure of pink stone and glass, Canada Place, is located in the busy centre of the new harbor district and is also the city's most recent landmark. Close by is Harbor Centre, a modern skyscraper complex with a shopping centre and a Skylift to the top floor. A glass elevator transports visitors to a 167-metre high observation platform where the view across the city, harbor and bay is overwhelming.
The exciting Skytrain is the city's most popular means of transport, an ultra-modern train built on posts that zig zags its way through the city. Each of the city's most important destinations are easily accessible and it has reduced the city's traffic problems considerably.
For the World Exhibition of 1986, on the edge of Chinatown, gardeners and craftsmen from Suzhou, China established Canada's first classical Chinese garden, the Doctor Sun Yat Sen Garden. Its ponds, bridges and small pavilions are similar to those in China, masterpieces of Far Eastern garden design.
Everything in Vancouver is youthful, attractive and dynamic, a place in which Canadian politeness unites with the Pacific way of life!
wn.com/Vancouver Travel Video Guide
Travel video about destination Vancouver in Canada.
Vancouver is the third largest city in Canada and one of the most beautiful on the American continent, a dynamic metropolis set in a beautiful location with a temperate climate throughout the year.
Close to the harbor area, the city's skyscrapers have proliferated in recent years. The capital of the southwestern province of British Columbia has developed into an economic centre of renown.
The city's oldest buildings were built less than 100 years ago because the former wooden houses of old Vancouver were destroyed by fire. Several buildings reflect the origin of their inhabitants and are similar to those in the United States and Europe.
Inspired by the Colosseum in Rome, an elegant structure of pink stone and glass, Canada Place, is located in the busy centre of the new harbor district and is also the city's most recent landmark. Close by is Harbor Centre, a modern skyscraper complex with a shopping centre and a Skylift to the top floor. A glass elevator transports visitors to a 167-metre high observation platform where the view across the city, harbor and bay is overwhelming.
The exciting Skytrain is the city's most popular means of transport, an ultra-modern train built on posts that zig zags its way through the city. Each of the city's most important destinations are easily accessible and it has reduced the city's traffic problems considerably.
For the World Exhibition of 1986, on the edge of Chinatown, gardeners and craftsmen from Suzhou, China established Canada's first classical Chinese garden, the Doctor Sun Yat Sen Garden. Its ponds, bridges and small pavilions are similar to those in China, masterpieces of Far Eastern garden design.
Everything in Vancouver is youthful, attractive and dynamic, a place in which Canadian politeness unites with the Pacific way of life!
- published: 13 Aug 2013
- views: 40640
Montreal City Guide - Lonely Planet travel video
Learn more about Montreal: http://www.lonelyplanet.com/canada/montreal
wn.com/Montreal City Guide Lonely Planet Travel Video
Learn more about Montreal: http://www.lonelyplanet.com/canada/montreal
- published: 25 Nov 2014
- views: 85
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29:45
Sophie Eckhardt-Gramatté (1899-1974) : Piano Concerto No. 2 (1946)
Sophie Eckhardt-Gramatté (1899-1974) : Piano Concerto No. 2 (1946)
Sophie Eckhardt-Gramatté (1899-1974) : Piano Concerto No. 2 (1946)
Sophie Eckhardt-Gramatté (1899-1974) (Canada)
Piano Concerto No. 2 in E-flat major (1946)
Pianist : Marc-André Hamelin
Dir : Mario Bernardi
1- Allegro deciso (13.38)
2- Espressivo (7.58)
3- Maestoso – Allegro ma non troppo (8.01)
On collectionCB2 and collectionCB4 we can also listen to Sophie Eckhardt-Gramatté’s « Concert Piece for cello and orchestra « (1928 ; rev. 1974), « Capriccio concertante » (1941), « Concerto for orchestra » (1955), « Violin Concerto n°2 for violin » (1951), « Molto sostenuto » for String orchestra (1952), « Symphony-Concertante » (Concerto No. 3) for piano and orchestra (1967) and « Symphony No. 2 "Manitoba" » (197
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3:16
Canadian Electrohome -1946 repair p.1
Canadian Electrohome -1946 repair p.1
Canadian Electrohome -1946 repair p.1
via YouTube Capture
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1:41
The 20 Best Chevrolet Suburban 1941 - 1946
The 20 Best Chevrolet Suburban 1941 - 1946
The 20 Best Chevrolet Suburban 1941 - 1946
The Chevrolet Suburban is a full-size, extended-length sport utility vehicle from Chevrolet. It is the longest continuous use automobile nameplate in production, starting from 1934 for the 1935 U.S. model year, and has traditionally been one of General Motors' most profitable vehicles. The Suburban has been produced under the Chevrolet, Holden, and GMC marques until the GMC version was rebranded as the GMC Yukon XL. For most of its recent history, the Suburban has been a station wagon-bodied version of the Chevrolet pickup truck, including the Chevrolet C/K and Silverado series of truck-based vehicles. Cadillac offers a version called the Esc
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3:29
Jalousie, Alys Robi, 1946
Jalousie, Alys Robi, 1946
Jalousie, Alys Robi, 1946
Jalousie (Jacob Gade et Amélia Renaud) par Alys Robi, 1946. RCA Victor Company Limited, Montreal, Canada -56-5131-A- sur appareil gramophone de table Casavant, fabriqué en 1908 par Casavant Frères Ltée à St-Hyacinthe, Québec, Canada
Mentions légales: Ce vidéo est publié à des fins éducatives seulement. Je ne détiens aucun droits d'auteur.
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3:18
Jalousie, Alys Robi, 1946
Jalousie, Alys Robi, 1946
Jalousie, Alys Robi, 1946
Jalousie (Jacob Gade et Amélia Renaud) par Alys Robi, 1946. RCA Victor Company Limited, Montreal, Canada -56-5131-A- sur appareil gramophone HMV model 103, 1925.
Mentions légales: Ce vidéo est publié à des fins éducatives seulement. Je ne détiens aucun droits d'auteur.
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7:37
Chants Populaires, No. 4 : [extrait] (1946 ?)
Chants Populaires, No. 4 : [extrait] (1946 ?)
Chants Populaires, No. 4 : [extrait] (1946 ?)
Ce film fait partie du patrimoine conservé par Bibliothèque et Archives Canada et n’existe qu’en français.
Source: Bibliothèque et Archives Canada. Office national du film du Canada : Nitrate fonds, 1973-0132.
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2:39
Ha! Le petit vin blanc! Alys Robi, 1946
Ha! Le petit vin blanc! Alys Robi, 1946
Ha! Le petit vin blanc! Alys Robi, 1946
Ha! Le petit vin blanc! (Drejac-Ch. et Borel-Clerc) par Alys Robi, 1946. (RCA Victor Company Limited, Montreal, Canada 56-5131-B) sur appareil gramophone HMV model 103, 1925.
Mentions légales: Ce vidéo est publié à des fins éducatives seulement. Je ne détiens aucun droits d'auteur.
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8:51
RIDE IN A 1946 CHEVY SEDAN DELIVERY !
RIDE IN A 1946 CHEVY SEDAN DELIVERY !
RIDE IN A 1946 CHEVY SEDAN DELIVERY !
IN MONTREAL CANADA
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22:20
Meet the Navy on Tour with titles from Meet the Navy 1946
Meet the Navy on Tour with titles from Meet the Navy 1946
Meet the Navy on Tour with titles from Meet the Navy 1946
Watch out for the Dynamic Dance Duo...Alan & Blanche Lund from Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. Other than my Pops, Ivan Romanoff, the Lunds stole the show.
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8:32
Bombers to Lose Grey Cup to Argos, 1946 (1946)
Bombers to Lose Grey Cup to Argos, 1946 (1946)
Bombers to Lose Grey Cup to Argos, 1946 (1946)
Ce film fait partie du patrimoine conservé par Bibliothèque et Archives Canada et n’existe qu’en anglais.
Les Argonauts de Toronto ont battu les Blue Bombers de Winnipeg, 28 à 6, lors du match de la Coupe Grey de 1946, qui a eu lieu au Stade Varsity de Toronto.
Source : Bibliothèque et Archives Canada. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation fonds, 1981-0152.
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3:04
Aluminium Found In Us (1946)
Aluminium Found In Us (1946)
Aluminium Found In Us (1946)
United States of America (USA)? / Canada. Various shots of a landscape - flat land, wooded area, river runs through it, dam seen, artificial lake, bridge. Si...
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0:49
Canadian Student Cycling In Banff (1946)
Canadian Student Cycling In Banff (1946)
Canadian Student Cycling In Banff (1946)
Unused / unissued material - dates and locations unclear or unknown. Cyclists in Banff. Canada. L/S of the Banff in its mountain setting. Various shots so th...
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3:38
Mackenzie King Speech A Dieppe (1946)
Mackenzie King Speech A Dieppe (1946)
Mackenzie King Speech A Dieppe (1946)
Unissued / unused material. France. Prime Minister of Canada William Mackenzie King pays tribute to Canadian soldiers who fell in the Dieppe raid in 1942 (na...
