Home Trivia Trivia quiz #10: Gatineau legends, a ruined church and a quirky traffic light

Trivia quiz #10: Gatineau legends, a ruined church and a quirky traffic light

by Laura Byrne Paquet
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Welcome to the Ottawa Road Trips trivia game for the week of May 25, 2020!

Many thanks to everyone who played last week’s game. Our winner is reader Leonard Heitin, and a $10 Tim Horton’s e-gift card is headed his way. I’ve updated last week’s game with the answers.

Here are 10 more questions to test your knowledge of places in Ontario, Quebec and beyond. Each question includes a handy link to a post where you’ll find the answer. NOTE: This week’s game has closed in terms of being able to win the prize, but you’re welcome to play for fun. I’ve updated the post to include the answers at the very bottom. As always, note that this is virtual travel only—please wait to actually visit these places until the COVID-19 crisis ends.

Question 1: A lovely ruin

Partially destroyed metal bell on a platform inside the roofless ruins of a grey stone church.

What is the name of this national historic site in Williamstown—partway between Alexandria and Lancaster? It is the shell of a grand church that was largely destroyed by fire in 1970.

Question 2: Raise a glass

Tulip-shaped glass of beer on a coaster on a wooden bar.

What Outaouais craft brewery makes a honey-accented beer called La Reine du Mont Vinoy?

Question 3: Discover a mica mine

What provincial park in Eastern Ontario is home to an abandoned mica mine known as the Silver Queen?

Question 4: Christmas tradition

What is the name of this festive conveyance, which usually visits several Eastern Ontario communities in November or December each year?

Question 5: A prime minister’s watch

For the second week in a row, I have a question about Mackenzie King! At what national historic site in Ottawa might participants on a white glove tour be able to pick up and examine King’s pocket watch?

Question 6: Castles in the sand

Photo by John A BrebnerFriends of the provincial park Im looking for

Naturally enough (given its name), what provincial park in Prince Edward County traditionally hosts a big sandcastle festival called SandFest each July?

Question 7: Author, author

Charles Leslie McFarlane was born in Carleton Place and lived there until he was 8. As an adult, under the pen name Franklin W. Dixon, he would go on to write 19 novels in what classic children’s book series?

Question 8: An Irish-American traffic light

Traffic light with red on the bottom in Tipperary Hill, Syracuse, New York.
FlickrCreative Commons photo by <a href=httpswwwflickrcomphotosdougtone3867631258inphotolist 7E4ADZ 7E8qXh 7E4APa 7E8r7C 7E4AKr 7E8r3W 7E8r2U 6Huzjb 6Hqwgt 6Huz9f 6Huz3J 6HqvZv 6TLBYL 6TLC2y 29CPWrH 7E8rk3 7E4AUe 7E4ASp 7E8rao 7E8rgW 7E8rfs 5zpwXc 6HuzY9 7E8ris 7E4AFZ 7E8rvq 7E8roA 7E8rmG 7E8rEE 7E4BjF 7E4B8v 7E8rsb 7E8rJf 7E8rxm 5ztPgw 6HuzJS 5ztPeN 29CPVb6 4Ytpj6 6HqwqK 5ztPbh 5ztPfJ 5ztPcY 5ztPdQ 5zpwWn 6Hqwvk 6Huzz7 6HqwRR 6HqwFx 6HuzTy target= blank rel=noreferrer noopener>Doug Kerr<a>

In what upstate New York city‘s Tipperary Hill neighbourhood would you find an upside-down traffic light (with red on the bottom)? According to what is likely an urban legend, the light was installed that way because the Irish-American locals couldn’t stand the idea of any object where “British” red was placed higher than “Irish” green. (As an Irish descendant myself, I can easily imagine this story taking hold and growing.)

Question 9: Ottawa landmarks

It was built in just two months in 1898. It was the site where the first Ottawa Senators won the Stanley Cup in 1904. It’s been a skating arena, a horseback-riding school and a recruiting centre, among other things. Its nickname is the Cattle Castle, but what is the official name of this beautiful domed building at Lansdowne Park in Ottawa?

Question 10: Outaouais movies

several large reels of movie film unspooled on a white table
Photo by <a href=httpsunsplashcomdmjdeniseutm source=unsplashutm medium=referralutm content=creditCopyText target= blank rel=noreferrer noopener>Denise Jans<a> on <a href=httpsunsplashcomsphotosmovieutm source=unsplashutm medium=referralutm content=creditCopyText>Uns<a><a href=httpsunsplashcomsphotosmovieutm source=unsplashutm medium=referralutm content=creditCopyText target= blank rel=noreferrer noopener>plash<a>

What type of watercraft takes to the air in a Gatineau Valley legend about a group of loggers who made a pact with the Devil—a story that the National Film Board later made into a 10-minute animated movie?

And here are the answers!

  1. St. Raphael’s Ruins
  2. Les Brasseurs de Montebello
  3. Murphy’s Point Provincial Park
  4. The CP Holiday Train
  5. Laurier House
  6. Sandbanks Provincial Park
  7. The Hardy Boys
  8. Syracuse
  9. The Aberdeen Pavilion
  10. A (flying) canoe

P.S.: If you enjoy learning about Eastern Ontario, the Outaouais and points beyond, please subscribe to my free weekly e-newsletter.

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