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  1. Woodside National Historic Site Explore Woodside, which was the childhood home of William Lyon Mackenzie King, Canada's tenth and longest-serving Prime Minister. Tour the 11.5 acre Kitchener, Ontario property and discover its fascinating history.

  2. Woodside National Historic Site. We saved you a seat! Parks Canada has placed over 200 red Adirondack chairs in peaceful and scenic locations throughout many of the country’s most unique and treasured places, including the set found here at Woodside National Historic Site. Grab a friend, go for a walk then relax and snap a selfie on one of ...

  3. Woodside National Historic Site, Kitchener: See 33 reviews, articles, and 13 photos of Woodside National Historic Site, ranked No.13 on Tripadvisor among 58 attractions in Kitchener.

  4. Woodside National Historic Site of Canada is a picturesque, wooded estate, set in the midst of a modern suburb in the north-east part of the city of Kitchener. It includes a one-and-a-half-storey house, reconstructed in 1942 as a mid-19th-century house and furnished in the style of the 1890s.

  5. Woodside National Historic Site was the boyhood home of William Lyon Mackenzie King, Canada's tenth and longest-serving Prime Minister. This Victorian home, filled with King family heirlooms and period reproductions, is a portal to the Victorian era in Canada.

  6. Parks Canada has placed over 200 red Adirondack chairs in peaceful and scenic locations throughout many of the country’s most unique and treasured places, including the set found here at Woodside National Historic Site. Grab a friend, go for a walk then relax and snap a selfie on one of our red chairs.

  7. For upper class Victorians, afternoon tea was light meal served between lunch, at noon, and supper, at 8 pm. When you hosted an afternoon tea, it would include sweet treats like cookies, candies and cakes, as well as sandwiches, fruits and nuts. Compared to a dinner party, a high tea was less formal and easier to manage.