For twenty-four years our organization has never had a fund raiser - so now we would like to ask your help in raising the funds to buy a microfilm reader/printer and the available microfilm reels of newspapers for Cumberland County. We are a registered charitable organization and will issue tax receipts for your donation. Please HELP US REACH OUR GOAL. Please contact our office if you need further details. Donations may be made by cheque, e-transfer to "archives@ccgsns.com" or through Paypal by hitting the Donate Button, above - please add a note to say it is for the microfilm reader/printer. Or drop by the office Thursday - Saturday from 10 AM - 4 PM
Come visit Friday & Saturday afternoon from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.
The speaker for this event will be Courtney Mrazek who is the current W.P. Bell Postdoctoral Fellow in the Canadian Studies Department at Mount Allison University. Her topic: "A Matter of Life and Breath: Patient Trends at the Nova Scotia Sanatorium and the Jordan Memorial Sanatorium."
Everyone is welcome.
Please join us for an interesting lecture, a 50/50 draw, and refreshments on November 20th.
Meetings are always open to the public, so please come join your local family Genealogical Society, which has been serving Cumberland County for the past 24 years. Research your heritage and find new relatives. Learn about what times your parents, grandparents and other ancestors, lived through, where, when, how, education, religion, occupations, etc.
Email: "archives@ccgsns.com" or Call: 902-661-7278
The North Shore Villages
“The North Shore Villages”
The North Shore Villages
1755-1815 (British Navy, Loyalists)
Price $30.00 + S&H
ISBN 978-1-7383926–1-2
547 pages
6”x9” perfect bound
By author Stephen G. Leahy
Early in the 16th century, sails were predominant in moving wooden naval vessels with their powerful and weighty cannons.
Sails in turn relied on masts which played a far greater role in world affairs than just supporting the canvas sails. Masts were vital to the success of nations which sought to rule the seas for trade, exploration, empire building, or war. In effect, masts were then to sea transportation what fuel is to fleets of today.
For its masts, the British Empire required strong, straight, and massive trees reaching up to one hundred and twenty feet in height and weighing as much as twenty tons. By the early 1600’s the Baltic forests had been depleted while threats of war by Sweden and the Dutch made the supply less secure.
Over the next 125 years the white pine forests of New England supplied the largest masts for the British Royal Navy. When these pines came under siege by colonists who wanted to keep them for themselves, Britain imposed the King’s Broad Arrow Policies which restricted their use to the Royal Navy. The colonists greatly resented this move, helping to further the American Revolution.
In 1721, the British Board of Trade set out to acquire a “Nursery of timber” of considerable size in Nova Scotia, in the process removing the French from the region in favour of English settlers. However, a stipulation forbade peopling the Colony of Nova Scotia until suitable “Nursery” was found.
This book records the outbreak of the American Revolution, the establishment of the Nova Scotia “Nursery” and the founding of the North Shore Villages, Pugwash, Wallace, Wentworth and Westchester.