Success Stories
The
Fortress of Louisbourg
The Fortress
of Louisbourg: A Virtual Tour of Cape Breton
If
you’ve ever imagined what life was really like in Canada’s early days,
The Fortress of Louisbourg is a magical web site that transports
you to the 18th century for a virtual tour of one of Cape Breton's most
beautiful tourist attractions. The federal government began the reconstruction
of the Fortress in 1961 to provide work for unemployed coal miners and
turn Louisbourg into a living history museum. Today it is the largest
historic reconstruction in North America.
The project was carried out
under contract to Industry Canada’s SchoolNet Digital Collections program,
which gives people 15 to 30 years of age entrepreneurial and technology-based
job experience converting collections of Canadian material into digital
form for display on SchoolNet. The SchoolNet Digital Collections web
site has grown to become possibly the largest single source of Canadian
content on the Information Highway.
This past summer a team of
young people brought the story of The Fortress of Louisbourg
into the 20th century by placing it on the Information Highway for the
enjoyment and education of Canadians across the country. Project manager
Joan Cunningham said many positive things came out of this experience.
"Every team member developed web design skills and gained confidence
working with Internet technology," said Cunningham. "At the end
of the project, they were proud of their achievement."
Cunningham explained that
the quest for historical accuracy was the biggest challenge facing the
team. "The Fortress staff were very generous with their time on this
project," she said. "They supplied between four and five on-site
historians to edit our work. The team learned how to work meticulously,
with tight deadlines." Cunningham said that every article went through
five to seven edits, and team members often had to start over in the
interests of getting the story exactly right. "No one really minded,"
she said. "We knew at the outset that this had to be perfect, and
we were determined to do a good job."
The attention to detail comes
through loud and clear, from the delicate images of the fleur-de-lys
background to the carefully scripted stories of pioneer life. Cunningham
explained that above all, the team wanted the web site to be interesting.
There’s something for everyone; you can search the Parish Genealogy
records for your ancestors or sample colonial recipes for a typical
meal or explore the Fortress through the interactive map.
There’s also humour and an
obvious enjoyment of the task at hand. The team members, who take a
bow at the end of the site, appear cheerfully decked out in 18th century
dress. They include Danielle Boone, researcher and translator; Matthew
MacNeil, programmer and system maintenance; Lisa Cleary, researcher;
Caitrian MacNeil, artist, image editor and researcher; Chris Lahey,
researcher and image editor; and Joe Ward, genealogy editor.
Jamie Bonaparte, programmer,
image editor and researcher, summed up the advantages of his experience
with this SchoolNet Digital Collections project in these words: "I
recently had an e-mail from a computer professor at Dalhousie who had
heard about this project. Not only did he mention that he may use some
forms of this "problem-based learning", but he also offered me a job!".
|