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Mahone Bay, Nova Scotia

Mahone Bay is a town on the northwest shore of Mahone Bay along the South Shore of Nova Scotia in Lunenburg County. A long-standing picturesque tourism destination, the town has recently enjoyed a growing reputation as a haven for entrepreneurs and business startups.[3] The town has the fastest growing population of any municipality in Nova Scotia according to the 2016 census, experiencing 9.9% population growth.[4]

Mahone Bay
Town
The Famous Three Churches of Mahone Bay
Motto: 
"A Treasure Since 1754"
Mahone Bay
Location within Nova Scotia
Coordinates: 44°26′56″N 64°22′55″W / 44.44889°N 64.38194°W / 44.44889; -64.38194
CountryCanada
ProvinceNova Scotia
CountyLunenburg County
Founded1754
IncorporatedMarch 31, 1919
Government
 • MayorDavid Devenne[1]
 • Governing BodyMahone Bay Town Council
 • MLASuzanne Lohnes-Croft Liberal
 • MPRick Perkins (C)
Area
 (2021)[2]
 • Total3.12 km2 (1.20 sq mi)
Highest elevation
24 m (79 ft)
Lowest elevation
0 m (0 ft)
Population
 • Total1,064
 • Density341.4/km2 (884/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC-4 (AST)
Postal code span
B0J
Area code902
Telephone Exchanges521, 624, 627
Median household income (2005)$36,374
Total private dwellings571
Websitetownofmahonebay.ca

History edit

The end of glaciation began 13,500 years ago[5] and ended with the region becoming largely ice free 11,000 years ago. The earliest evidence of Palaeo-Indian settlement in the region follows rapidly after deglaciation.[6]

The Town of Mahone Bay is part of the Mi’kma’ki territory of the Mi’kmaq who have inhabited their traditional lands for over 13,500 years. Prior to arrival of the Europeans, Mi’kmaw lived in and around what is now Mahone Bay. Indian Point, just outside the town, was an important summertime settlement where the Mi’kmaq could enjoy the sheltered waters and plentiful food sources. In the winter, they would move inland from the coast using the rivers that flow into Mahone Bay harbour. There are many Mi’kmaq who live in the area today.

British officials placed public notices in Germany, southern France, Switzerland, and the Netherlands stating that those willing to move to their planned settlement in Nova Scotia would receive grants of land, food for a year, and a few farm animals. Between 1750 and 1752 more than 2,200 such “Foreign Protestants” made the long journey from Europe to Halifax.

In 1753, most of the new immigrants were brought from Halifax to Lunenburg, which was to be the centre of the planned settlement. The first to arrive were those who lived in town of Lunenberg and had farm lots throughout the peninsula, including Mahone Bay. They arrived under the leadership of mariner Ephraim Cook. The people who settled on the Lunenburg Peninsula, including the present-day village of Mahone Bay, were foreign protestants who were German, Swiss, and Montbéliardais settlers.[7]

During the French and Indian War, there were nine Native and Acadian (Catholic) raids against the protestant settlers on the Lunenburg Peninsula. One such raid – the Raid on Lunenburg (1756) – happened just off the shores of Mahone Bay on present-day Covey Island and [John] Rous Island.

Another raid happened on 24 August 1758 in the village of Mahone Bay, when eight Mi'kmaq attacked the family homes of Lay and Brant. While they killed three people in the raid, the Mi'kmaq were unsuccessful in taking their scalps, which was the common practice for payment from the French.[8]

Mills were established at the mouth of each of Mahone Bay's two rivers and over the decades a separate community evolved at Mahone Bay with blacksmiths, merchants, a large school, churches, and shipyards.

Shipbuilding edit

Mahone Bay's boat building history begins with the Mi’kmaq. The Mi’kmaq were built birch bark canoes. The British began the first industrial production of ships. They established sawmills to produce lumber for shipbuilding. The earliest official registration form found for a vessel built in Mahone Bay dates from 1817. By 1850, at least 43 vessels had already been built by small shipyards in the Mahone Bay area and larger shipyards began being established to build mainly schooners and other smaller vessels, primarily for fishing and moving goods. As years passed, the trend was to build larger vessels for longer distance trading with the United States, West Indies, and elsewhere.

