Sunday, October 27, 2024

What happened to Harold Holt? The Disappearance of an Australian Prime Minister

Let's go Down Under, shall we?  The year is 1967 and Harold Holt is prime minister of Australia.  Let's take a look at his mysterious disappearance.  First, some background.  Holt was a lawyer and politician who served as Australia's 17th PM, and the leader of the Liberal Party of Australia.  He became the third Australian prime minister to die in office, following Joseph Lyons in 1939 and John Curtin in 1945.

Harold Edward Holt was born in Stanmore, New South Wales, a suburb of Sydney, on August 5, 1908.  He was the eldest of the two sons born to Thomas James Holt, a schoolteacher, and his wife, Olive May, née Williams.  Harold's  younger brother, Clifford was born in 1910.  His parents eventually separated, and his mother died in 1925 when Harold was 16.

In 1920, Holt began boarding at Wesley College in Melbourne.  In 1927, he started studying law at the  University of Melbourne, where he lived at Queen's College.  He excelled in sports, especially cricket, and football (soccer)/and he was also active in student activities and debating.  His fine oratory skills and essay writing won him prizes.

In 1930, Holt graduated with a Bachelor of Laws degree.  As a young lawyer in Melbourne during the early 1930s, he developed an interest in politics.  He joined the United Australia Party (UAP), the forerunner of the Liberal Party, and was elected to the federal Parliament in 1935 in the secure UAP seat of Fawkner.  Holt was 27 years old when he entered Parliament as its youngest member.  According to the Australian Dictionary of  Biography, the new member for Fawkner "was a dashing figure: of middle height, fit and handsome, with thick black hair swept back, well-tailored clothes, ready smile and a natural charm."

Holt as a young man in the 1930s

In 1939, Holt's mentor, Sir Robert Menzies, became prime minister and Holt was appointed a minister without portfolio.  In 1941, under Prime Minister Menzies, Holt organized the Department of Labour and National Service for wartime mobilization.  However, Menzies' government was defeated that year and the UAP was sent into opposition.  

Holt joined the new Liberal Party upon its creation in 1945.  When the Liberals came into office in 1949, Holt became a senior cabinet minister for the new government.  From 1949 to 1956, he held the important position of Minister for Immigration.  During his tenure as Minister for Immigration, Holt dealt with post-war immigration to Australia.  He relaxed the White Australia policy (based on the  Immigration Restriction Act of 1901) for the first time.

Holt's reforms evened the playing field between Europeans and non-Europeans seeking citizenship, setting a 5-year wait time for both groups.  The criteria for non-European migrants applying for permanent residence.  

From 1949 to 1958, Holt served as Minister of Labour and National Service, where he took care of labour disputes.  In 1956, he was elected deputy leader of the Liberal Party.  After the 1956 election, he also became Treasurer.  

Harold Holt was the most experienced cabinet minister in the Australian government, and the heir apparent to Robert Menzies.  Upon Menzies' retirement, Holt was elected unanimously as Liberal Party leader.  On January 26, 1966, Holt succeeded Menzies as prime minister.

Holt's new government continued to tear down the White Australia policy, which restricted immigration based on race, and his government also assumed responsibility for indigenous affairs.  Sadly, Holt never completely dismantled the racist White Australia policy, but his initiatives were absolutely instrumental in bringing about its end, since it was formerly abolished in stages.  Prime Minister Gough Whitlam definitively renounced the policy in 1973, and its last vestiges were finally removed in 1975 when the Racial Discrimination Act was passed.

Harold Holt promoted a stronger relationship with Asia and the Pacific and made several visits to East Asian countries.  As prime minister, Holt developed a close relationship with the United States.  He created controversary by increasing Australian troops in aid of the South Vietnam.  Holt strongly supported American policies in Vietnam, stating that "without the American shield, most of us who live in Asia and the South Pacific would have a continuing sense of insecurity."

Under Holt's leadership, Australia's co-operation with the Americans went beyond support for the Vietnam War.  He approved the construction of several Earth stations to be used by NASA and U.S, intelligence agencies.  According to Tom Frame, Holt's biographer, Australia became "the most substantial centre for American missile and space operation outside the continental United States."

