Finishing up Vieux Montreal; World Trade Center & Berlin Wall
Mai 24 (Mardi)
Realizing that I only have about a little bit more than a week left in Montreal, I'm trying to go to as many places as I possibly could from now on considering I still have a paper to do and a final to study for. After all, I'm "supposed" to be studying here.. not rampanting all over the place.
So today's route: Travel Agency in China Town (get Quebec City info) ->Vieux Montreal: Bank of Montreal Museum -> Saint-Sulpice Sminary -> Centre d'historie de Montreal -> Place D'Youville -> Royal Bank Building -along rue Saint-Jacques->World Trade Centre Montreal -> Square Victoria -> back to McGill at 12:30
My floormate said that there was a Chinese travel agency that offers 1-day tour to Quebec City for $38. I thought that was a pretty good deal considering that I probably have to pay $60 just for the return tickets. But I have to see whether there are cheaper bus tickets b/c I want to stay at Quebec City for a night but I have to pay 2x if I go with the Chinese tour. I'll think about that later.
So then I went to the Museum inside the Bank of Montreal. The bank was founded in 1817 - the oldest banking institution in the country. The architecture was designed by a New York architecutral firm in 1905.
The exterior of the Bank viewed from Place d'Arms. It was designed in the style of ancient Roman and Greek santuary with all the coloumns and the dome, etc.
The lobby of the BMO (Bank of Montreal) building.It's huge! Sorry the pic looks quite dark b/c the building was still being used as a 'bank' with all the tellers & etc. so I didn't exactly want to be flashing all over the place with my camera, attracting unnecessary attention from the security guards.
An antique staff magazine published in the old days.
The statue of an ancient goddess at the main entrance. She represents Patria (home land)and is a memorial to those who died in WWI.
There was a one-room museum inside the bank and it was about the early history of banking in Canada.
In the museum! It's really small but it's ok~
What you would see when you see ads of the museum - a wax figure behind the counter of a old bank.
A painting of what the BMO building and the surrounding would have looked like in the old days.
The reason why I included this painting here is b/c I think I have been to the place where this took place - BMO's VP drove the spike of the Canadian Pacific Railway Transcontinental Line. Craigellachie, BC. 1885.
MONEY MONEY MONEY~
Walking out of the museum you would see this wall sculpture. This piece was originally commissioned for the exterior of the first head office. It remained out there for 60 years.
Across from the BMO main entrance & the Place d'Arms & right beside the Notre-Dame Basilica was the Saint-Sulpice Seminary. Constructed in 1685, this is the oldest building in Montreal. It was first used as a headquarter forthe Sulpician priests who owned the island of Montreal 'til 1854. Now it's still used as a residence for the priests. Its clock (dates to 1701) is the oldest of its kind in North America.
Walking south to where the Pointe-a-Calliere Museum that I went the other day (b/c Centre d'Historie de Montreal was just right beside it). & there were a lot of houses that looked old and similar in style like this one:
Then I came across the Place de la Gande Paix where Centre d'Historie de Montreal was.
Looking at the colomun in the Place. The Pointe-a-Calliere Museum is the building to the right of the pic.
Opposite from the colomun was the back of the Centre d'Historie de Montreal.
The front entrance of the Centre d'Historie de Montreal.
One of the first things you see when you're in the museum - the names of some of the major streets in Montreal!
The REAL Lord Nelson statue. Remember in one of my Vieux Montreal posts in which I talked about the Lord Nelson statue in Place Jacques-Cartier? This is the REAL statue removed from the monuments b/c its material (the revolutionary Coade artificial stone at the time) could not stand the 'elements' (ie wind, rain, etc).
A powder horn (inscripted with a map of Quebec) that was used on the Plains of Abraham. Every soldier carried a powder horn.
Time moves on~ Some fashion and tech development.
The temporary exhibit was: "Jazz, Swinging Nights in Montreal!" - CHECK IT OUT!
ALL THAT JAZZ~
Entering! The place looks so like a night club with all the nice lighting, eh?!
JAZZ IN MONTREAL! COOL~ I wish I could stay for the largest International Jazz Festival happening here at the end of June! But too bad.. maybe NEXT TIME~~~!!
Montreal, City of a Thousand and One Clubs! - starting from the 1920's. You get all these match boxes from Jazz clubs that would advertise their own showbiz.
Jazz Night Clubs in Town.
In the background -> this is what the big jazz clubs look like.
Shall we dance? Try to follow the steps and do it really fast! haha.. the crazy swings.
BEBOP! YAY! For friends who took MUSC 221 -> THIS IS IT! Remember Charlie Parker, the famous sax player? He made several trips to Montreal and greatly influenced the jazz styles here.
A board that explains different kinds of Jazz and the development of those different kinds.
There was a recording room where you could hear old jazz recordings on 'records' (yes..those big discs).
A "jazz cafe" at the top floor of the museum where you get to see the video tape of a live jazz performance and more songs to listen to
A building right opposite from the Centre d'historie de Montreal.
The Canadian Music Centre (it stores a lot of Canadian music; over 600 Canadian composers, etc.) I didn't go in 'cause there seemed to be no one in it.
Walking along the Sainte-Helene - a beautiful Victorian business district.
Walking along rue Saint-Jacques - Canada's "Wall Street" in its heydays (1920's). I think this particular building is a hotel attached to the World Trade Centre of Montreal.
The Royal Bank's head office erected in 1928. It was designed by New York architects York & Sawyer.
The Molson Bank a street away from the Royal Bank. It was built in 1866.
Centre de Commerce Mondial de Montreal (aka MOntreal World Trade Center).
Inside the center is another city. It kinda feels like the Vancouver Public Library in downtown Vancouver. But this one has a more business feel to it b/c, after all, it's a WTC in the second largest city in the country.
The BERLIN WALL - a piece of it, really.
I'm not joking. That piece of concrete was a part of the infamous Berlin Wall that separated the city.
A lobby-kind of place right oustide of the Nordheimer (a part of the WTC complex where the Inter-Continental Montreal hotel is). THe building once had a small concert hall where famous musicians such as Maurice RAVEL(!!!) and Sarah Bernhardt once were.
Going back down to the first floor and walking toward the wester entrance where the fountain was.
"The semireclining statue of Amphitrite (Poseidon's wife) overlooking the fountain. It's an 18th-century piece from the municipal fountain of St-Mihiel-de-la-Meuse in France. Photographers would often use this space to do fashion shoots or wedding pictures.
The "outdoor" cafe in the building, right beside the fountain. Tres elegante!
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