
The Heritage Attraction at a Glance & the Story Behind the Site
The Cumberland Heritage Village Museum is a living-history museum located just east of Ottawa’s downtown, in the historic community of Cumberland. It offers visitors an immersive journey into rural life in the 1920s and 1930s, with more than twenty heritage buildings and historically accurate reproductions spread across a scenic village setting.

The museum’s collection, including structures like a general store, sawmill, one-room schoolhouse, blacksmith shop, fire hall, print shop, and Watson’s Garage, showcases everyday life and trades from the early 20th century. Knowledgeable staff and costumed interpreters lead daily demonstrations and activities (seasonally), helping guests experience how people lived, worked, and interacted in a rural Eastern Ontario village between World Wars.

Cumberland’s story extends beyond settlement era recreation. The village itself was founded in the early 1800s by settlers such as Foubert and others, and the museum place-makes this history through the fabric of its buildings and interpreted spaces.






















