LondonSights

Sights in London

  1. Museum London

    Focusing on the visual arts and how they fit together with history, Museum London has over 5000 works of art (including the largest collection of Paul Peel paintings) and an artifact collection of over 25,000 pieces. Exhibitions and programming are created around the stories of artifacts, and outdoor installations carry the stories beyond the walls. Also on-site is Eldon House, London’s oldest residence, which places you in the past rather than attempting to describe it.

    reviewed

  2. Ska-Nah-Doht Village & Museum

    Re-creating a 1000-year-old Iroquois longhouse community, Ska-Nah-Doht Iroquoian Village & Museum is 32km west of London. Village structures are encircled by a maze; the museum contains artifacts thousands of years old and recounts the area’s history. Outside the walls are First Nations crops and burial platforms. Meandering park trails are open until dusk. From London, take Hwy 402 to interchange 86 then follow Hwy 2 west.

    reviewed

  3. Banting House National Historic Site

    This historic site is where Nobel Prize–winner Sir Frederick Banting devised the method for extracting insulin in the 1920s. A pilgrimage site for diabetics, the meticulously curated museum outlines the history of diabetes, and chronicles Banting’s medical contributions.

    reviewed

  4. Royal Canadian Regiment Museum

    Inside the austere Wolseley Hall, the Royal Canadian Regiment Museum focuses on the oldest infantry regiment in Canada, with displays covering the North-West Rebellion of 1885 through both world wars to the Korean War.

    reviewed

  5. Fanshawe Pioneer Village

    Explore London’s history at the 30-building Fanshawe Pioneer Village on the eastern edge of town. Costumed blacksmiths, farmers and craftspeople carry out their duties in true 19th-century pioneer-village style.

    reviewed

  6. Museum of Ontario Archaeology

    An educational and research facility affiliated with the University of Western Ontario, the Museum of Ontario Archaeology displays materials and artifacts spanning 11,000 years of aboriginal history in Ontario.

    reviewed

  7. Sifton Bog

    Sifton Bog is a peaty acid bog off Oxford St W that’s home to unusual plants and animals, including lemmings, shrews, carnivorous sundew plants, white-tailed deer and nine varieties of orchid.

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  8. Westminster Ponds

    Westminster Ponds is an area of woods, bogs and ponds sustaining a veritable zoo of creatures, including fox, turtles and herons.

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  9. Lawson Prehistoric Indian Village

    Lawson Prehistoric Indian Village is an active excavation of a 500-year-old village next to the Museum of Ontario Archaeology.

    reviewed