By the end of WWI, there was no longer much demand for sailing vessels so the local shipyards began designing and building power vessels that used engines instead of sails for fishing and moving goods (including rum-running). Shipyards continued producing vessels during WWII. During this period, as many as 500 people were employed in Mahone Bay shipyards.

Although fishing vessels were still being built until 1967, after WWII the industry transitioned to mainly constructing pleasure boats. Fibreglass sailboats were built on the site of the present RPS Composites factory located at 740 Main Street, under several different company names, including Paceship Yachts. The final days of commercial boat building concentrated on the building of pleasure crafts. Mahone Bay Plycraft Co. built thousands of laminated plywood “runabout” boats from 1949 to 1962. Commercial shipbuilding in the Town of Mahone Bay wrapped up around 1975, when the last fibreglass yachts were built at Paceship.

World Wars I and II brought brief revivals of shipbuilding with construction of schooners, tugboats and barges. After the war, the shipyard became known for innovative production of moulded plywood boats. Later on, Paceship Yachts and McVay Fiberglass Yachts built fibreglass sailboats, such as the Paceship 20, designed in 1970.

There were six major shipyards that produced between 1850 – 1942: Obed H. Ham Yacht Works, Abraham Ernst/ Erst & Sons/ Ernst Shipbuilding, John Zwicker, John Mclean and Sons Shipyard, Elkanah Zwicker/ Titus Langilee, Henry Schnare."

Today edit

 
Mahone Bay town centre

The town is also known for a history of wooden boat building, it was the main industry of Mahone Bay in its earlier years. The Mahone Bay Museum explains and shows this history in detail. Until recent years the town's shipbuilding and boat-building heritage was celebrated by the "Mahone Bay Wooden Boat Festival".

The view across the harbour is of three prominent churches: St James' Anglican; St John's Evangelical Lutheran; and Trinity United. It has become an iconic image of Nova Scotia, frequently photographed and featured on postcards and calendars.[9] The town has a number of upscale shops and restaurants which almost universally are designed to appeal to the tourist trade, and sometimes shut down during the winter months.[citation needed] The town also has a plastics factory.

Demographics edit

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1901866—    
1911951+9.8%
19211,177+23.8%
19311,065−9.5%
19411,025−3.8%
19511,019−0.6%
19561,109+8.8%
19611,103−0.5%
19811,228+11.3%
19861,093−11.0%
19911,096+0.3%
19961,017−7.2%
2001991−2.6%
2006904−8.8%
2011943+4.3%
20161,036+9.9%
20211,064+2.7%
[10][11][12][13][14][2]

In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, Mahone Bay had a population of 1,064 living in 522 of its 599 total private dwellings, a change of 2.7% from its 2016 population of 1,036. With a land area of 3.12 km2 (1.20 sq mi), it had a population density of 341.0/km2 (883.3/sq mi) in 2021.[2]

Government edit

The Town of Mahone Bay is governed by a Council composed of a mayor and six councillors elected at-large.[15] The mayor is David DeVenne.[16] Day-to-day activities are managed by a Chief Administrative Officer (CAO) who is accountable to Council.[15] Municipal governments in Nova Scotia are elected every four years and the most recent round of elections took place on October 17, 2020. The provincial legislation that creates and empowers the municipality is the Nova Scotia Municipal Government Act.[17]

Municipal Council is responsible for all facets of the municipal government, including directly delivered and shared or regional services. Directly delivered services include services such fire, public works, roads, as well as the municipally owned and operated electrical and water utilities. The municipality participates in shared services, such as library services and policing. The town's municipal operating budget was $2.7 million, and the town owned electric light utility of $1.9 million and water utility of $575 thousand resulted in a total proposed budget of $5.2 million in the 2017/18 fiscal year.[18]