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3:00
Fire And Firemen - Pulpwood Fire (1946)
Fire And Firemen - Pulpwood Fire (1946)
Fire And Firemen - Pulpwood Fire (1946)
Unissued / unused material. Pulpwood fire at Ottawa, Canada. Night shots of large fires. Silhouettes of fire fighters in action. C/U burning log stacks. More...
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1:17
Boom Town (1946)
Boom Town (1946)
Boom Town (1946)
Yellowknife, Canada.
Several air shots of snow covered Canadian town, (Boom Town) in a valley. Various shots of the new houses, roads, people, shops, bank, restaurants etc. Most of the shops and the houses are the log wood cabins. Several shots of the people eating in a fast food restaurant - fairly big portions, old record states 'unrationed food'. Several shots of the prices on wall. More shots of the new town.
Date found in the old record - 01/05/1946.
90,000 historic films, all SEARCHABLE on YouTube at: http://www.youtube.com/britishpathe Join us on Facebook at: http://www.facebook.com/britishpathe Tweet us @britishpathe FILM ID:23
Sophie Eckhardt-Gramatté (1899-1974) : Piano Concerto No. 2 (1946)
Sophie Eckhardt-Gramatté (1899-1974) (Canada)
Piano Concerto No. 2 in E-flat major (1946)
Pianist : Marc-André Hamelin
Dir : Mario Bernardi
1- Allegro deciso (13.38)
2- Espressivo (7.58)
3- Maestoso – Allegro ma non troppo (8.01)
On collectionCB2 and collectionCB4 we can also listen to Sophie Eckhardt-Gramatté’s « Concert Piece for cello and orchestra « (1928 ; rev. 1974), « Capriccio concertante » (1941), « Concerto for orchestra » (1955), « Violin Concerto n°2 for violin » (1951), « Molto sostenuto » for String orchestra (1952), « Symphony-Concertante » (Concerto No. 3) for piano and orchestra (1967) and « Symphony No. 2 "Manitoba" » (1970).
For better know the Canadian Sophie Eckhardt-Gramatté : foundation Sophie Eckhardt-Gramatté (in English) :
http://www.egre.mb.ca/sc/index.html
LIST OF UPLOADS OF COLLECTIONCB, COLLECTIONCB2, COLLECTIONCB3, COLLECTIONCB4
and
IDEAL "DISCOTHEQUE" OF MORE THAN 1,500 ORCHESTRAL WORKS OF FEELINGS :
http://www.corentinboissier.net/
wn.com/Sophie Eckhardt Gramatté (1899 1974) Piano Concerto No. 2 (1946)
Sophie Eckhardt-Gramatté (1899-1974) (Canada)
Piano Concerto No. 2 in E-flat major (1946)
Pianist : Marc-André Hamelin
Dir : Mario Bernardi
1- Allegro deciso (13.38)
2- Espressivo (7.58)
3- Maestoso – Allegro ma non troppo (8.01)
On collectionCB2 and collectionCB4 we can also listen to Sophie Eckhardt-Gramatté’s « Concert Piece for cello and orchestra « (1928 ; rev. 1974), « Capriccio concertante » (1941), « Concerto for orchestra » (1955), « Violin Concerto n°2 for violin » (1951), « Molto sostenuto » for String orchestra (1952), « Symphony-Concertante » (Concerto No. 3) for piano and orchestra (1967) and « Symphony No. 2 "Manitoba" » (1970).
For better know the Canadian Sophie Eckhardt-Gramatté : foundation Sophie Eckhardt-Gramatté (in English) :
http://www.egre.mb.ca/sc/index.html
LIST OF UPLOADS OF COLLECTIONCB, COLLECTIONCB2, COLLECTIONCB3, COLLECTIONCB4
and
IDEAL "DISCOTHEQUE" OF MORE THAN 1,500 ORCHESTRAL WORKS OF FEELINGS :
http://www.corentinboissier.net/
- published: 17 Oct 2015
- views: 4
The 20 Best Chevrolet Suburban 1941 - 1946
The Chevrolet Suburban is a full-size, extended-length sport utility vehicle from Chevrolet. It is the longest continuous use automobile nameplate in production, starting from 1934 for the 1935 U.S. model year, and has traditionally been one of General Motors' most profitable vehicles. The Suburban has been produced under the Chevrolet, Holden, and GMC marques until the GMC version was rebranded as the GMC Yukon XL. For most of its recent history, the Suburban has been a station wagon-bodied version of the Chevrolet pickup truck, including the Chevrolet C/K and Silverado series of truck-based vehicles. Cadillac offers a version called the Escalade ESV.
The Suburban is sold in the United States (including the insular territories), Canada, Mexico, The Philippines (withdrawn after 2015), and the Middle East (Except Israel) as a Left-hand drive vehicle, while the Yukon XL is sold only in North America (United States and Canada) and The Middle East territories (except Israel).
Suburbans were built in model years 1941, 1942, and 1946. It was produced during the war as a military transport vehicle.[6] Seating for up to eight occupants was available. Models with rear panel doors were designated "3106," while those with tailgates were designated "3116." The Chevrolet versions were equipped a 216-cubic-inch 6-cylinder engine. The GMC version was equipped with a 228-cubic-inch 6-cylinder engine. It shared much of its mechanicals with the AK Series trucks.
wn.com/The 20 Best Chevrolet Suburban 1941 1946
The Chevrolet Suburban is a full-size, extended-length sport utility vehicle from Chevrolet. It is the longest continuous use automobile nameplate in production, starting from 1934 for the 1935 U.S. model year, and has traditionally been one of General Motors' most profitable vehicles. The Suburban has been produced under the Chevrolet, Holden, and GMC marques until the GMC version was rebranded as the GMC Yukon XL. For most of its recent history, the Suburban has been a station wagon-bodied version of the Chevrolet pickup truck, including the Chevrolet C/K and Silverado series of truck-based vehicles. Cadillac offers a version called the Escalade ESV.
The Suburban is sold in the United States (including the insular territories), Canada, Mexico, The Philippines (withdrawn after 2015), and the Middle East (Except Israel) as a Left-hand drive vehicle, while the Yukon XL is sold only in North America (United States and Canada) and The Middle East territories (except Israel).
Suburbans were built in model years 1941, 1942, and 1946. It was produced during the war as a military transport vehicle.[6] Seating for up to eight occupants was available. Models with rear panel doors were designated "3106," while those with tailgates were designated "3116." The Chevrolet versions were equipped a 216-cubic-inch 6-cylinder engine. The GMC version was equipped with a 228-cubic-inch 6-cylinder engine. It shared much of its mechanicals with the AK Series trucks.
- published: 28 Sep 2015
- views: 0
Jalousie, Alys Robi, 1946
Jalousie (Jacob Gade et Amélia Renaud) par Alys Robi, 1946. RCA Victor Company Limited, Montreal, Canada -56-5131-A- sur appareil gramophone de table Casavant, fabriqué en 1908 par Casavant Frères Ltée à St-Hyacinthe, Québec, Canada
Mentions légales: Ce vidéo est publié à des fins éducatives seulement. Je ne détiens aucun droits d'auteur.
wn.com/Jalousie, Alys Robi, 1946
Jalousie (Jacob Gade et Amélia Renaud) par Alys Robi, 1946. RCA Victor Company Limited, Montreal, Canada -56-5131-A- sur appareil gramophone de table Casavant, fabriqué en 1908 par Casavant Frères Ltée à St-Hyacinthe, Québec, Canada
Mentions légales: Ce vidéo est publié à des fins éducatives seulement. Je ne détiens aucun droits d'auteur.
- published: 26 Sep 2015
- views: 4
Jalousie, Alys Robi, 1946
Jalousie (Jacob Gade et Amélia Renaud) par Alys Robi, 1946. RCA Victor Company Limited, Montreal, Canada -56-5131-A- sur appareil gramophone HMV model 103, 1925.
Mentions légales: Ce vidéo est publié à des fins éducatives seulement. Je ne détiens aucun droits d'auteur.
wn.com/Jalousie, Alys Robi, 1946
Jalousie (Jacob Gade et Amélia Renaud) par Alys Robi, 1946. RCA Victor Company Limited, Montreal, Canada -56-5131-A- sur appareil gramophone HMV model 103, 1925.
Mentions légales: Ce vidéo est publié à des fins éducatives seulement. Je ne détiens aucun droits d'auteur.
- published: 02 Apr 2015
- views: 9
Chants Populaires, No. 4 : [extrait] (1946 ?)
Ce film fait partie du patrimoine conservé par Bibliothèque et Archives Canada et n’existe qu’en français.
Source: Bibliothèque et Archives Canada. Office national du film du Canada : Nitrate fonds, 1973-0132.
wn.com/Chants Populaires, No. 4 Extrait (1946 )
Ce film fait partie du patrimoine conservé par Bibliothèque et Archives Canada et n’existe qu’en français.
