A few days ago, when I visited Luhu Park, I took the bus No. 144 in front of the Bennaby Village Museum and got off at the station. So I knew about this museum. Later, I checked it online and found that this is still one of the popular attractions. So I went to visit it today. The weather today is very good, very suitable for going out, the sunny wind is not big. The museum is free, but there are some charging items inside, such as taking the train more than 100 years ago, but the price is acceptable. Entering the gate to the left is love farm house, a house of early Chinese immigrants. They come from the south of Guangdong Province. After they come, they overcome various difficulties, and then buy land, establish a farm, hard-working farming, and then the vendors (also Chinese farmers) come to sell agricultural products. Slowly powerful and then become Canadian citizens, admire them, uprooted from their hometowns to a remote country where the language is not spoken, and finally survived tenaciously. The museum has pharmacies, barber shops, schools, train stations, post offices, and more than a hundred years ago. Since one of Canada's most resourceful sources is wood, rooms are built with wood, and from the exhibition's Chinese farmers' houses, farmers' houses in some parts of China are not so good now. It was also when I visited this museum that I knew that Bennaby was a person's name. Because of his many outstanding contributions, many places were named after him, such as Bennaby Lake (burnaby lake). Worth a visit!