Mahone Bay is represented by one riding in the Nova Scotia House of Assembly and shares representation with one riding in Canada's House of Commons.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Mayor's Welcome - Town of Mahone Bay
  2. ^ a b c d "Population and dwelling counts: Canada, provinces and territories, census divisions and census subdivisions (municipalities), Nova Scotia". Statistics Canada. February 9, 2022. Retrieved March 12, 2022.
  3. ^ "Mahone Bay, Shelburne, Bridgewater are the little towns that could". Chronicle Herald. Saltwire Publishing. Retrieved 31 March 2018.
  4. ^ "Census Profile, 2016 Census Mahone Bay, Town [Census subdivision]". Statistics Canada. Government of Canada. Retrieved 31 March 2018.
  5. ^ Stea, Robert (1998). "Deglaciation of Nova Scotia: Stratigraphy and chronology of lake sediment cores and buried organic sections" (PDF). erudit. Géographie physique et Quaternaire. Retrieved 30 March 2018.
  6. ^ Lothrop, Jonathon (2016). "Early Human Settlement of Northeastern North America". Paleoamerica. 2 (3): 192–251. doi:10.1080/20555563.2016.1212178.
  7. ^ Among the settlers were the Hyson, Zwicker, Keddy, Eisenhauer/Eisner, Weinacht/Whynot, Ernst, and Veinot families. All these names can be found in the area today. The old cemetery, known as Bayview Cemetery, has some 18th-century slate gravestones engraved in German.
  8. ^ Bell, Wintrop Packard (1961). The "Foreign Protestants" and the Settlement of Nova Scotia: The History of a Piece of Arrested British Colonial Policy in the Eighteenth Century. University of Toronto Press. p. 511.
  9. ^ Pacey, Elizabeth; Comiter, Alvin (1994). Landmarks: Historic Buildings in Nova Scotia. Nimbus Publishing. p. 74. ISBN 978-1-55109-071-9.
  10. ^ [1], Censuses 1871-1931
  11. ^ [2], Census 1941-1951
  12. ^ Census 1951-1961
  13. ^ [3], Census 1961
  14. ^ [4] 2013-10-05 at the Wayback Machine, Censuses 1981-2001
  15. ^ a b "Town Government". Town of Mahone Bay. Town of Mahone Bay. Retrieved 31 March 2018.
  16. ^ "Mayor's Welcome". Town of Mahone Bay. Town of Mahone Bay. Retrieved 31 March 2018.
  17. ^ https://nslegislature.ca/sites/default/files/legc/statutes/municipal%20government.pdf "Municipal Government Act"
  18. ^ "Proposed 2017/18 Operating Budget". Town of Mahone Bay. Town of Mahone Bay. Retrieved 31 March 2018.