Source: Bibliothèque et Archives Canada. Office national du film du Canada : Nitrate fonds, 1973-0132.
- published: 13 Apr 2015
- views: 7
Ha! Le petit vin blanc! Alys Robi, 1946
Ha! Le petit vin blanc! (Drejac-Ch. et Borel-Clerc) par Alys Robi, 1946. (RCA Victor Company Limited, Montreal, Canada 56-5131-B) sur appareil gramophone HMV model 103, 1925.
Mentions légales: Ce vidéo est publié à des fins éducatives seulement. Je ne détiens aucun droits d'auteur.
wn.com/Ha Le Petit Vin Blanc Alys Robi, 1946
Ha! Le petit vin blanc! (Drejac-Ch. et Borel-Clerc) par Alys Robi, 1946. (RCA Victor Company Limited, Montreal, Canada 56-5131-B) sur appareil gramophone HMV model 103, 1925.
Mentions légales: Ce vidéo est publié à des fins éducatives seulement. Je ne détiens aucun droits d'auteur.
- published: 02 Apr 2015
- views: 7
Meet the Navy on Tour with titles from Meet the Navy 1946
Watch out for the Dynamic Dance Duo...Alan & Blanche Lund from Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. Other than my Pops, Ivan Romanoff, the Lunds stole the show.
wn.com/Meet The Navy On Tour With Titles From Meet The Navy 1946
Watch out for the Dynamic Dance Duo...Alan & Blanche Lund from Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. Other than my Pops, Ivan Romanoff, the Lunds stole the show.
- published: 04 Mar 2015
- views: 28
Bombers to Lose Grey Cup to Argos, 1946 (1946)
Ce film fait partie du patrimoine conservé par Bibliothèque et Archives Canada et n’existe qu’en anglais.
Les Argonauts de Toronto ont battu les Blue Bombers de Winnipeg, 28 à 6, lors du match de la Coupe Grey de 1946, qui a eu lieu au Stade Varsity de Toronto.
Source : Bibliothèque et Archives Canada. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation fonds, 1981-0152.
wn.com/Bombers To Lose Grey Cup To Argos, 1946 (1946)
Ce film fait partie du patrimoine conservé par Bibliothèque et Archives Canada et n’existe qu’en anglais.
Les Argonauts de Toronto ont battu les Blue Bombers de Winnipeg, 28 à 6, lors du match de la Coupe Grey de 1946, qui a eu lieu au Stade Varsity de Toronto.
Source : Bibliothèque et Archives Canada. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation fonds, 1981-0152.
- published: 03 Nov 2014
- views: 1
Aluminium Found In Us (1946)
United States of America (USA)? / Canada. Various shots of a landscape - flat land, wooded area, river runs through it, dam seen, artificial lake, bridge. Si...
wn.com/Aluminium Found In US (1946)
United States of America (USA)? / Canada. Various shots of a landscape - flat land, wooded area, river runs through it, dam seen, artificial lake, bridge. Si...
Canadian Student Cycling In Banff (1946)
Unused / unissued material - dates and locations unclear or unknown. Cyclists in Banff. Canada. L/S of the Banff in its mountain setting. Various shots so th...
wn.com/Canadian Student Cycling In Banff (1946)
Unused / unissued material - dates and locations unclear or unknown. Cyclists in Banff. Canada. L/S of the Banff in its mountain setting. Various shots so th...
Mackenzie King Speech A Dieppe (1946)
Unissued / unused material. France. Prime Minister of Canada William Mackenzie King pays tribute to Canadian soldiers who fell in the Dieppe raid in 1942 (na...
wn.com/Mackenzie King Speech A Dieppe (1946)
Unissued / unused material. France. Prime Minister of Canada William Mackenzie King pays tribute to Canadian soldiers who fell in the Dieppe raid in 1942 (na...
Fire And Firemen - Pulpwood Fire (1946)
Unissued / unused material. Pulpwood fire at Ottawa, Canada. Night shots of large fires. Silhouettes of fire fighters in action. C/U burning log stacks. More...
wn.com/Fire And Firemen Pulpwood Fire (1946)
Unissued / unused material. Pulpwood fire at Ottawa, Canada. Night shots of large fires. Silhouettes of fire fighters in action. C/U burning log stacks. More...
Boom Town (1946)
Yellowknife, Canada.
Several air shots of snow covered Canadian town, (Boom Town) in a valley. Various shots of the new houses, roads, people, shops, bank, restaurants etc. Most of the shops and the houses are the log wood cabins. Several shots of the people eating in a fast food restaurant - fairly big portions, old record states 'unrationed food'. Several shots of the prices on wall. More shots of the new town.
Date found in the old record - 01/05/1946.
90,000 historic films, all SEARCHABLE on YouTube at: http://www.youtube.com/britishpathe Join us on Facebook at: http://www.facebook.com/britishpathe Tweet us @britishpathe FILM ID:2307.13
wn.com/Boom Town (1946)
Yellowknife, Canada.
Several air shots of snow covered Canadian town, (Boom Town) in a valley. Various shots of the new houses, roads, people, shops, bank, restaurants etc. Most of the shops and the houses are the log wood cabins. Several shots of the people eating in a fast food restaurant - fairly big portions, old record states 'unrationed food'. Several shots of the prices on wall. More shots of the new town.
Date found in the old record - 01/05/1946.
90,000 historic films, all SEARCHABLE on YouTube at: http://www.youtube.com/britishpathe Join us on Facebook at: http://www.facebook.com/britishpathe Tweet us @britishpathe FILM ID:2307.13
- published: 13 Apr 2014
- views: 2
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21:17
Junior Prom (1946)
Junior Prom (1946)
Junior Prom (1946)
An educational film from 1946 showing two couples' experiences on a double date. Please subscribe for more great videos! Please like, comment and favorite! -...
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20:19
American Indian Trappers, Traders and Canoe Builders ( 1946 )
American Indian Trappers, Traders and Canoe Builders ( 1946 )
American Indian Trappers, Traders and Canoe Builders ( 1946 )
FAIR USE NOTICE: This video may contain copyrighted material. Such material is made available for educational purposes only. This constitutes a 'fair use' of...
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48:01
WW2: Coverage of Military Hangings - Landsberg, Germany (May 28-29,1946)
WW2: Coverage of Military Hangings - Landsberg, Germany (May 28-29,1946)
WW2: Coverage of Military Hangings - Landsberg, Germany (May 28-29,1946)
(Munich 187) War Crimes Trials, Nuremberg, Germany, May 24, 1946. War criminal von Burgdorff seated in truck on Furth airfield and guarded by MPs. Col. Muszkat, Chief of the Polish Mission for Prosecution of War Crimes at Frankfurt, signing receipt for prisoners. Prisoners are put aboard plane. INTs showing prisoners seated in plane.
(Munich 191) Hangings at Landsberg, Germany, May 28, 1946. Military hangings of two German civilians.
(Munich 191) Hangings at Landsberg, Germany, May 28, 1946. Continuation of military hangings of three German civilians in courtyard. MS, captain reading death sentences. Coffin containing bodies of executed men
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153:48
Кубок Харламова. Финал. Чайка Нижний Новгород - СКА-1946 Санкт-Петербург. 1-й матч
Кубок Харламова. Финал. Чайка Нижний Новгород - СКА-1946 Санкт-Петербург. 1-й матч
Кубок Харламова. Финал. Чайка Нижний Новгород - СКА-1946 Санкт-Петербург. 1-й матч
Прямая видеотрансляция матча
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133:51
Кубок Харламова. Финал. Чайка Нижний Новгород - СКА-1946 Санкт-Петербург. 2-й матч
Кубок Харламова. Финал. Чайка Нижний Новгород - СКА-1946 Санкт-Петербург. 2-й матч
Кубок Харламова. Финал. Чайка Нижний Новгород - СКА-1946 Санкт-Петербург. 2-й матч
Прямая видеотрансляция матча
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101:35
Alfred Hitchcock - Notorious
Alfred Hitchcock - Notorious
Alfred Hitchcock - Notorious
Alfred Hitchcock - Notorious - with Ingrid Bergman and Cary Grant (1946)
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44:02
Radar: Technical Principles: Indicators 1946 US Army Training Film TF11-1387
Radar: Technical Principles: Indicators 1946 US Army Training Film TF11-1387
Radar: Technical Principles: Indicators 1946 US Army Training Film TF11-1387
more at http://scitech.quickfound.net/
A US Army training film explaining the basics of Radar systems for radar operators.
US Army training film TF11-1387
Public domain film from the National Archives, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
also see: Radar: Technical Principles: Mechanics
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FAb9_ZkcDTM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radar
Rada
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73:13
National Art of Sumo volume 20 : 1946 -- 1953
National Art of Sumo volume 20 : 1946 -- 1953
National Art of Sumo volume 20 : 1946 -- 1953
National Art of Sumo volume 20 : 1946 -- 1953 http://www.dosukoi.fr.