Harold Holt was a personal friend of U.S. president Lyndon B. Johnson.  They were the same age (both men having been born in August of 1908.  The two first met in 1942 during World War II, when Johnson served as a member of the U.S. Naval Reserve in Australia and New Zealand.  During a July 1966 White House visit, Holt famously declared that he was "all the way with LBJ," a slogan Johnson used during the 1964 presidential election campaign.  

Holt also sponsored LBJ's October 1966 visit to Australia.  Johnson was the first American president to travel Down Under while in office, but his visit was fraught with tension over the Vietnam War.  Protests took place during several appearances by the U.S. president, including throwing paint at, and lying in front of Johnson's car.

Holt with LBJ in 1966

In the federal election of  November 26, 1966, Harold Holt's Liberal-Country coalition government won an increased majority in the House of Representatives in a landslide victory over the opposition Labor Party.  1966 was a good year for Holt, but things started to go wrong for him personally and politically in 1967, including the death of his brother Cliff and the emergence of Gough Whitlam, a tough challenger, as leader of the opposition.  Gough's Labor Party won by-election victories in July and September.

On Friday, December 15, Holt left the Australian capital of Canberra for a much-needed restful weekend at the holiday home he owned in Portsea, Victoria on Mornington Peninsula, on the outskirts of Melbourne.  His wife, Zara, did not accompany him.  She stayed behind in Canberra.  Holt intended to return on Monday for ministerial changes in the New Year.

On the fateful day of December 17, 1966, Harold Holt decided to go to the local beach.  The Prime Minister had just finalized his last cabinet meeting for the year, and he was was eager to relax and unwind.  So, he headed out to Cheviot Beach near seaside home he owned.

On the afternoon of December 17, Holt  and a group of four other adults arrived at Cheviot Beach.  It was a Sunday afternoon and Christmas celebrations were in full swing.  Holt  and his companions strolled along the Bass Strait, enjoying the sunshine. 

Harold Holt was an outdoorsman and and an enthusiast of water sports.  He enjoyed swimming, spearfishing and snorkeling.  However, the PM wasn't in perfect health as he had undergone shoulder surgery on Friday and had been advised by his doctor to take it easy after the operation.  Disregarding his his doctor's advice, he had played tennis with friends on Saturday.                

Despite the high tide, he was eager for a swim, so he changed into his swim suit, claiming that he knew the beach like the back of his hand.  He then walked into the surf and began swimming away from the beach.  It was a gusty afternoon and Holt disappeared from sight in the rough waters.  Holt's four companions climbed a rocky cliff and search for signs of him, but to no avail.  

When Harold Holt disappeared, Australia launched one of the largest search operations in its history, Two hours after he went missing, dozens of police, search and rescue squads had already converged on Cheviot Beach.  Despite their best efforts, no trace of  Holt's body was ever found, and he was presumed to have drowned.  On December 10, 1967, Governor General Lord Casey terminated Holt's commission as prime minister.  The search exhaustive search was finally called off on January 6th.  All that was left was a pile of Holt's clothes on the sand at Cheviot Beach.   

Search party combing Cheviot Beach

The news of Harold Holt's disappearance and presumed drowning sent shock waves throughout  the Australian nation.  Television and radio broadcasters across the country proclaimed, "It is feared the prime minister has drowned."  The question of security was raised, since Holt's death had occurred just four years after John F, Kennedy's assassination.  It was difficult to believe that the prime minister, who had a sore shoulder, could have acted so foolishly as to enter dangerous waters.


After Holt's death, a number conspiracy theories surfaced.  The lack of a formal inquiry added fuel to the notion that there had been a coverup.  Tom Frame, Holt's biographer,, told CNN that the conspiracy theories "have become so well-known and almost part of Australian folklore on there own."  According to John Warhurst, emeritus professor of politics at the Australian National University, there was wild speculation in the media that Holt had committed suicide.  Some theorized that he was upset over his allegedly rocky marriage or worn out by the rigours of his job.  

Since this was the Cold War era, there was speculation that a foreign power, probably Russia or China, was involved Holt's disappearance.  A book titled The Prime Minister Was A Spy, by British journalist Anthony Grey, was published.  Grey alleged that Holt had been a Chinese spy and that he had evacuated to a Chinese submarine at the completion of his mission.  The book was received with mockery and disdain.  Years later, Zara dismissed the theory saying, "Harry?  Chinese submarine?  He didn't even like Chinese cooking."

