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Dundurn National Historic Site
Categories: Public Services & Government Landmarks & Historical Buildings Active Life Parks Arts & Entertainment Museums Landmarks & Historical Buildings, Parks, Museums [Edit]
610 York BlvdHamilton, ON L8R 3H1
(905) 546-2872
2 reviews for Dundurn National Historic Site
2 reviews in English
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Review from Johnny H.
Toronto, ON
Excellent place to have a glimpse at what luxury life was like 100 years ago. The tour guide gave us a very detailed explanation on history behind the house.
Of course, being an old house that belonged to a rich person, there are many weird aspects of the house (the house has its own beer brewery). It was very interesting to see all the features that are not common in modern houses.
Unfortunately, the house gives off too much of restored look. Majority of the house went through renovation to bring back its original shape. Not sure if that worked for me.
Overall, it is a wonderful place to visit if you are in Hamilton. -
Review from John F.
North York, ON
Had been wanting to see this and got here over the weekend.
This is not really a castle, but actually a stately home belonging to Allan McNab, a colonial premier of Canada and ancestor of the current Duchess of York (AKA "The Rottweiler'). It has been a museum since 1900 but they are stll doing restoration - the main hall was about to have new wallpaper based on the original.
It is interesting as a house museum as it has a lot of original pieces and generally careful restoration, with the tour spending almost as must time on the servants quarters as upstairs. The guide was knowledgeable but geared her scripted spiel more to the children in attendance.
For its mid-nineteenth century time, the house combined some fairly sophisiticated features (early gasification, running water and a flush toilet) with some rather corner cutting finishing touches (stucco painted with lines over brick instead of real sandstone for the exterior wall, trompe l'oeuil marble inside instead of the real thing, and bare plank floors upstairs - in the Eastern US or England at this time I think they would have been covered by "Turkey carpets.")
The grounds include a pretty dovecote (visible prominently from York Boulevard), a rather boring gift shop, a military museum of somewhat moderate interest, an strange little building used for cockfighting (!), and the most interesting, a lovely heirloom garden with an excellent interpreter.
The tour plus the museum and garden take about 90 minutes to see. I felt the $11 price tag was worth it and suited to the scale of the property. I learned some interesting tidbits of Canadian history, and the house, despite some of the cost-cutting of the orginal inhabitants, is quite lovely and has some truly unique touches.
Well worth a trip to Hamilton. Remember to leave early as the QEW traffic on a summer weekend will add another hour to the trip.