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59:24
Jacques R. Pauwel PhD - Original air date 08-11-15
Jacques R. Pauwel PhD - Original air date 08-11-15
Jacques R. Pauwel PhD - Original air date 08-11-15
Jacque Pauwels PhD
Born in Belgium in 1946, but resident of Canada since 1969.
Studies and degrees: Licenciate History, State University of Ghent, Belgium, 1969; PhD History, York University, 1976; MA Political Science, University of Toronto, 1984; PhD Political Science, University of Toronto, 1995. Lectured at various Ontario universities, including U of T, Waterloo, Guelph.
Author of numerous articles and books. Most recently “The Myth of the Good War”
Also active as tour operator and guide on behalf of family business, Pauwels Travel Bureau of Brantford, Ontario.
Married to Danielle Van Laere, father of David and Natalie, born respectivel
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83:29
Le gardian 1946
Le gardian 1946
Le gardian 1946
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27:32
Rotary Iron: Making a New Day Out of Tuesday 1946 Ironrite Company
Rotary Iron: Making a New Day Out of Tuesday 1946 Ironrite Company
Rotary Iron: Making a New Day Out of Tuesday 1946 Ironrite Company
more at http://kitchen.quickfound.net/
"How the Ironrite automatic ironing machine makes the life of the housewife much easier." As of 2014, new rotary irons sell on the Internet for $2,000 to $13,000.
Public domain film from the Prelinger Archives, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mangle_(m
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24:30
Tree Farming: "Timber in the Northeast" circa 1946 (Logging for Continuous Production)
Tree Farming: "Timber in the Northeast" circa 1946 (Logging for Continuous Production)
Tree Farming: "Timber in the Northeast" circa 1946 (Logging for Continuous Production)
more at http://scitech.quickfound.net/environment/environment_news.html Tree farming, as compared to logging, in Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, and Northern ...
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73:21
Gouverner la France depuis 1946 - Alain Bergounioux
Gouverner la France depuis 1946 - Alain Bergounioux
Gouverner la France depuis 1946 - Alain Bergounioux
A l'occasion de la journée scientifique organisée par l'APHG en coopération avec l'AHCESR à l'université Paris Sorbonne le 25 mai 2013, Alain Bergounioux, in...
-
33:41
Jean-Paul Sartre à la Sorbonne (1946)
Jean-Paul Sartre à la Sorbonne (1946)
Jean-Paul Sartre à la Sorbonne (1946)
Jean-Paul Sartre à la Sorbonne : première diffusion le 30/11/1946 sur la Chaîne Parisienne.
« Si l’on se borne à écrire sur la liberté, en général on contribue à l’oppression » !
« L’essence est de maintenir la liberté » L’art pour l’art : un appel stérile à la liberté.
J’appelle bourgeoisie tout ce qui pense bassement »
En 1946, à la Sorbonne, Jean-Paul Sartre donnait une conférence pour marquer la création de l’Unesco : il était question de l’écrivain, imbu d’une responsabilité dont il ne sait que faire - comme tous les autres hommes -, de Flaubert, de l’élite éclairée, des couches sociales assistant à la liquidation de leur idéologie… «
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25:16
Blas Galindo: Cantata a la Patria para coro y orquesta (1946)
Blas Galindo: Cantata a la Patria para coro y orquesta (1946)
Blas Galindo: Cantata a la Patria para coro y orquesta (1946)
Orquesta Sinfónica Carlos Chávez dirigida por / Carlos Chávez Symphony Orchestra conducted by Fernando Lozano. Cello: Gabriela Oliva. Coro/Choir: Coro Nacional de México.
Blas Galindo pertenece a la generación de compositores mexicanos nacidos durante la Revolución y por lo mismo de empapó de los valores nacionalistas que ésta emanaba. Habiendo nacido en una humilde comunidad indígena, marchó como niño a la revolución y dedicó su adolescencia a desarrollar su talento musical en su comunidad. Esto le permitiría más tarde acceder al reformado Conservatorio Nacional de México e incluso ganó una beca para estudiar con Aaron Copland, ya para ent
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55:52
Industrial Medicine: Doctor in Industry 1946 General Motors
Industrial Medicine: Doctor in Industry 1946 General Motors
Industrial Medicine: Doctor in Industry 1946 General Motors
more at http://scitech.quickfound.net
'Epic history of industrial medicine in the first half of the 20th century, showing how manufacturers and the medical profession came to terms with one another and culminating in GM's rehabilitation program for returned World War II veterans. Directed by Haford Kerbawy.'
Public domain film from the Prelinger Archives, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less nois
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20:19
How Native Americans Build Canoes plus Traders and Trappers, 1946
How Native Americans Build Canoes plus Traders and Trappers, 1946
How Native Americans Build Canoes plus Traders and Trappers, 1946
How Native Americans Build Canoes plus Traders and Trappers, 1946.
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236:40
Full Length Western Movie Duel in the Sun 1946 Gregory Peck
Full Length Western Movie Duel in the Sun 1946 Gregory Peck
Full Length Western Movie Duel in the Sun 1946 Gregory Peck
Full Length Western Movie Duel in the Sun 1946 Gregory Peck =========================================================== western movies
Junior Prom (1946)
An educational film from 1946 showing two couples' experiences on a double date. Please subscribe for more great videos! Please like, comment and favorite! -...
wn.com/Junior Prom (1946)
An educational film from 1946 showing two couples' experiences on a double date. Please subscribe for more great videos! Please like, comment and favorite! -...
American Indian Trappers, Traders and Canoe Builders ( 1946 )
FAIR USE NOTICE: This video may contain copyrighted material. Such material is made available for educational purposes only. This constitutes a 'fair use' of...
wn.com/American Indian Trappers, Traders And Canoe Builders ( 1946 )
FAIR USE NOTICE: This video may contain copyrighted material. Such material is made available for educational purposes only. This constitutes a 'fair use' of...
WW2: Coverage of Military Hangings - Landsberg, Germany (May 28-29,1946)
(Munich 187) War Crimes Trials, Nuremberg, Germany, May 24, 1946. War criminal von Burgdorff seated in truck on Furth airfield and guarded by MPs. Col. Muszkat, Chief of the Polish Mission for Prosecution of War Crimes at Frankfurt, signing receipt for prisoners. Prisoners are put aboard plane. INTs showing prisoners seated in plane.
(Munich 191) Hangings at Landsberg, Germany, May 28, 1946. Military hangings of two German civilians.
(Munich 191) Hangings at Landsberg, Germany, May 28, 1946. Continuation of military hangings of three German civilians in courtyard. MS, captain reading death sentences. Coffin containing bodies of executed men being moved out of courtyard.
(Munich 191) Hangings at Landsberg, Germany, May 28, 1946. Bodies of hanged men are set in coffins and coffins are stacked in yard. One coffin is labelled "Niedermayer Engelbert". Niedermayer was a crematoria worker at Dachau. Soldier adjusts rope on scaffold. German civilian hangman speaking to American officers. 22:03:28 Klaus (or Claus) Karl Schilling is escorted up the steps of the scaffold. He faces the camera and speaks briefly before he is hanged. Schilling was a physician who deliberately infected inmates with malaria at Dachau. Another man is executed. Otto Moll is executed in the sequence beginning 22:06:09. CU of the name "Dr. Schilling Claus" on coffin. Dark shots of Moll's (?) body being cut down from the gallows and placed in a coffin. A group of US soldiers and officers watching the hangings. One of them holds a camera. They stand at attention as an officer walks by. Another man is lead to the gallows while soldiers watch.
(Munich 193) Landsberg (Dachau) Hangings, Landsberg, Germany, May 29, 1946. Scenes showing condemned men marching to the gallows and being hung. An officer reading the charges. Capt. Freeman discussing hangings with Swiss newspaperman, Karl S. Wick. Some of the condemned men making statements. Civilian workmen fastening coffin tops.
(Munich 193) Landsberg (Dachau) Hangings, Landsberg, Germany, May 1946. Coverage of the military hangings of Becher, Lippman, Temple, Hintermeyer, Knoll, Eicheldorfer, Boettger, Kick, Weiss, and Wagner.
Notes:
Coverage of the military hangings of Becher, Lippman, Temple, Hintermeyer, Knoll, Eichelsdorfer, Boettger, Kick, Weiss, and Wagner are found in 111 ADC 6007 - RG-60.2881, Film ID 2361; 111 ADC 6008 - RG-60.2978, Film ID 2381; and 111 ADC 6009 - RG-60.2336, Film ID 896.
Cameraman: Klappert + Singleton
Original Archive Numbers: 111 ADC 5982+111 ADC 5983 + 111 ADC 5984 + 111 ADC 6007 + 111 ADC 6008
Producer: US Army Signal Corps
wn.com/WW2 Coverage Of Military Hangings Landsberg, Germany (May 28 29,1946)
(Munich 187) War Crimes Trials, Nuremberg, Germany, May 24, 1946. War criminal von Burgdorff seated in truck on Furth airfield and guarded by MPs. Col. Muszkat, Chief of the Polish Mission for Prosecution of War Crimes at Frankfurt, signing receipt for prisoners. Prisoners are put aboard plane. INTs showing prisoners seated in plane.