Harold Holt's funeral service was held at St. Paul's Anglican Cathedral in Melbourne.  The service was attended by President Lyndon Johnson, Prince Charles, and U.K. Prime Minister Harold Wilson, and senior representatives of 12 Asian nations.

It wasn't until 2005 that a Victorian coroner opened a formal inquiry into Harold Holt's disappearance.  State Coroner Graeme Johnstone concluded that Harold Holt had drowned at Cheviot Beach and that his remains had been either swept out to sea or taken by sharks.

END NOTES

* On October 8, 1946, Harold Holt married Zara Dickins Fell in her parents' home in Toorak, a suburb of Melbourne, Australia.  Holt was first was introduced to Zara in 1926, through a university student she was dating at the time.  Zara and her friend Betty James opened a dress shop called Magg in Melbourne in 1929.  After about a year, Betty left the partnership to get married.  Zara continued alone for another year until, at her mother's insistence, the shop was closed.  

During World War II, Zara worked for her father's food manufacturing business.  In 1949, Zara and Betty resumed their partnership, opening a new shop in Toorak, a suburb.  Two more shops Magg shops were opened and the two women became successful fashion entrepreneurs.  Zara was the head designer, while Betty took care of business matters.

Zara's first husband was Colonel James Fell, with whom she had three children.  She and Fell wed in 1935 and Zara gave birth to three sons, Nicholas in 1937 and twins Sam and Andrew in 1939.  The couple divorced in 1946 and Zara married Harold Holt.  Holt legally adopted Zara's children and gave them his surname.  According to Tom Frame in his book The Life and Death of Harold Holt, Holt was the twins' biological father.

In June of 1968, Zara was created a Dame Commander of the British Empire for her "devotion to the public interest."  On February 19, 1969, about two years after Holt's drowning, she married Jeff Bate, a farmer and Liberal politician.  Thereafter, she became known as Dame Zara Bate.  After Bate's death, Zara retired to the Gold Coast of Queensland Australia, She died there on June 14, 1989, at the age of 80.

Zara in 1966

* Harold Holt's nickname was "Gunner."  In May of 1940, holt enlisted in the Australian Imperial Force and trained as a gunner.


SOURCES: Enccylopaedia Britannica; CNN, "Hoe Australia's PM went swimming 50 years ago and vanished forever," by Ben Westcott, December 17, 2017; ABC News, "Inside the disappearance of Harold Holt- one of the largest search operations in Australian history," by Bridget Judge for RetroFocus, October 31, 2020; Wikipedia; Australian Dictionary of Biography; National Film and Sound Archive of Australia, "Holt Hosts Australia'a First Presidential Visit


- Joanne

Monday, October 21, 2024

November 5th: The most important election in American history

Donald J. Trump is a sick man.  One doesn't have to be a doctor to realize that he is in serious cognitive decline.  The evidence is overwhelming and becoming clearer every day.  The man does not speak coherently.  He slurs.  His thoughts wander and he cannot complete a sentence without going off on a tangent.  His behaviour is becoming increasingly bizarre.by the day.  He has imitated duck sounds.  He continues to spout nonsense about Hannibal Lector and immigrants eating cats and dogs.  He's made vulgar comments about Arnold Palmer's genitalia.  This is not just "Trump being Trump."  This is an unstable 78-year-old man who is running for the highest office in the United States.  Can you imagine if Kamala Harris or Joe Biden behaved in this manner?

Trump's own niece, Mary Trump is a clinical psychiatrist.  As a member of the Trump family, she grew up with him.  She understands why her uncle is the way he is, and she has repeatedly called him out.  Why doesn't the corporate media do the same?  Why has his conduct been normalized.  The president of the United States must think clearly in order to protect American citizens.  An unhinged man such as Donald Trump is not capable of doing so.  He poses a grave threat to America and to the free world, including concerned Canadians like myself.  

Of course Trump denies that he has cognitive issues.  He sees it as a weakness and he won't admit the truth.  That's why he refuses to be transparent about his health.  He spouts nonsense about having aced two cognitive tests.  His family has not intervened.  They should show concern about his health, but they won't.  Perhaps they are too afraid of the consequences of defying him.

