Drawings

Habitation, Port Royal, Annapolis County

St. Mary's Basilica

Prince's Lodge Rotunda, Greater Halifax, NS

Halifax Citadel, Halifax, Nova Scotia

North Hills Museum House, Annapolis Co, NS

Sawrey Knots, Far Sawrey, Lake District

Covenanter Church, Grand Pre, NS

Privateer's Wharf - Halifax

MANNING CHAPEL - ACADIA UNIVERSITY

Uniacke House, Mount Uniacke, NS

Beringer Vineyards

Haliburton House, Windsor, NS

The Three Churches, Mahone Bay, NS

EMERSON HALL ACADIA UNIV. (Ref: 048)

Peter Michael Winery

Kingfisher Cottage - St. Florence, Wales

Convocation Hall - King's Edgehill School, Windsor

Inglenook Winery

ALUMNI HOUSE - ACADIA UNIVERSITY

St. George's Church, Halifax, NS

Ferrari-Carano Vineyards

Robertson Store - Maritime Museum, Halifax

Oakville Ranch Vineyards

Chateau Montelena Chinese Garden

St. Pauls Church, Halifax, NS

Beaulieu Vineyard

Chateau St. Jean

ACADIA WAR MEMORIAL GYM. (ref: 49)

Heitz Cellar

Grand Pre Evangeline Church, Grand Pre, NS

Polperro Waterfront, Cornwall

Craig Y Mor Cottage - Newport, Wales

The Temple at Swinnithwaite - Yorkshire

Silverado Vineyards

SEMINARY HOUSE - ACADIA UNIVERSITY

ACADIA PRESIDENT'S HOUSE (ref 47)

Shand House - Windsor. NS

Little Dutch Church, Halifax, Nova Scotia

Lundy Island Lighthouse - Devon

Lunenburg Museum Docks, Lunenburg, NS

Scoles Manor - Corfe, Dorset

EMERSON HALL - ACADIA UNIV. (Ref: 002)

CSS Acadia, Maritime Museum, Halifax, Nova Scotia

GOVERNMENT HOUSE. - HALIFAX

Groth Vineyards

Saintsbury

Chimney Rock Winery

Prescott House - Starr's Point, Kings Co, NS

Opus One

Fort Massey Church, Halifax, NS

Halifax City Hall, Halifax, Nova Scotia

Lawrence House - Maitland, Hants Co, NS

Shute Gate House - Axminster, Devon

Halifax Old Town Clock, Halifax, Nova Scotia

Peggy's Cove Lighthouse, Halifax Co, NS

Grgich Hills Cellar

UNIVERSITY HALL

MEMORIAL GYM - ACADIA UNIVERSITY

Davis Bynum Winery

Railroad Station Library, Wolfwille, NS

Grace Family Vineyards

Robert Mondavi Winery

King's County Courthouse, Kentville, NS

Habitation, Port Royal, Annapolis County

Habitation, Port Royal, Annapolis County

Signed & Matted Limited Edition Print 8" x 10" 

$20  each. (plus shipping $4.) 

Plus $4 Shipping & Insurance

Add the appropriate shipping charge and submit your order by email(gallery@eastlink.ca), giving us the destination postal address and your telephone number.  We will respond promptly and notify you when your payment has been received and the tracking # for your parcel.

The Armstrong Gallery accepts payment for online orders by:
1. email-transfer of funds to
gale@eastlink.ca (available within Canada)
2. Visa or Mastercard.  Please email or telephone  (902-640-2176) with the credit card particulars.

If ordering more than one piece of artwork we will do our best to combine the packaging to obtain the best shipping rate and will advise you accordingly as to the final charge.
 

YOUR PATRONAGE IS MUCH APPRECIATED…THANK YOU!

Habitation, Port Royal

The Habitation at Port Royal, as we see it today, is a more or less faithful replica of the fort built by Sieur de Monts and Samuel de Champlain in 1605.  From this site Acadian colonization and culture radiated out in the decades that followed.  Sadly, because Port Royal was the first French settlement (second in all North America only to the Spanish settlement at St. Augustine) it also became a focal point of English imperial interest and contention, making for a century of battles in which the fortress site changed hands many times.  However, in its very first life (1605-1613) the roughly hewn Habitation played host to a most extraordinary collection of gentlemen…adventurers of serious intellect, who were imbued with a real sense of their own culture, but filled with open-minded curiosity about the peoples and places of the New World.  Here, during those first winters, Champlain and his friends staged original plays and held splendid feasts, heralding their comradery with the founding of L’Order de Bon Temps.  In 1613 the Habitation was sacked by English forces from the new Virginia colony, and gradually the strategic focus moved further up the Annapolis Basin to what became Annapolis Royal.