(Munich 191) Hangings at Landsberg, Germany, May 28, 1946. Military hangings of two German civilians.
(Munich 191) Hangings at Landsberg, Germany, May 28, 1946. Continuation of military hangings of three German civilians in courtyard. MS, captain reading death sentences. Coffin containing bodies of executed men being moved out of courtyard.
(Munich 191) Hangings at Landsberg, Germany, May 28, 1946. Bodies of hanged men are set in coffins and coffins are stacked in yard. One coffin is labelled "Niedermayer Engelbert". Niedermayer was a crematoria worker at Dachau. Soldier adjusts rope on scaffold. German civilian hangman speaking to American officers. 22:03:28 Klaus (or Claus) Karl Schilling is escorted up the steps of the scaffold. He faces the camera and speaks briefly before he is hanged. Schilling was a physician who deliberately infected inmates with malaria at Dachau. Another man is executed. Otto Moll is executed in the sequence beginning 22:06:09. CU of the name "Dr. Schilling Claus" on coffin. Dark shots of Moll's (?) body being cut down from the gallows and placed in a coffin. A group of US soldiers and officers watching the hangings. One of them holds a camera. They stand at attention as an officer walks by. Another man is lead to the gallows while soldiers watch.
(Munich 193) Landsberg (Dachau) Hangings, Landsberg, Germany, May 29, 1946. Scenes showing condemned men marching to the gallows and being hung. An officer reading the charges. Capt. Freeman discussing hangings with Swiss newspaperman, Karl S. Wick. Some of the condemned men making statements. Civilian workmen fastening coffin tops.
(Munich 193) Landsberg (Dachau) Hangings, Landsberg, Germany, May 1946. Coverage of the military hangings of Becher, Lippman, Temple, Hintermeyer, Knoll, Eicheldorfer, Boettger, Kick, Weiss, and Wagner.
Notes:
Coverage of the military hangings of Becher, Lippman, Temple, Hintermeyer, Knoll, Eichelsdorfer, Boettger, Kick, Weiss, and Wagner are found in 111 ADC 6007 - RG-60.2881, Film ID 2361; 111 ADC 6008 - RG-60.2978, Film ID 2381; and 111 ADC 6009 - RG-60.2336, Film ID 896.
Cameraman: Klappert + Singleton
Original Archive Numbers: 111 ADC 5982+111 ADC 5983 + 111 ADC 5984 + 111 ADC 6007 + 111 ADC 6008
Producer: US Army Signal Corps
- published: 22 Sep 2015
- views: 28
Alfred Hitchcock - Notorious
Alfred Hitchcock - Notorious - with Ingrid Bergman and Cary Grant (1946)
wn.com/Alfred Hitchcock Notorious
Alfred Hitchcock - Notorious - with Ingrid Bergman and Cary Grant (1946)
- published: 30 Mar 2013
- views: 621285
Radar: Technical Principles: Indicators 1946 US Army Training Film TF11-1387
more at http://scitech.quickfound.net/
A US Army training film explaining the basics of Radar systems for radar operators.
US Army training film TF11-1387
Public domain film from the National Archives, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
also see: Radar: Technical Principles: Mechanics
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FAb9_ZkcDTM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radar
Radar is an object-detection system which uses radio waves to determine the range, altitude, direction, or speed of objects. It can be used to detect aircraft, ships, spacecraft, guided missiles, motor vehicles, weather formations, and terrain. The radar dish or antenna transmits pulses of radio waves or microwaves which bounce off any object in their path. The object returns a tiny part of the wave's energy to a dish or antenna which is usually located at the same site as the transmitter.
Radar was developed in secret in nations across the world just before and during World War II. The term RADAR was coined in 1941 by the United States Navy as an acronym for radio detection and ranging. The term radar has since entered English and other languages as the common noun radar, losing all capitalization...
As early as 1886, Heinrich Hertz showed that radio waves could be reflected from solid objects. In 1895 Alexander Popov, a physics instructor at the Imperial Russian Navy school in Kronstadt, developed an apparatus using a coherer tube for detecting distant lightning strikes...
The German Christian Huelsmeyer was the first to use radio waves to detect "the presence of distant metallic objects". In 1904 he demonstrated the feasibility of detecting a ship in dense fog but not its distance. He obtained a patent for his detection device in April 1904 and later a patent for a related amendment for determining the distance to the ship. He also got a British patent on September 23,
In August 1917 Nikola Tesla outlined a concept for primitive radar units. He stated,
- "...by their [standing electromagnetic waves] use we may produce at will, from a sending station, an electrical effect in any particular region of the globe; [with which] we may determine the relative position or course of a moving object, such as a vessel at sea, the distance traversed by the same, or its speed."
In 1922 A. Hoyt Taylor and Leo C. Young, researchers working with the U.S. Navy, discovered that when radio waves were broadcast at 60 MHz it was possible to determine the range and bearing of nearby ships in the Potomac River. Despite Taylor's suggestion that this method could be used in low visibility, the Navy did not immediately continue the work. Serious investigation began eight years later after the discovery that radar could be used to track airplanes.
Before the Second World War, researchers in France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, the Soviet Union, the United Kingdom, and the United States, independently and in great secrecy, developed technologies that led to the modern version of radar. Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and South Africa followed prewar Great Britain, and Hungary had similar developments during the war.
In 1934 the Frenchman Émile Girardeau stated he was building an obstacle-locating radio apparatus "conceived according to the principles stated by Tesla" and obtained a patent for a working system, a part of which was installed on the Normandie liner in 1935.
During the same year, the Soviet military engineer P.K.Oschepkov, in collaboration with Leningrad Electrophysical Institute, produced an experimental apparatus, RAPID, capable of detecting an aircraft within 3 km of a receiver...
Full radar evolved as a pulsed system, and the first such elementary apparatus was demonstrated in December 1934 by American Robert M. Page, working at the Naval Research Laboratory. The following year, the United States Army successfully tested a primitive surface to surface radar to aim coastal battery search lights at night. This was followed by a pulsed system demonstrated in May 1935 by Rudolf Kühnhold and the firm GEMA in Germany and then one in June 1935 by an Air Ministry team led by Robert A. Watson Watt in Great Britain. Later, in 1943, Page greatly improved radar with the monopulse technique that was used for many years in most radar applications...
wn.com/Radar Technical Principles Indicators 1946 US Army Training Film Tf11 1387
more at http://scitech.quickfound.net/
A US Army training film explaining the basics of Radar systems for radar operators.
US Army training film TF11-1387
Public domain film from the National Archives, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
also see: Radar: Technical Principles: Mechanics
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FAb9_ZkcDTM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radar
Radar is an object-detection system which uses radio waves to determine the range, altitude, direction, or speed of objects. It can be used to detect aircraft, ships, spacecraft, guided missiles, motor vehicles, weather formations, and terrain. The radar dish or antenna transmits pulses of radio waves or microwaves which bounce off any object in their path. The object returns a tiny part of the wave's energy to a dish or antenna which is usually located at the same site as the transmitter.
Radar was developed in secret in nations across the world just before and during World War II. The term RADAR was coined in 1941 by the United States Navy as an acronym for radio detection and ranging. The term radar has since entered English and other languages as the common noun radar, losing all capitalization...
As early as 1886, Heinrich Hertz showed that radio waves could be reflected from solid objects. In 1895 Alexander Popov, a physics instructor at the Imperial Russian Navy school in Kronstadt, developed an apparatus using a coherer tube for detecting distant lightning strikes...
The German Christian Huelsmeyer was the first to use radio waves to detect "the presence of distant metallic objects". In 1904 he demonstrated the feasibility of detecting a ship in dense fog but not its distance. He obtained a patent for his detection device in April 1904 and later a patent for a related amendment for determining the distance to the ship. He also got a British patent on September 23,
In August 1917 Nikola Tesla outlined a concept for primitive radar units. He stated,
- "...by their [standing electromagnetic waves] use we may produce at will, from a sending station, an electrical effect in any particular region of the globe; [with which] we may determine the relative position or course of a moving object, such as a vessel at sea, the distance traversed by the same, or its speed."
In 1922 A. Hoyt Taylor and Leo C. Young, researchers working with the U.S. Navy, discovered that when radio waves were broadcast at 60 MHz it was possible to determine the range and bearing of nearby ships in the Potomac River. Despite Taylor's suggestion that this method could be used in low visibility, the Navy did not immediately continue the work. Serious investigation began eight years later after the discovery that radar could be used to track airplanes.
Before the Second World War, researchers in France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, the Soviet Union, the United Kingdom, and the United States, independently and in great secrecy, developed technologies that led to the modern version of radar. Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and South Africa followed prewar Great Britain, and Hungary had similar developments during the war.