I have not even mentioned yet the danger Trump would pose to the world order with his admiration for dictators such as Vladimir Putin of Russia and Kim Jong Un of North Korea.  His authoritarian tendencies are clear.  He does not believe in democracy.  That's why conservative Republicans must put country ahead of party.  This is not a normal election.  It is not a campaign between right wing and left wing.  It is a contest between democracy and autocracy.  It is a test of the strength of America's democratic ideals.  The stakes are extraordinarily high.  

The November 5th election is just around the corner.  It will be the most consequential election in American history.  Early voting and mail-in voting has already begun.  I urge my American friends to get out and vote to preserve American democracy.  I urge male voters not to be fooled by Trump's image as a tough macho man.  Like any bully, he is weak inside, where it really counts.  He has to put others down to raise himself up.  He must be defeated at the ballot box.


- Joanne

Saturday, September 21, 2024

Autumn reading

 Greetings to Number 16 readers,

If you are looking for some fun reading this fall, may I suggest my novel The Missing Reporter.  I think you will enjoy it.  It's suspenseful and it's an easy read.  If you are interested, click on the link below the book cover image  to view my author's page.

The Missing Reporter is full of mystery and intrigue.  Set in 1989, it is the story of Sandra McKay, a crime reporter from Prince Edward Island.  Why did she suddenly vanish after starting a new job?  Is her disappearance linked to the death of prominent dental surgeon Lawrence Somerville, whose brother works for a mob boss.  Intrepid private detective Norm Trapper ion on the case and he is searching for answers.



Here is the link to my author's webpage.  

https://joannemadden.ca/

By the way, I am working on my third novel, a sequel to The Missing Reporter.  

Thank you for your support.  It is much appreciated.


- Joanne

Thursday, September 12, 2024

Niagara-on-the-Lake photos

Recently I visited my favourite small town in Ontario - Niagara-on-the-Lake.  It is postcard pretty with beautiful flowers and greenery.   It is not overrun by tacky souvenir shops and flagrant commercialism.

- Joanne

Here are some photos of some of the places I visited in Niagara-on-the-Lake and the Niagara region..

Below is a statue of one of my favourite playwrights, the great George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950).  It is located just outside the Shaw Cafe & Wine Bar in Niagara-on-the-Lake, right on the town's main street at 92 Queen Street.  Niagara-on-the-Lake's theatrical festival, the Shaw Festival is named after him.






While in Niagara-on the-Lake, I spotted this antique Ford with a Massachusetts licence plate.  I think it is a Model T, but I am not certain.  



Below are photos of The Olde Angel Inn.  It was built circa 1789 and burned down during the War of 1812.  However, it was rebuilt in 1815.  The inn consists of five historic guest rooms and the pub serves British fare, and of course, draught beer.  There is a sine bar as well.




VOICES OF FREEDOM PARK, NIAGARA-ON-THE-LAKE

I visited Voices of Freedom Park in the heart of the Old Town, which celebrates Black history.  It is described on its website as "an experimental installation designed to engage, educate, and challenge visitors about his most important aspect of our history.  Voices from the past will tell their stories, enriching visitors; understanding of how they shaped our town and nation."  The park opened in 2018.



















ROYAL GEORGE THEATRE

A photo of the Royal George Theatre where I saw a production of Agatha Christie's Witness for the Prosecution.





NIAGARA RIVER AT QUEENSTON HEIGHTS





Monday, September 9, 2024

Is Donald Trump too unwell to be president?


"do the weave. You know what the weave is? I’ll talk about, like, nine different things that they all come back brilliantly together. And it’s like friends of mine that are like English professors, they say: ‘It’s the most brilliant thing I’ve ever seen,’” 

- Donald Trump


It is unspeakably dangerous for the president of the United States to be mentally and physically unwell.  It is obvious that Donald Trump is both.  He is a threat to the security of Americans and to the world.  Why isn't corporate media questioning Trump's fitness to be president more strongly?  The Republican presidential nominee is not funny and he's not entertaining.  He is downright scary, and yes, weird.  It is frightening that so many American's are willing to support such a man.  It's as if his behaviour has been normalized.

Trump's speeches have become more and more bizarre, and increasingly more incoherent. They are longer and more rambling. Trump realizes this himself, as you can tell from the quote above.  He is in no shape to be president.  To be blunt, he is losing it.  He does not have all his mental faculties, and he is only going to get worse.  If, heaven forbid, Trump should ever win the election because of the electoral college and the right wing Supreme Court, he will be a complete and utter disaster.

