Wednesday, February 4, 2026
Brock's Only Independent Student Newspaper
One of the only worker-managed newspapers in Canada

Niagara-on-the-Lake museum offers free admission to all Niagara residents throughout February

|
|

Those who wish to learn more about Niagara’s long and varied history should look no further than the Niagara-on-the-Lake (NOTL) Museum, which is offering free admission to all Niagara residents throughout the month of February.

The campaign, titled “Free February,” will give those who live in Niagara an opportunity to learn about the history of the town of NOTL with no cost.

The museum runs not only permanent exhibitions but temporary ones as well, which might incentivize history enthusiasts to make consistent returns to the museum.

Currently, the temporary exhibition on display is titled “All Along the Waterfront,” and focuses on the importance of water and the relationship it holds with humanity. The museum hopes to spread awareness of how NOTL’s waterways, the Niagara River and Lake Ontario, have played a prominent role in the town’s history. The museum believes that a better understanding of the relationship that humans hold with water will “help us ensure its protection for future generations.”

The museum is also advertising its permanent exhibition, which details 9,000 years of NOTL’s past, ranging from Indigenous history to the increased tourism of the 1970s. The exhibit holds a series of significant artifacts, including uniforms worn during the War of 1812.

The museum also displays two new student exhibits. The first, “A History of Cycling,” observes the history of travel on two wheels; while the second, “Through All Eyes,” dedicates itself to the timeline of Indigenous culture in Niagara.

If you wish to extend your learning even further, the museum also offers virtual lectures, which run weekly from Feb. 1 until Mar. 8.

The lectures are presented over Zoom video calls every Wednesday morning at 11 a.m. They are free to attend, but registration is required. Weekly topics include historic homes in Queenston (a rural community based in NOTL) and Canada’s relationship to the Civil War.

Information on exhibits and events can be found on the museum’s website. The website also provides links to ordering virtual tickets for the weekly online lectures.

More by this author

RELATED ARTICLES

Canadian Blood Services to host on-campus events amidst “Give and Get Away” campaign  

Canadian Blood Services (CBS) will be returning to Brock’s main campus this winter, offering two events for students. 

Most likely first-time NBA All-Stars  

It’s that time of the year when players from around the NBA are chosen to return to another All-Star game or become one for the first time. For some, this is a defining moment that can change the trajectory of a career, while others see it as just another meaningless statistic.   

ICE, an American case study: how democracy corrodes 

Minneapolis has become an international flashpoint with a blunt sequence of two shootings, two official narratives and a public that was asked to accept federal claims faster than it could access federal evidence. How a democratic state can unfold into government officials killing their own citizens can be understood by situating the moments in the United States’ longer history of immigration policing and the legal language that has long divided their people into categories of belonging and removability. 

A conversation on A.I. with the Centre for Pedagogical Innovation 

The use of artificial intelligence in the classroom has brought challenges to longstanding norms in university lectures, seminars and academic integrity. A core pillar of the learning approach at Brock University, the Centre for Pedagogical Innovation (CPI), has been working to provide Brock’s professors and teaching assistants with guidance on how to navigate these challenges.

Carney in Davos: “The power of the less powerful starts with honesty” 

Speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland on Jan. 20, Prime Minister Mark Carney said that the global “rules based international order” was undergoing a rupture, not a transition. 

BIPOC Law Society offers legal coaching for all 

The Brock University BIPOC Law Society (BLS) was ratified by BUSU in November 2025. The club, which currently has 60 members, hosted its first major event — a LinkedIn panel — on the week of Jan. 19, aiming to provide accessible legal education. 

Trump threatens Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell  

On Jan. 11, the chair of the United States federal reserve, Jerome Powell, released a video statement where he states that “the Department of Justice served the Federal Reserve with grand jury subpoenas threatening a criminal indictment” over the cost of renovating Federal Reserve buildings.  

Explore co-op, summer, part-time or new grad roles at Brock’s 2026 Experience Expo  

Brock University’s Experience Expo is back for 2026, bringing more than 80 employers to Brock for the largest on-campus recruitment fair. The event provides students with the opportunity to make multiple career connections in one place.