In 1934 the Frenchman Émile Girardeau stated he was building an obstacle-locating radio apparatus "conceived according to the principles stated by Tesla" and obtained a patent for a working system, a part of which was installed on the Normandie liner in 1935.
During the same year, the Soviet military engineer P.K.Oschepkov, in collaboration with Leningrad Electrophysical Institute, produced an experimental apparatus, RAPID, capable of detecting an aircraft within 3 km of a receiver...
Full radar evolved as a pulsed system, and the first such elementary apparatus was demonstrated in December 1934 by American Robert M. Page, working at the Naval Research Laboratory. The following year, the United States Army successfully tested a primitive surface to surface radar to aim coastal battery search lights at night. This was followed by a pulsed system demonstrated in May 1935 by Rudolf Kühnhold and the firm GEMA in Germany and then one in June 1935 by an Air Ministry team led by Robert A. Watson Watt in Great Britain. Later, in 1943, Page greatly improved radar with the monopulse technique that was used for many years in most radar applications...
- published: 14 Aug 2015
- views: 46
Jacques R. Pauwel PhD - Original air date 08-11-15
Jacque Pauwels PhD
Born in Belgium in 1946, but resident of Canada since 1969.
Studies and degrees: Licenciate History, State University of Ghent, Belgium, 1969; PhD History, York University, 1976; MA Political Science, University of Toronto, 1984; PhD Political Science, University of Toronto, 1995. Lectured at various Ontario universities, including U of T, Waterloo, Guelph.
Author of numerous articles and books. Most recently “The Myth of the Good War”
Also active as tour operator and guide on behalf of family business, Pauwels Travel Bureau of Brantford, Ontario.
Married to Danielle Van Laere, father of David and Natalie, born respectively in 1971 and 1974 and both UofT graduates.
Degrees
• 1995PhD, Political Science, University of Toronto (Thesis on Canadian Foreign Investment Policy supervisor: C. Tuohy.)
• 1984MA, Political Science, University of Toronto
• 1976PhD, History, York University, Toronto (Dissertation on Women University Students in Nazi Germany; supervisor: M. Kater)
• 1969Licenciaat Letteren en Wijsbegeerte, afdeling Geschiedenis, Rijksuniversiteit Gent (Thesis over Werkstakingen in België, 1830-1880; supervisor: J. Dhondt.)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Myth of the Good war
In the spirit of historians Howard Zinn, Gwynne Dyer, and Noam Chomsky, Jacques Pauwels focuses on the big picture. Like them, he seeks to find the real reasons for the actions of great powers and great leaders. Familiar Second World War figures from Adolf Hitler to Franklin D. Roosevelt and Joseph Stalin are portrayed in a new light in this book. The decisions of Hitler and his Nazi government to go to war were not those of madmen. Britain and the US were not allies fighting shoulder to shoulder with no motive except ridding the world of the evils of Nazism.
In Pauwels’ account, the actions of the United States during the war years were heavily influenced by American corporations — IBM, GM, Ford, ITT, and Standard Oil of New Jersey (now called Exxon) — who were having a very profitable war selling oil, armaments, and equipment to both sides, with money gushing everywhere. Rather than analyzing Pearl Harbor as an unprovoked attack, Pauwels notes that US generals boasted of their success in goading Japan into a war the Americans badly wanted. One chilling account describes why President Truman insisted on using nuclear bombs against Japan when there was no military need to do so. Another reveals that Churchill instructed his bombers to flatten Dresden and kill thousands when the war was already won, to demonstrate British American strength to Stalin.
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Tags: The Myth of the Good War / Adolf Hitler / Corporate America Supported Nazi Germany / Henry Ford / Joseph Stalin
wn.com/Jacques R. Pauwel Phd Original Air Date 08 11 15
Jacque Pauwels PhD
Born in Belgium in 1946, but resident of Canada since 1969.
Studies and degrees: Licenciate History, State University of Ghent, Belgium, 1969; PhD History, York University, 1976; MA Political Science, University of Toronto, 1984; PhD Political Science, University of Toronto, 1995. Lectured at various Ontario universities, including U of T, Waterloo, Guelph.
Author of numerous articles and books. Most recently “The Myth of the Good War”
Also active as tour operator and guide on behalf of family business, Pauwels Travel Bureau of Brantford, Ontario.
Married to Danielle Van Laere, father of David and Natalie, born respectively in 1971 and 1974 and both UofT graduates.
Degrees
• 1995PhD, Political Science, University of Toronto (Thesis on Canadian Foreign Investment Policy supervisor: C. Tuohy.)
• 1984MA, Political Science, University of Toronto
• 1976PhD, History, York University, Toronto (Dissertation on Women University Students in Nazi Germany; supervisor: M. Kater)
• 1969Licenciaat Letteren en Wijsbegeerte, afdeling Geschiedenis, Rijksuniversiteit Gent (Thesis over Werkstakingen in België, 1830-1880; supervisor: J. Dhondt.)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Myth of the Good war
In the spirit of historians Howard Zinn, Gwynne Dyer, and Noam Chomsky, Jacques Pauwels focuses on the big picture. Like them, he seeks to find the real reasons for the actions of great powers and great leaders. Familiar Second World War figures from Adolf Hitler to Franklin D. Roosevelt and Joseph Stalin are portrayed in a new light in this book. The decisions of Hitler and his Nazi government to go to war were not those of madmen. Britain and the US were not allies fighting shoulder to shoulder with no motive except ridding the world of the evils of Nazism.
In Pauwels’ account, the actions of the United States during the war years were heavily influenced by American corporations — IBM, GM, Ford, ITT, and Standard Oil of New Jersey (now called Exxon) — who were having a very profitable war selling oil, armaments, and equipment to both sides, with money gushing everywhere. Rather than analyzing Pearl Harbor as an unprovoked attack, Pauwels notes that US generals boasted of their success in goading Japan into a war the Americans badly wanted. One chilling account describes why President Truman insisted on using nuclear bombs against Japan when there was no military need to do so. Another reveals that Churchill instructed his bombers to flatten Dresden and kill thousands when the war was already won, to demonstrate British American strength to Stalin.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Tags: The Myth of the Good War / Adolf Hitler / Corporate America Supported Nazi Germany / Henry Ford / Joseph Stalin
- published: 16 Sep 2015
- views: 6
Rotary Iron: Making a New Day Out of Tuesday 1946 Ironrite Company
more at http://kitchen.quickfound.net/
"How the Ironrite automatic ironing machine makes the life of the housewife much easier." As of 2014, new rotary irons sell on the Internet for $2,000 to $13,000.
Public domain film from the Prelinger Archives, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mangle_(machine)
A mangle (as it is called in the United Kingdom) or wringer (as it is called in the United States) is a mechanical laundry aid consisting of two rollers in a sturdy frame, connected by cogs and, in its home version, powered by a hand crank or electrically. While the appliance was originally used to wring water from wet laundry, today mangles are used to press or flatten sheets, tablecloths, kitchen towels, or clothing and other laundry...
Clothes press
The Oxford English Dictionary dates the first use of the word in English from 1598, quoting John Florio who, in his 1598 dictionary, A World of Words, described "a kind of press to press buckram, fustian, or dyed linen cloth, to make it have a luster or gloss." The word comes from the Dutch mangel, from mangelen "to mangle", which in turn derives from the medieval Latin mango or manga which ultimately comes from the Greek manganon, meaning "axis" or "engine". Some northern European countries used a table version for centuries, the device consisting of a wood cylinder around which the damp cloth was wrapped, and a curved length of wood, the mangle, which was used to roll and flatten the cloth.
In the second half of the 19th century, steam was harnessed to laundry purposes and commercial laundries used steam-powered mangles or ironers. Gradually, the electric washing machine's spin cycle rendered this use of a mangle obsolete, and with it the need to wring out water from clothes mechanically. Box mangles were large and primarily intended for pressing laundry smooth; they were used by wealthy households, large commercial laundries, and self-employed "mangle women". Middle-class households and independent washerwomen used upright mangles for wringing water out of laundry, and in the later 19th century they were more widely used than early washing machines. The rollers were typically made of wood, or sometimes rubber.
The Steel Roll Mangle Co. of 108 Franklin Street, Chicago, Illinois offered a gas heated home mangle for pressing linens in 1902. In the 1930s electric mangles were developed and are still a feature of many laundry rooms. They consist of a rotating padded drum which revolves against a heating element which can be stationary, or can also be a rotating drum. Laundry is fed into the turning mangle and emerges flat and pressed on the other side. This process takes much less time than ironing with the usual iron and ironing board.