Nevertheless, Trump has the backing of the Republican Party.  Sadly, the party of Lincoln is no longer a real political party.  It is a cult party, completely controlled by a severely ill 78-year-old man.  Trump is in no condition to be anywhere near the nuclear codes.  He is in no condition to deal with Vladimir Putin or the war in Gaza.  He should never set foot in  the Oval Office again.

If you doubt me, just take a look at Trump's physical appearance.  He doesn't look healthy with his orange-toned puffy face.  He spouts incoherent gibberish about Hannibal Lector, Al Capone and sharks.  When Joe Biden appeared unwell during a debate with Trump, the pressure was immediate and relentless for  him to bow out of the presidential race, which he eventually did.  

Donald Trump did not expect President Biden to bow out, simply because he can't conceive of a politician voluntarily relinquishing power.  Trump doesn't understand why Biden put his country above himself.  He has no comprehension of sacrifice or loyalty to anything or anybody but himself.

There is clearly a double standard in America.  Much of the mainstream media are not focusing on Donald Trump's mental state and his obvious cognitive decline.  Why not?  Joe Biden was considered not fit for the office of the presidency.  Donald Trump is a great deal less fit to be president than Joe Biden.  Biden, who is only three years older than Trump, struggles with age-related issues.  However, Biden is not a sociopath.  He would never attempt to overthrow a democratically elected government, as Trump did on January 6, 2001.  Biden is not a convicted felon, as Trump is.  He is neither a racist nor a misogynist.  Unlike Trump, Biden believes in democracy and wants to preserve it.

There have been several American presidents who had serious health issues.  Abraham Lincoln suffered from depression.  Today he would have been prescribed Prozac.  Lincoln's depression was not anywhere near as serious as Trump's mental issues.  Lincoln was 56 years old when he was assassinated in 1865.

Lincoln

Woodrow Wilson had a near-fatal stroke on October 2, 1919, which left him incapacitated.  The severity of Wilson's condition was hidden from Congress and the American people.  All messages to him were relayed directly to his wife, Edith.  Wilson finished his term in office in 1921.  He died on February 3, 1924.

Wilson

In February of 1945, Franklin D. Roosevelt was very ill when he met Josef Stalin and Winston Churchill for a conference at Yalta, a Russian spa on the Crimean coast.  FDR died about two months later on April 12, 1945, without completing his fourth term as president.  

FDR

In September of 1955, Dwight D. Eisenhower suffered an acute heart attack while vacationing in Denver, Colorado.  Eisenhower ran for a second term in office in 1956.  He won, defeating the Democratic candidate, Adlai Stevenson.

Eisenhower

In 1972, Democratic Senator George McGovern chose Senator Thomas Eagleton of Missouri as his vice-presidential running mate.  It was revealed that Eagleton had received electroshock therapy for clinical depression during the 1960s.  The senator was later diagnosed with bipolar II.  

McGovern initially backed his running mate "1000 percent"  However, after confidentially consulting with prominent psychologists, McGovern was told that a recurrence of Eagleton's depression was possible and could imperil the country should he become acting president.  At McGovern's request, Eagleton then withdrew his candidacy for vice president.

Eagleton was replaced by Kennedy in-law Sargent Shriver.  The addition of Shriver, a diplomat, and the driving force behind the creation of the Peace Corrps, was not enough to save the McGovern campaign.  He and Shriver were defeated by Richard Nixon in a landslide victory for the Republicans.

Eagleton
Eagleton was much younger that Donald Trump when he was forced to remove himself from his candidacy for vice president.  He was in his early 40s, while Trump is 78 years old.  Eagleton did not ramble incoherently.  He did not slur his speech.  Trump's mental state is so much worse that Eagleton's.  Yet the spineless Republicans still anointed him as their 2024 candidate for president.

Many of Trump's most ardent supporters are billionaires.  They desire the tax breaks he will give them if he becomes president again.  They don't care if it means a deranged man is the leader of the United States of America.  How this race is even close is beyond me.  In the United States, all are supposed to be equal before the law.  Trump has been able to evade justice at every corner, either by delaying tactics or intimidation and bullying.  On November 5th, the American people are going to have deliver the verdict on democracy in America.  If Trump wins, he will not allow another free election in the United States.  He will permit his friend and fellow alpha male, Putin, to run roughshod over Ukraine.  By the way, Putin and Trump may act tough on the outside, but like all bullies, they are mush on the inside.

