Apr 30, 2021 • 16 minutes
Haliburton County's Young Men's Literary Society had aspirations to greater things in a small community plus Canada's WW2 POW Camps - mostly surprisingly civilized....but not always.
May 7, 2021 • 18 minutes
Celebrating nurses in Haliburton County - and beyond. Plus Canada's largest ever strike and its legacy.
May 15, 2021 • 17 minutes
How did Haliburton County's little town of Cheddar get it's name plus why was Toronto called the Belfast of North America in the mid-1800's?
May 22, 2021 • 16 minutes
Arthur Bachelor achieved so much in early Haliburton County, then died tragically. The HMCS Esquimalt was the last Canadian naval ship sunk in WW2.
May 28, 2021 • 16 minutes
What does a new community in the wilderness to do with the deceased plus Quebec's folk-lore boogielady Marie-Josephte Corriveau.
Jun 5, 2021 • 14 minutes
It takes many characters to make a small turn of the century village, and this episode is about one of them. Plus, John Joseph Kelso - a remarkable man and tireless early advocate for children and animals.
Jun 12, 2021 • 18 minutes
Haliburton village has the iconic late 1800's Reid House, but who were the Reid family? Plus, John Anderson - the last escaped slave that the US tried to extradite back from Canada.
Jun 19, 2021 • 16 minutes
A brief story of Bernard Naraseau, an early indigenous Canadian in Haliburton County plus 1916's Battle of the Hat Pins for Francophone education in Ontario
Jun 26, 2021 • 17 minutes
Some of the changes brought about by the early transition from horse and buggy to motor vehicles. Plus, Canada's secret weapon in WW2 - the Cree code talkers.
Jul 10, 2021 • 16 minutes
What was summer vacation like for kids at the end of the 1800's plus a fur-trade labourer in the late 1800's Canada that wasn't what 'he' seemed to be.
Get new episodes of Time Warp automatically