There were many electric rotary ironers on the American market including Solent, Thor, Ironrite and Apex. By the 1940s the list had grown to include Bendix, General Electric, Kenmore and Maytag. By the 1950s home ironers or mangles as they came to be called were becoming popular time savers for the homemaker...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clothes_iron
A clothes iron, also called a flatiron or simply an iron, is a small appliance: a handheld piece of equipment with a flat, roughly triangular surface that, when heated, is used to press clothes to remove creases. It is named for the metal of which the device is commonly made, and the use of it is generally called ironing. Ironing works by loosening the ties between the long chains of molecules that exist in polymer fiber materials. With the heat and the weight of the ironing plate, the fibers are stretched and the fabric maintains its new shape when cool. Some materials, such as cotton, require the use of water to loosen the intermolecular bonds. Many materials developed in the twentieth century are advertised as needing little or no ironing.
The electric iron was invented in 1882 by Henry W. Seeley, a New York inventor. Seeley patented his "electric flatiron" on June 6, 1882. His iron weighed almost 15 pounds and took a long time to warm up. Other electric irons had also been invented, including one from France (1882), but it used a carbon arc to heat the iron, a method which was dangerous...
wn.com/Rotary Iron Making A New Day Out Of Tuesday 1946 Ironrite Company
more at http://kitchen.quickfound.net/
"How the Ironrite automatic ironing machine makes the life of the housewife much easier." As of 2014, new rotary irons sell on the Internet for $2,000 to $13,000.
Public domain film from the Prelinger Archives, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mangle_(machine)
A mangle (as it is called in the United Kingdom) or wringer (as it is called in the United States) is a mechanical laundry aid consisting of two rollers in a sturdy frame, connected by cogs and, in its home version, powered by a hand crank or electrically. While the appliance was originally used to wring water from wet laundry, today mangles are used to press or flatten sheets, tablecloths, kitchen towels, or clothing and other laundry...
Clothes press
The Oxford English Dictionary dates the first use of the word in English from 1598, quoting John Florio who, in his 1598 dictionary, A World of Words, described "a kind of press to press buckram, fustian, or dyed linen cloth, to make it have a luster or gloss." The word comes from the Dutch mangel, from mangelen "to mangle", which in turn derives from the medieval Latin mango or manga which ultimately comes from the Greek manganon, meaning "axis" or "engine". Some northern European countries used a table version for centuries, the device consisting of a wood cylinder around which the damp cloth was wrapped, and a curved length of wood, the mangle, which was used to roll and flatten the cloth.
In the second half of the 19th century, steam was harnessed to laundry purposes and commercial laundries used steam-powered mangles or ironers. Gradually, the electric washing machine's spin cycle rendered this use of a mangle obsolete, and with it the need to wring out water from clothes mechanically. Box mangles were large and primarily intended for pressing laundry smooth; they were used by wealthy households, large commercial laundries, and self-employed "mangle women". Middle-class households and independent washerwomen used upright mangles for wringing water out of laundry, and in the later 19th century they were more widely used than early washing machines. The rollers were typically made of wood, or sometimes rubber.
The Steel Roll Mangle Co. of 108 Franklin Street, Chicago, Illinois offered a gas heated home mangle for pressing linens in 1902. In the 1930s electric mangles were developed and are still a feature of many laundry rooms. They consist of a rotating padded drum which revolves against a heating element which can be stationary, or can also be a rotating drum. Laundry is fed into the turning mangle and emerges flat and pressed on the other side. This process takes much less time than ironing with the usual iron and ironing board.
There were many electric rotary ironers on the American market including Solent, Thor, Ironrite and Apex. By the 1940s the list had grown to include Bendix, General Electric, Kenmore and Maytag. By the 1950s home ironers or mangles as they came to be called were becoming popular time savers for the homemaker...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clothes_iron
A clothes iron, also called a flatiron or simply an iron, is a small appliance: a handheld piece of equipment with a flat, roughly triangular surface that, when heated, is used to press clothes to remove creases. It is named for the metal of which the device is commonly made, and the use of it is generally called ironing. Ironing works by loosening the ties between the long chains of molecules that exist in polymer fiber materials. With the heat and the weight of the ironing plate, the fibers are stretched and the fabric maintains its new shape when cool. Some materials, such as cotton, require the use of water to loosen the intermolecular bonds. Many materials developed in the twentieth century are advertised as needing little or no ironing.
The electric iron was invented in 1882 by Henry W. Seeley, a New York inventor. Seeley patented his "electric flatiron" on June 6, 1882. His iron weighed almost 15 pounds and took a long time to warm up. Other electric irons had also been invented, including one from France (1882), but it used a carbon arc to heat the iron, a method which was dangerous...
- published: 23 Dec 2014
- views: 23
Tree Farming: "Timber in the Northeast" circa 1946 (Logging for Continuous Production)
more at http://scitech.quickfound.net/environment/environment_news.html Tree farming, as compared to logging, in Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, and Northern ...
wn.com/Tree Farming Timber In The Northeast Circa 1946 (Logging For Continuous Production)
more at http://scitech.quickfound.net/environment/environment_news.html Tree farming, as compared to logging, in Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, and Northern ...
Gouverner la France depuis 1946 - Alain Bergounioux
A l'occasion de la journée scientifique organisée par l'APHG en coopération avec l'AHCESR à l'université Paris Sorbonne le 25 mai 2013, Alain Bergounioux, in...
wn.com/Gouverner La France Depuis 1946 Alain Bergounioux
A l'occasion de la journée scientifique organisée par l'APHG en coopération avec l'AHCESR à l'université Paris Sorbonne le 25 mai 2013, Alain Bergounioux, in...
- published: 22 Aug 2013
- views: 1292
-
author:
APHG
Jean-Paul Sartre à la Sorbonne (1946)
Jean-Paul Sartre à la Sorbonne : première diffusion le 30/11/1946 sur la Chaîne Parisienne.
« Si l’on se borne à écrire sur la liberté, en général on contribue à l’oppression » !
« L’essence est de maintenir la liberté » L’art pour l’art : un appel stérile à la liberté.
J’appelle bourgeoisie tout ce qui pense bassement »
En 1946, à la Sorbonne, Jean-Paul Sartre donnait une conférence pour marquer la création de l’Unesco : il était question de l’écrivain, imbu d’une responsabilité dont il ne sait que faire - comme tous les autres hommes -, de Flaubert, de l’élite éclairée, des couches sociales assistant à la liquidation de leur idéologie… « Il n’y a pas de littérature innocente »
Thème(s) : Littérature| 20e siècle| Grands Classiques| Littérature Française| Jean-Paul Sartre
Source : France Culture
wn.com/Jean Paul Sartre À La Sorbonne (1946)
Jean-Paul Sartre à la Sorbonne : première diffusion le 30/11/1946 sur la Chaîne Parisienne.
« Si l’on se borne à écrire sur la liberté, en général on contribue à l’oppression » !
« L’essence est de maintenir la liberté » L’art pour l’art : un appel stérile à la liberté.
J’appelle bourgeoisie tout ce qui pense bassement »
En 1946, à la Sorbonne, Jean-Paul Sartre donnait une conférence pour marquer la création de l’Unesco : il était question de l’écrivain, imbu d’une responsabilité dont il ne sait que faire - comme tous les autres hommes -, de Flaubert, de l’élite éclairée, des couches sociales assistant à la liquidation de leur idéologie… « Il n’y a pas de littérature innocente »
Thème(s) : Littérature| 20e siècle| Grands Classiques| Littérature Française| Jean-Paul Sartre
Source : France Culture
- published: 09 Oct 2014
- views: 1
Blas Galindo: Cantata a la Patria para coro y orquesta (1946)
Orquesta Sinfónica Carlos Chávez dirigida por / Carlos Chávez Symphony Orchestra conducted by Fernando Lozano. Cello: Gabriela Oliva. Coro/Choir: Coro Nacional de México.
Blas Galindo pertenece a la generación de compositores mexicanos nacidos durante la Revolución y por lo mismo de empapó de los valores nacionalistas que ésta emanaba. Habiendo nacido en una humilde comunidad indígena, marchó como niño a la revolución y dedicó su adolescencia a desarrollar su talento musical en su comunidad. Esto le permitiría más tarde acceder al reformado Conservatorio Nacional de México e incluso ganó una beca para estudiar con Aaron Copland, ya para entonces gran amigo de la música mexicana, en Tanglewood. Su Cantata a la Patria de 1946 está basada sobre el poema nacionalista Suave Patria (1921) del romántico Ramón López Velarde, la cual es su obra maestra y constituye un elogio a las bondades naturales y humanas de la nación mexicana.
Blas Galindo was born during the Mexican Revolution, and thus became permeated with the nationalist values of the conflict. Being born in a humble indigenous community, he went as a child soldier into the revolution and dedicated his teenage years to develop his musical talents within his community. This would later allow him to enter the reformed National Mexican Conservatoire, even winning a grant to study in Tanglewood with Aaron Copland, already a great friend to Mexican Music and composers. His Cantata to the Fatherland of 1946 is based upon the nationalist poem Suave Patria (The Smooth Fatherland, 1921) by romantic poet Ramon Lopez Velarde, which is his masterpiece and constitutes a eulogy to the natural and human nurtures of the Mexican nation.
