Pictou, Nova Scotia

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Pictou, Nova Scotia
Pictou, Nova Scotia during the Lobster Carnival
Pictou, Nova Scotia during the Lobster Carnival
Location of Pictou, Nova Scotia
Pictou, Nova Scotia
Location of Pictou, Nova Scotia
Coordinates: 45°40′53″N 62°42′43″W / 45.68139, -62.71194
Country Flag of Canada Canada
Province Flag of Nova Scotia Nova Scotia
Municipality Pictou County
Founded 1773
Incorporated May 4, 1874
Government
 - Mayor Joseph Hawes
 - Governing Body Pictou Town Council
Area
 - Total 7.94 km² (3.1 sq mi)
Elevation 0-54 m (0-177 ft)
Population (2001)
 - Total 3,875
 - Density 488.0/km² (1,263.9/sq mi)
Time zone AST (UTC-4)
Postal code B0K
Area code(s) 902
Telephone Exchange 485
Median Earnings* $32,797
NTS Map 011E10
GNBC Code CBDPK
*Median household income, 2000 ($) (all households)
Part of a series about
Places in Nova Scotia
Website: http://www.townofpictou.com

Pictou is a Canadian town in Pictou County, Nova Scotia.

Located on the north shore of Pictou Harbour, the town is approximately 10km north of the larger town of New Glasgow.

Once an active shipping port and the shire town of the county, today Pictou is primarily a local service centre for surrounding rural communities as well as being the primary tourist destination in this region of Nova Scotia.

Its port was the receiving point for many Scottish immigrants moving to a new home in northern Nova Scotia and Cape Breton Island following the Highland Clearances of the late 1700s and early 1800s. Consequently, the town's slogan is "The Birthplace of New Scotland"; the first wave of immigrants is acknowledged to have arrived on September 15, 1773, on the Hector. Norman McLeod who arrived some years after the Hector from Scotland landed in Pictou but eventually settled in the area of Saint Anne's in Cape Breton of Nova Scotia. He later encouraged his parish to follow him to Waipu, New Zealand where today there still resides many descendants.

During the latter part of the 1800s, Pictou's industrial sector gained strength. The Intercolonial Railway was built to the town on a spur from the Stellarton-Oxford Junction "Short Line". Shipbuilding increased through the 1800s, particularly with the increase in coal being shipped from Pictou Landing, Abercrombie and the East River of Pictou. A shipyard has been continuously established in the town since this period. The port's activity increased after the nearby Scott Maritimes pulp mill opened in Abercrombie in 1965. CN Rail abandoned its service to the town in the late 1980s but other transportation - including Highway 106 (the Trans-Canada Highway) - opened in the 1970s to provide alternatives.

Contents

[edit] Notable Pictonians

[edit] Education

Pictou Academy is the town's high school and was founded in 1803 by Dr. Thomas McCulloch, who was travelling to his new clergy posting on Prince Edward Island. He was convinced to stay the winter and ended up remaining in Pictou for much longer. Disappointed by the lack of education among Pictonians, Dr. McCulloch decided to start a "college". There was considerable argument between Dr. Thomas McCulloch and Nova Scotia's provincial government for funding however it finally became a reality in 1816 when the Pictou Academy was incorporated. The province of Nova Scotia would not let it be named a "college," as such, but it was a school of higher education (senior matriculation) which was open to people of every race and denomination.

Between 1816 and the present, Pictou Academy has been in four separate buildings. The school was moved from its original building to a new site, while the second and third buildings both burned down. There were Academy graduates from every year since it was incorporated, excluding the years between several of its different buildings.

At the start of the school year of 2003–2004, all high schools in Pictou County were closed, and their students began to go the two new "superschools", Northumberland Regional High School, and North Nova Education Centre, for their education. The only exception to this is Pictou Academy, which continues to operate.

[edit] Attractions

The primary tourist attraction in Pictou is the waterfront along Pictou Harbour. During the 1990s-2000s, industrial land on the Pictou waterfront was redeveloped with the centrepiece being construction of the replica tall ship Hector. Now completed, the ship is docked each summer at the Hector Heritage Quay, an interpretive centre that includes a gift store, a carpentry shop, a blacksmith shop and an artist's studio.

The Hector Festival, celebrating the arrival of settlers to Nova Scotia on the Hector takes place in August. In July, the Lobster Carnival takes place, and an amusement park is set up. The Lobster Carnival is a yearly event celebrating the end of the fishing season and has been a town festival since 1934.

The waterfront redevelopment also features a marina and small boardwalk that connects to the Trans-Canada Trail. The historic Intercolonial Railway station on the waterfront has been restored, and a new fisheries museum is under construction nearby. An interesting attraction near the waterfront is the Grohmann Knives factory and outlet store; Grohmann claims to be the only manufacturer of hand-made knives in Canada.

Water taxis and boat tours of the harbour are available, which also connect to the town of New Glasgow.

Pictou is 5 kilometres south of the port of Caribou where Northumberland Ferries Limited operates a seasonal vehicle-pedestrian ferry service to Prince Edward Island; there is also a pedestrian-only ferry that operates seaonally to Pictou Island. Several beaches are located near the town of Pictou, most notably Caribou Provincial Park and Waterside Beach Provincial Park.

[edit] External links

Coordinates: 45°40′53″N, 62°42′43″W

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