Stewiacke
Stewiacke | |||
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Town | |||
Stewiacke Town Hall and cenotaph | |||
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Nickname(s): Halfway between the North Pole and the Equator | |||
Motto: Respect, Prosperity, Growth | |||
Stewiacke Location of Stewiacke, Nova Scotia | |||
Coordinates: 45°8′32″N 63°20′54″W / 45.14222°N 63.34833°W | |||
Country | Canada | ||
Province | Nova Scotia | ||
Municipality | Colchester County | ||
Incorporated | August 30, 1906 | ||
Government | |||
• Mayor | Wendy Robinson | ||
• MLA | Larry Harrison | ||
• MP | Scott Armstrong (C) | ||
Area | |||
• Total | 17.67 km2 (6.82 sq mi) | ||
Elevation | 100 m (300 ft) | ||
Population (2011) | |||
• Total | 1,436 | ||
• Density | 81.4/km2 (211/sq mi) | ||
Time zone | AST (UTC−4) | ||
• Summer (DST) | ADT (UTC−3) | ||
Postal code | B0N 2J0 | ||
Area code(s) | 902 | ||
Telephone Exchange | 639, 671 | ||
Median Earnings* | $26,521 | ||
NTS Map | 011E03 | ||
GNBC Code | CBKOM | ||
Website |
stewiacke | ||
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Stewiacke (2011 population: 1,438) is a town located in southern Colchester County, Nova Scotia, Canada. The town was incorporated on August 30, 1906.
Parks
- Caddell Rapids Provincial Park
History
Stewiacke was named in the language of the local Mi'kmaq First Nations and is a word meaning "flowing out in small streams" and "winding river" or "whimpering or whining as it goes".[1] During the French and Indian War, the British built Fort Ellis is the area to protect New England Planters from Mi'kmaq raids.
In the late 1990s, a tourism attraction named Mastodon Ridge opened near the town's highway exit, based on a local discovery of a mastodon skeleton. The Mastodon Ridge Complex features a craft store, toy store, a mini golf and interpretive centre which displays several of the mastodon's bones.
Stewiacke is home to two bars, a pharmacy, a grocery store, a pizza store, numerous fast food restaurants, two gas stations, a hardware store, an audio-visual production company, an 18-hole golf course and a newly built elementary school that consolidates 2 former local schools.
Stewiacke is also home to a volunteer fire brigade that was the first department in North America to use specialized foam as a fire suppression agent. Alongside other achievements involving the implementation of certain fire apparatus.
The town is noted as being located halfway between the North Pole and the Equator (Actually in Alton, Nova Scotia).[2] Controversy in the past over this claim stems from the fact that the Earth is not a perfect sphere, and therefore the halfway mark lies approximately 16 km North of the 45th parallel.[3]
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The town's most notorious event occurred on Friday April 12, 2001, when a local teenager, at home on a school in-service day, tampered with a railway switch on the CN Rail Halifax-Montreal mainline, causing Via Rail Canada's Ocean to derail several minutes later when it passed through the centre of the community.[6] Several buildings and rail cars were destroyed and many people were injured, including some severely, although no fatalities resulted.[6][7]
The town is located in the Stewiacke Valley at the confluence of the Stewiacke and Shubenacadie River and is a service and support centre for local agricultural communities as well as a service exit on Highway 102.
Navigator
Alton, Nova Scotia Truro, Nova Scotia Via Trunk 2 Or Hwy 102 |
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West St. Andrews, Nova Scotia Musquodoboit Valley Via Kitchener St./Stewiacke Rd. | ||||
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Shubenacadie, Nova Scotia Enfield, Nova Scotia Via Trunk 2 Or Hwy 102 |
References
- ↑ "Museum, Government of Nova Scotia - 511 Windsor Lowlands". Museum.gov.ns.ca. Retrieved 2009-04-19.
- ↑ "The Burnside News - Burnside entrepreneur to develop Stewiacke industrial park". BurnsideNews.com. Retrieved 2009-04-19.
- ↑ "Midway from the Equator to the North Pole - Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada". Harvard.edu. Retrieved 2009-04-19.
- ↑ I:\ecstats\Agency\BRIAN\census2 NS Department of Finance
- ↑ Statistics Canada, 2011
- 1 2 "Youth sentenced to six months for derailing train". CBC.ca. 2002-11-06. Retrieved 2009-04-19.
- ↑ "Teen faces victims of N.S. train wreck". CBC.ca. 2002-08-30. Retrieved 2009-04-19.
External links
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Coordinates: 45°08′32″N 63°20′55″W / 45.142336°N 63.34854°W