Image/imagen: La Patria / Allegory of the Fatherland. Jorge González Camarena. 1962.
wn.com/Blas Galindo Cantata A La Patria Para Coro Y Orquesta (1946)
Orquesta Sinfónica Carlos Chávez dirigida por / Carlos Chávez Symphony Orchestra conducted by Fernando Lozano. Cello: Gabriela Oliva. Coro/Choir: Coro Nacional de México.
Blas Galindo pertenece a la generación de compositores mexicanos nacidos durante la Revolución y por lo mismo de empapó de los valores nacionalistas que ésta emanaba. Habiendo nacido en una humilde comunidad indígena, marchó como niño a la revolución y dedicó su adolescencia a desarrollar su talento musical en su comunidad. Esto le permitiría más tarde acceder al reformado Conservatorio Nacional de México e incluso ganó una beca para estudiar con Aaron Copland, ya para entonces gran amigo de la música mexicana, en Tanglewood. Su Cantata a la Patria de 1946 está basada sobre el poema nacionalista Suave Patria (1921) del romántico Ramón López Velarde, la cual es su obra maestra y constituye un elogio a las bondades naturales y humanas de la nación mexicana.
Blas Galindo was born during the Mexican Revolution, and thus became permeated with the nationalist values of the conflict. Being born in a humble indigenous community, he went as a child soldier into the revolution and dedicated his teenage years to develop his musical talents within his community. This would later allow him to enter the reformed National Mexican Conservatoire, even winning a grant to study in Tanglewood with Aaron Copland, already a great friend to Mexican Music and composers. His Cantata to the Fatherland of 1946 is based upon the nationalist poem Suave Patria (The Smooth Fatherland, 1921) by romantic poet Ramon Lopez Velarde, which is his masterpiece and constitutes a eulogy to the natural and human nurtures of the Mexican nation.
Image/imagen: La Patria / Allegory of the Fatherland. Jorge González Camarena. 1962.
- published: 10 Jul 2015
- views: 7
Industrial Medicine: Doctor in Industry 1946 General Motors
more at http://scitech.quickfound.net
'Epic history of industrial medicine in the first half of the 20th century, showing how manufacturers and the medical profession came to terms with one another and culminating in GM's rehabilitation program for returned World War II veterans. Directed by Haford Kerbawy.'
Public domain film from the Prelinger Archives, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occupational_safety_and_health
...Physical hazards are a common source of injuries in many industries. They are perhaps unavoidable in certain industries, such as construction and mining, but over time people have developed safety methods and procedures to manage the risks of physical danger in the workplace. Employment of children may pose special problems.
Falls are a common cause of occupational injuries and fatalities, especially in construction, extraction, transportation, healthcare, and building cleaning and maintenance.
An engineering workshop specialising in the fabrication and welding of components has to follow the Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) at work regulations 1992. It is an employers duty to provide ‘all equipment (including clothing affording protection against the weather) which is intended to be worn or held by a person at work which protects him against one or more risks to his health and safety’. In a fabrication and welding workshop an employer would be required to provide face and eye protection, safety footwear, overalls and other necessary PPE.
Machines are commonplace in many industries, including manufacturing, mining, construction and agriculture, and can be dangerous to workers. Many machines involve moving parts, sharp edges, hot surfaces and other hazards with the potential to crush, burn, cut, shear, stab or otherwise strike or wound workers if used unsafely. Various safety measures exist to minimize these hazards, including lockout-tagout procedures for machine maintenance and roll over protection systems for vehicles. According to the United States Bureau of Labor Statistics, machine-related injuries were responsible for 64,170 cases that required days away from work in 2008. More than a quarter of these cases required more than 31 days spent away from work. That same year, machines were the primary or secondary source of over 600 work-related fatalities. Machines are also often involved indirectly in worker deaths and injuries, such as in cases in which a worker slips and falls, possibly upon a sharp or pointed object. The transportation sector bears many risks for the health of commercial drivers, too, for example from vibration, long periods of sitting, work stress and exhaustion. These problems occur in Europe but in other parts of the world the situation is even worse...
Confined spaces also present a work hazard. The National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health defines "confined space" as having limited openings for entry and exit and unfavorable natural ventilation, and which is not intended for continuous employee occupancy. Spaces of this kind can include storage tanks, ship compartments, sewers, and pipelines. Confined spaces can pose a hazard not just to workers, but also to people who try to rescue them.
Noise also presents a fairly common workplace hazard: occupational hearing loss is the most common work-related injury in the United States, with 22 million workers exposed to hazardous noise levels at work and an estimated $242 million spent annually on worker's compensation for hearing loss disability. Noise is not the only source of occupational hearing loss; exposure to chemicals such as aromatic solvents and metals including lead, arsenic, and mercury can also cause hearing loss.
Temperature extremes can also pose a danger to workers. Heat stress can cause heat stroke, exhaustion, cramps, and rashes. Heat can also fog up safety glasses or cause sweaty palms or dizziness, all of which increase the risk of other injuries. Workers near hot surfaces or steam also are at risk for burns. Dehydration may also result from overexposure to heat. Cold stress also poses a danger to many workers. Overexposure to cold conditions or extreme cold can lead to hypothermia, frostbite, trench foot, or chilblains...
wn.com/Industrial Medicine Doctor In Industry 1946 General Motors
more at http://scitech.quickfound.net
'Epic history of industrial medicine in the first half of the 20th century, showing how manufacturers and the medical profession came to terms with one another and culminating in GM's rehabilitation program for returned World War II veterans. Directed by Haford Kerbawy.'
Public domain film from the Prelinger Archives, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occupational_safety_and_health
...Physical hazards are a common source of injuries in many industries. They are perhaps unavoidable in certain industries, such as construction and mining, but over time people have developed safety methods and procedures to manage the risks of physical danger in the workplace. Employment of children may pose special problems.
Falls are a common cause of occupational injuries and fatalities, especially in construction, extraction, transportation, healthcare, and building cleaning and maintenance.
An engineering workshop specialising in the fabrication and welding of components has to follow the Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) at work regulations 1992. It is an employers duty to provide ‘all equipment (including clothing affording protection against the weather) which is intended to be worn or held by a person at work which protects him against one or more risks to his health and safety’. In a fabrication and welding workshop an employer would be required to provide face and eye protection, safety footwear, overalls and other necessary PPE.
Machines are commonplace in many industries, including manufacturing, mining, construction and agriculture, and can be dangerous to workers. Many machines involve moving parts, sharp edges, hot surfaces and other hazards with the potential to crush, burn, cut, shear, stab or otherwise strike or wound workers if used unsafely. Various safety measures exist to minimize these hazards, including lockout-tagout procedures for machine maintenance and roll over protection systems for vehicles. According to the United States Bureau of Labor Statistics, machine-related injuries were responsible for 64,170 cases that required days away from work in 2008. More than a quarter of these cases required more than 31 days spent away from work. That same year, machines were the primary or secondary source of over 600 work-related fatalities. Machines are also often involved indirectly in worker deaths and injuries, such as in cases in which a worker slips and falls, possibly upon a sharp or pointed object. The transportation sector bears many risks for the health of commercial drivers, too, for example from vibration, long periods of sitting, work stress and exhaustion. These problems occur in Europe but in other parts of the world the situation is even worse...
Confined spaces also present a work hazard. The National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health defines "confined space" as having limited openings for entry and exit and unfavorable natural ventilation, and which is not intended for continuous employee occupancy. Spaces of this kind can include storage tanks, ship compartments, sewers, and pipelines. Confined spaces can pose a hazard not just to workers, but also to people who try to rescue them.
Noise also presents a fairly common workplace hazard: occupational hearing loss is the most common work-related injury in the United States, with 22 million workers exposed to hazardous noise levels at work and an estimated $242 million spent annually on worker's compensation for hearing loss disability. Noise is not the only source of occupational hearing loss; exposure to chemicals such as aromatic solvents and metals including lead, arsenic, and mercury can also cause hearing loss.
Temperature extremes can also pose a danger to workers. Heat stress can cause heat stroke, exhaustion, cramps, and rashes. Heat can also fog up safety glasses or cause sweaty palms or dizziness, all of which increase the risk of other injuries. Workers near hot surfaces or steam also are at risk for burns. Dehydration may also result from overexposure to heat. Cold stress also poses a danger to many workers. Overexposure to cold conditions or extreme cold can lead to hypothermia, frostbite, trench foot, or chilblains...
- published: 02 Jul 2015
- views: 21
Full Length Western Movie Duel in the Sun 1946 Gregory Peck
Full Length Western Movie Duel in the Sun 1946 Gregory Peck =========================================================== western movies
wn.com/Full Length Western Movie Duel In The Sun 1946 Gregory Peck
Full Length Western Movie Duel in the Sun 1946 Gregory Peck =========================================================== western movies
- published: 29 Jun 2015
- views: 4