External links edit

  • Official website

mahone, nova, scotia, mahone, town, northwest, shore, mahone, along, south, shore, nova, scotia, lunenburg, county, long, standing, picturesque, tourism, destination, town, recently, enjoyed, growing, reputation, haven, entrepreneurs, business, startups, town,. Mahone Bay is a town on the northwest shore of Mahone Bay along the South Shore of Nova Scotia in Lunenburg County A long standing picturesque tourism destination the town has recently enjoyed a growing reputation as a haven for entrepreneurs and business startups 3 The town has the fastest growing population of any municipality in Nova Scotia according to the 2016 census experiencing 9 9 population growth 4 Mahone BayTownThe Famous Three Churches of Mahone BaySealMotto A Treasure Since 1754 Mahone BayLocation within Nova ScotiaCoordinates 44 26 56 N 64 22 55 W 44 44889 N 64 38194 W 44 44889 64 38194CountryCanadaProvinceNova ScotiaCountyLunenburg CountyFounded1754IncorporatedMarch 31 1919Government MayorDavid Devenne 1 Governing BodyMahone Bay Town Council MLASuzanne Lohnes Croft Liberal MPRick Perkins C Area 2021 2 Total3 12 km2 1 20 sq mi Highest elevation24 m 79 ft Lowest elevation0 m 0 ft Population 2021 2 Total1 064 Density341 4 km2 884 sq mi Time zoneUTC 4 AST Postal code spanB0JArea code902Telephone Exchanges521 624 627Median household income 2005 36 374Total private dwellings571Websitetownofmahonebay ca Contents 1 History 1 1 Shipbuilding 2 Today 3 Demographics 4 Government 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory editThe end of glaciation began 13 500 years ago 5 and ended with the region becoming largely ice free 11 000 years ago The earliest evidence of Palaeo Indian settlement in the region follows rapidly after deglaciation 6 The Town of Mahone Bay is part of the Mi kma ki territory of the Mi kmaq who have inhabited their traditional lands for over 13 500 years Prior to arrival of the Europeans Mi kmaw lived in and around what is now Mahone Bay Indian Point just outside the town was an important summertime settlement where the Mi kmaq could enjoy the sheltered waters and plentiful food sources In the winter they would move inland from the coast using the rivers that flow into Mahone Bay harbour There are many Mi kmaq who live in the area today British officials placed public notices in Germany southern France Switzerland and the Netherlands stating that those willing to move to their planned settlement in Nova Scotia would receive grants of land food for a year and a few farm animals Between 1750 and 1752 more than 2 200 such Foreign Protestants made the long journey from Europe to Halifax In 1753 most of the new immigrants were brought from Halifax to Lunenburg which was to be the centre of the planned settlement The first to arrive were those who lived in town of Lunenberg and had farm lots throughout the peninsula including Mahone Bay They arrived under the leadership of mariner Ephraim Cook The people who settled on the Lunenburg Peninsula including the present day village of Mahone Bay were foreign protestants who were German Swiss and Montbeliardais settlers 7 During the French and Indian War there were nine Native and Acadian Catholic raids against the protestant settlers on the Lunenburg Peninsula One such raid the Raid on Lunenburg 1756 happened just off the shores of Mahone Bay on present day Covey Island and John Rous Island Another raid happened on 24 August 1758 in the village of Mahone Bay when eight Mi kmaq attacked the family homes of Lay and Brant While they killed three people in the raid the Mi kmaq were unsuccessful in taking their scalps which was the common practice for payment from the French 8 Mills were established at the mouth of each of Mahone Bay s two rivers and over the decades a separate community evolved at Mahone Bay with blacksmiths merchants a large school churches and shipyards Shipbuilding edit Mahone Bay s boat building history begins with the Mi kmaq The Mi kmaq were built birch bark canoes The British began the first industrial production of ships They established sawmills to produce lumber for shipbuilding The earliest official registration form found for a vessel built in Mahone Bay dates from 1817 By 1850 at least 43 vessels had already been built by small shipyards in the Mahone Bay area and larger shipyards began being established to build mainly schooners and other smaller vessels primarily for fishing and moving goods As years passed the trend was to build larger vessels for longer distance trading with the United States West Indies and elsewhere By the end of WWI there was no longer much demand for sailing vessels so the local shipyards began designing and building power vessels that used engines instead of sails for fishing and moving goods including rum running Shipyards continued producing vessels during WWII During this period as many as 500 people were employed in Mahone Bay shipyards Although fishing vessels were still being built until 1967 after WWII the industry transitioned to mainly constructing pleasure boats Fibreglass sailboats were built on the site of the present RPS Composites factory located at 740 Main Street under several different company names including Paceship Yachts The final days of commercial boat building concentrated on the building of pleasure crafts Mahone Bay Plycraft Co built thousands of laminated plywood runabout boats from 1949 to 1962 Commercial shipbuilding in the Town of Mahone Bay wrapped up