It was built 1775 but contains evidence of Acadian construction as well as several additions. The Wave house (1887) and the former united church(1896 on Queen street are also used in the residency program The residency program can host as many as 20 with private rooms and work spaces. There is an art gallery on the 2nd floor, a used book shop on the ground floor with a vegetarian cafe. The former post office, armoury and customs house (1913) has been converted into a space for artistic and cultural activities and hosts residencies from artists, writers, academics, dancers, musicians, etc. The Fundy Geological Museum, located along the eastern shore of Parrsboro Harbour, and the Parrsboro Rock and Mineral Shop and Museum, along the western shore, display many unearthed discoveries and provide information on the history of the region's landscape. Of the three museums in Parrsboro, two are dedicated to geological history. Many fossils are on display in local museums. The cliffs along the Minas Basin to the east and west of Parrsboro contain fossils of prehistoric animals and plants. The community is known for its seasonal theatre productions, fossil and rock hounding attractions, museums, high tides and heritage buildings. Climate Ĭlimate data for Parrsboro, 1981–2010 normals, extremes 1897–presentĪrea features Historical population YearĪs with much of rural Nova Scotia, the primary industry in Parrsboro is tourism. The Town of Parrsboro was dissolved effective Novemand merged into the larger Municipality of the County of Cumberland. The NSURB held public hearings in November 2015 and issued a decision on Jgranting the application. On Octothe Town Council filed an application for dissolution with the Nova Scotia Utility and Review Board. Parrsboro was incorporated as a town on July 15, 1889. The prints are now on display at the Parrsboro Rock and Mineral Shop and Museum, owned by George. On April 10, 1984, Parrsboro resident Eldon George located the world's smallest dinosaur footprints at Wasson Bluff, a series of cliffs to the east of Parrsboro Harbour. The local Air Cadet Squadron, 689 Handley Page, is named after this event. After three months, the aircraft was repaired and departed for Greenport, New York, Parrsboro's sister town. When the starboard engine failed the pilot, Major Brackley saw the lights of the town during the night and landed. Ī Handley Page V/1500 named Atlantic made a forced landing in Parrsboro July 5, 1919. The 13th and final vessel in this service, operated by the Dominion Atlantic Railway, was the MV Kipawo, which is now permanently beached at Parrsboro and incorporated into the Ship's Company Theatre performance centre. Throughout the late 19th century and first four decades of the twentieth century, Parrsboro saw daily ferry service across the Minas Basin to the Annapolis Valley ports of Kingsport and Wolfville. Railway service to Parrsboro was abandoned on June 14, 1958, following several years of declining shipments, several months before the 1958 mining disaster. The Springhill and Parrsboro Railway began service to the town from the coal mining town of Springhill on JParrsboro became a coal shipping port for the Springhill mines, primarily serving Saint John, New Brunswick. In its peak years of the 1890s, over 1646 ships arrived and departed annually. The town became a port of registry in 1850 for over 115 locally built schooners as well as giant square riggers, culminating in the largest, the ship Glooscap in 1891. Parrsboro thrived in the mid 19th century as the hub of a string of shipbuilding communities from Economy to Advocate collectively known as the " Parrsboro Shore". The settlement, at first named Mill Village, was renamed Parrsboro in honour of Nova Scotia Governor John Parr in 1784, and the town was incorporated on July 15, 1889. The centre of settlement gradually shifted from Partridge Island to the sheltered estuary of the Parrsboro River where a harbour and surrounding mills grew. After they were expelled in 1755, they were replaced by New England Planters. The first European settlers were the Acadians in 1670 at the western mouth of the Parrsboro Harbour, near Partridge Island. The native inhabitants called the region "Awokum," meaning a 'short-cut' or 'passing-over point.' Parrsboro is a community located in Cumberland County, Nova Scotia, Canada.Ī regional service centre for southern Cumberland County, the community is also known for its port on the Minas Basin, the Ship's Company Theatre productions, and the Fundy Geological Museum.īefore the arrival of European settlers, Parrsboro was a portage point for Mikmaq travellers along the Minas Basin and Cumberland County river systems.
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