• Wheaton Covered Bridge, a 50m-long
covered bridge built in 1916 which spans the Tantramar River on the High Marsh Road. • Cranewood: a
Georgian house constructed of local red sandstone in about 1836 by
William Crane. It was bought by
Josiah Wood in 1867, and remained in the Wood family until 1966. From 1966 to 1975 the house belonged to Dr. W.S.H. Crawford, until it was purchased by
Mount Allison University for use as the official residence of the president. In 2013 the Cranewood building was converted into a bakery. • The Swan Pond, also known as Lily Pond is located in Ladies' College Park on the campus of
Mount Allison University. The pond was excavated in 1901 and a fountain designed by artist
John Hammond was added in 1904. The last pair of swans to live in the Swan Pond died in 2015. • Campbell Carriage Factory: Tantramar's first museum, the Carriage Factory was operated by the Campbell family for over 100 years, closing its doors in the 1950s. •
Captain George Anderson House, an
octagon house built in 1855. • The Boultenhouse Heritage Centre, built by prolific shipbuilder Christopher Boultenhouse in 1840, built onto the front of the Bulmer House, which is believed to be Tantramar's oldest house built in 1790. It houses wallpaper that is original to the house, imported from Paris, and believed to be one of only 3 or 4 examples of this type of wallpaper remaining intact in North America. • The Sackville Harness Shop was founded in 1919 and made custom hand-crafted leather items, specializing in harnesses and straw collars for draught horses. The building, an example of
Gothic Revival architecture, was constructed c. 1846 and is one of the Town's earliest commercial properties. The business closed in 2021. • The Vogue Cinema: an
Art Deco style building built in 1946. • The Cube is the tallest building in Tantramar. Standing at 44-metre high, it's a featureless white cube-shaped structure which is an enormous automated blueberry and cranberry freezer. Aside from its main use, beginning in 2021, it is also used as a public screen for video art and music videos during
SappyFest. •
Fort Beauséjour – Fort Cumberland National Historic Site: In 1751 the French built Fort Beauséjour atop the Aulac Ridge to defend Acadia from British controlled Nova Scotia. The fort serves as a reminder of how strategically important the Isthmus of Chignecto was to the European empires. ==Education==