I urge Americans to rise up and use your vote to prevent Donald Trump from regaining the presidency. The American judiciary system has failed to stop this deranged demagogue.  It will take the power of the people on November 5th to keep him away from the White House.  It will take the power of the electoral ballot to bring Trump down.


- Joanne

Saturday, August 24, 2024

Our surprise parking ticket

Thursday, August 22 was an ideal day to visit the Canadian National Exhibition (CNE) in Toronto, which we locals call "the Ex."  It was sunny, but not too humid.  It was also a fine day for a football game.  So, my husband and I decided to spend some time at the Ex and then attend the Toronto Argos game at BMO Field on the CNE grounds.

We prefer taking the GO train to the Es, so we parked our car near the Mimico GO station.  There were many unoccupied reserved parking spaces close to the station.  We could have parked illegally in one of them, but we didn't.  Instead of taking our chances by parking in a reserved space, we chose to park our vehicle a little further away, on Wesley St.  After a short walk, we caught the next train to the Ex.  

After an enjoyable time at the fair and at the football game, we caught a GO train back to the Mimico station.  We soon noticed an unpleasant surprise on our windshield - a yellow parking ticket.  At first we were mystified because we hadn't noticed any NO PARKING signs where we parked.  However, we were fined $40 for parking longer than three hours.  Again, we were mystified.  We hadn't seen any sign informing us that there was a time limit.  Is the city so cash strapped that it is handing out parking tickets here, there and everywhere?

It seems so blatantly unfair.  Much more than three hours is required for a day at the Ex.  We don't see how we were careless or negligent.  We don't think we deserved the parking ticket.  We had no idea about restricting our parking time to three hours.  How were we to know when there was no sign?  If we are missing something, we would like to know.  We also don't want to give up taking the GO train to the Ex or to sporting events at BMO Field.


- Joanne

Tuesday, August 20, 2024

Why do we rush the summer?

Today is August 20th, and many will say that the end of summer is nigh.  I am not one of them.  I find enjoyment in all four seasons, but summer is really special.  I revel in those lazy, hazy days of sunshine, and those long, lingering summer evenings.  Yes, I know it must come to an end, that it's all part of the cycle of life.  Summer must end to make way for fall and winter, and, of course, life must go on.  What I don't understand is why it has to be rushed.  Summer should be savoured.  It should be sipped slowly.

The back-to-school sales seem to be starting earlier and earlier every year.  That's the way advertising works.  However, the autumnal equinox falls on September 22, 2024.  That's over a month away.  We actually have more than a month of summer left.  What's the rush?

For many, summer ends when school begins.  In the province of Ontario, where I've lived all my life, the first day of school is traditionally the Tuesday after Labour Day.  Here in Toronto, the Canadian National Exhibition (CNE) runs from mid-August until Labour Day.  When I was a child, the CNE or "the Ex" was summer's swan song, its last blast before the beginning of a new school year.

In other areas, school begins earlier, often the last week of August.  For most students, summer ends when school begins, but what about all the people who aren't students or teachers?  There is still much to enjoy in the month of September, even if you have returned to school and must concentrate on your studies.

Every moment of summer is  precious, and I don't want to waste a single one.  I prefer to sip the seasonal elixir for as long as possible. 


- Joanne

Thursday, August 8, 2024

Maritime photos: New Brunswick

 I recently toured the Maritimes.  I love Atlantic Canada/  It is one of my favourite places in the world.  On this trip, I visited Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island.  Here are some New Brunswick photos.  My Nova Scotia and P.E.I. photos are on separate pages.

- Joanne


NEW BRUNSWICK

Alma, New Brunswick











Fundy National Park




Baie Verte, New Brunswick, Near Sackville      

Bistro Le Chat Bleu



Maritime photos: Nova Scotia

I toured the Maritimes from July 5 to July 17, 2024.  I love Atlantic Canada.  It is one of my favourite places in the world.  On this trip, I visited Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island.  Here are some Nova Scotia photos.  My New Brunswick and P.E.I. photos are on separate pages.

- Joanne


NOVA SCOTIA


Halifax

Point Pleasant Park

Point Pleasant Park


Point Pleasant Park


Point Pleasant Park











Halifax restaurant: The Bicycle Thief




Halifax waterfront


Lunenburg




Peggy's Cove