around 1975 when the last fibreglass yachts were built at Paceship World Wars I and II brought brief revivals of shipbuilding with construction of schooners tugboats and barges After the war the shipyard became known for innovative production of moulded plywood boats Later on Paceship Yachts and McVay Fiberglass Yachts built fibreglass sailboats such as the Paceship 20 designed in 1970 There were six major shipyards that produced between 1850 1942 Obed H Ham Yacht Works Abraham Ernst Erst amp Sons Ernst Shipbuilding John Zwicker John Mclean and Sons Shipyard Elkanah Zwicker Titus Langilee Henry Schnare Today edit nbsp Mahone Bay town centre The town is also known for a history of wooden boat building it was the main industry of Mahone Bay in its earlier years The Mahone Bay Museum explains and shows this history in detail Until recent years the town s shipbuilding and boat building heritage was celebrated by the Mahone Bay Wooden Boat Festival The view across the harbour is of three prominent churches St James Anglican St John s Evangelical Lutheran and Trinity United It has become an iconic image of Nova Scotia frequently photographed and featured on postcards and calendars 9 The town has a number of upscale shops and restaurants which almost universally are designed to appeal to the tourist trade and sometimes shut down during the winter months citation needed The town also has a plastics factory Demographics editHistorical populationYearPop 1901866 1911951 9 8 19211 177 23 8 19311 065 9 5 19411 025 3 8 19511 019 0 6 19561 109 8 8 19611 103 0 5 19811 228 11 3 19861 093 11 0 19911 096 0 3 19961 017 7 2 2001991 2 6 2006904 8 8 2011943 4 3 20161 036 9 9 20211 064 2 7 10 11 12 13 14 2 In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada Mahone Bay had a population of 1 064 living in 522 of its 599 total private dwellings a change of 2 7 from its 2016 population of 1 036 With a land area of 3 12 km2 1 20 sq mi it had a population density of 341 0 km2 883 3 sq mi in 2021 2 Government editThe Town of Mahone Bay is governed by a Council composed of a mayor and six councillors elected at large 15 The mayor is David DeVenne 16 Day to day activities are managed by a Chief Administrative Officer CAO who is accountable to Council 15 Municipal governments in Nova Scotia are elected every four years and the most recent round of elections took place on October 17 2020 The provincial legislation that creates and empowers the municipality is the Nova Scotia Municipal Government Act 17 Municipal Council is responsible for all facets of the municipal government including directly delivered and shared or regional services Directly delivered services include services such fire public works roads as well as the municipally owned and operated electrical and water utilities The municipality participates in shared services such as library services and policing The town s municipal operating budget was 2 7 million and the town owned electric light utility of 1 9 million and water utility of 575 thousand resulted in a total proposed budget of 5 2 million in the 2017 18 fiscal year 18 Mahone Bay is represented by one riding in the Nova Scotia House of Assembly and shares representation with one riding in Canada s House of Commons See also editList of municipalities in Nova ScotiaReferences edit Mayor s Welcome Town of Mahone Bay a b c d Population and dwelling counts Canada provinces and territories census divisions and census subdivisions municipalities Nova Scotia Statistics Canada February 9 2022 Retrieved March 12 2022 Mahone Bay Shelburne Bridgewater are the little towns that could Chronicle Herald Saltwire Publishing Retrieved 31 March 2018 Census Profile 2016 Census Mahone Bay Town Census subdivision Statistics Canada Government of Canada Retrieved 31 March 2018 Stea Robert 1998 Deglaciation of Nova Scotia Stratigraphy and chronology of lake sediment cores and buried organic sections PDF erudit Geographie physique et Quaternaire Retrieved 30 March 2018 Lothrop Jonathon 2016 Early Human Settlement of Northeastern North America Paleoamerica 2 3 192 251 doi 10 1080 20555563 2016 1212178 Among the settlers were the Hyson Zwicker Keddy Eisenhauer Eisner Weinacht Whynot Ernst and Veinot families All these names can be found in the area today The old cemetery known as Bayview Cemetery has some 18th century slate gravestones engraved in German Bell Wintrop Packard 1961 The Foreign Protestants and the Settlement of Nova Scotia The History of a Piece of Arrested British Colonial Policy in the Eighteenth Century University of Toronto Press p 511 Pacey Elizabeth Comiter Alvin 1994 Landmarks Historic Buildings in Nova Scotia Nimbus Publishing p 74 ISBN 978 1 55109 071 9 1 Censuses 1871 1931 2 Census 1941 1951 Census 1951 1961 3 Census 1961 4 Archived 2013 10 05 at the Wayback Machine Censuses 1981 2001 a b Town Government Town of Mahone Bay Town of Mahone Bay Retrieved 31 March 2018 Mayor s Welcome Town of Mahone Bay Town of Mahone Bay Retrieved 31 March 2018 https nslegislature ca sites default files legc statutes municipal 20government pdf Municipal Government Act Proposed 2017 18 Operating Budget Town of Mahone Bay Town of Mahone Bay Retrieved 31 March 2018 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mahone Bay Nova Scotia Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mahone Bay Nova Scotia amp oldid 1151078665, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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