Open-air museum

Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village

Canada Alberta
Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village
Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village · Wikipedia

About

Open to the public from the May long weekend to Labour Day, the Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village (Ukrainian: Село спадщини української культури, romanized: Selo spadshchyny ukrains’koi kul’tury) is an open-air museum that uses costumed historical interpreters to recreate pioneer settlements in east central Alberta, Canada, northeast and east of Edmonton. In particular it shows the lives of Ukrainian Canadian settlers from the years 1899 to 1930. Buildings from surrounding communities have been moved to the historic site and restored to various years within the first part of the twentieth century. "The Village", as it is colloquially known, has a very strong commitment to historical authenticity and the concept of living history. The Village uses a technique known as first-person interpretation which requires that the costumed performers remain in character at all times (or as much as is feasibly possible). Actors answer all questions as if it is the year their building portrays. Although this technique is startling for some visitors at first, it allows for a much stronger experience of immersion in history than traditional third-person interpretation, where the actor acknowledges...

- Alberta Centenary Pioneer Recognition Monument

- Cenotaph to the Ukrainian Canadian Soldier

- Ukrainian Canadian Internment Camp Monument

- Chornobyl Disaster Commemorative Cross

Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village

The Museum is divided into thematic areas: Overview, Farmsteads, Rural Communities, and Town sites.

Note: the spellings used for names and locations are those from the time to which the building has been restored, and may not match those in use today

Name (indicates the name of the owners or operators of a building and its original location), as well as the time period to which it has been restored

Provides an introduction to Galician and Bukovinian immigration to Canada by showing the homes of three settler families. Iwan Pylypow was one of two individuals who set off the mass migration of Ukrainians to Canada at the end of the 19th century. His family was Galician. His third house in Canada is preserved at the Village. The second house is that of Mykhailo and Vaselina Hawreliak. The Hawreliaks were a large Ukrainian Bukovinian family who settled in the Shandro area. By the 1920s Mykhailo Hawreliak was quite successful, and the house preserved here has five bedrooms and a cistern that collected rainwater for use in the kitchen. The Nazar Yurko family was also from Bukovina, but was of Romanian descent.

- Pylypow House ( Star, Alberta ; Built 1906, depicts 1923–1929)

Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village

- Hawreliak House ( Shandro, Alberta ; Built 1919, depicts 1925–1928)

- Yurko House ( Boian, Alberta ; Built 1920, depicts 1932)

- Township Survey Marker (Reconstruction to circa 1892) – marked the corner of a Township (36 square miles), containing 160 acre plots of land available under the Dominion Lands Act for homesteading. The townships were surveyed prior to the mass influx of European immigration to the Canadian Prairies

- Burdei – Based on field research and archaeological findings; reconstructed to 1900 - Temporary shelters dug out of the ground or into the side of a hill were a common feature of the earliest farms of the Ukrainian immigrant settlers.

- Grekul House (Toporivtsi, Alberta; Built 1915, depicts 1918–1919)

Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village

- Grekul Granary (Toporivtsi, Alberta; Built 1908-1909, depicts 1918–1919

- Grekul Barn (Toporivtsi, Alberta; Built 1915, depicts 1918–1919

- Roswiyczuk Granary (North Kotzman, Alberta; Built 1914, depicts 1918)

- Makowichuk Barn (South Kotzman, Alberta; Built 1912, depicts 1918)

- Hlus' House (Buchach, Alberta; Built 1915–1916, depicts 1918)