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The Camp Hill area is roughly enclosed within two city blocks; the Camp Hill Cemetery, and the block bounded by Robie Street, Summer Street, Bell Road, and Veterans Memorial Lane (originally the eastern terminus of Jubilee Road, renamed in 1999).
In 1987 the Camp Hill Veterans' Memorial building was opened, and the original Camp Hill facilities were subsequently demolished. The new Veteran's Memorial Building, the Abbie J. Lane Hospital, and the Halifax Infirmary on Queen Street were merged to form the Camp Hill Medical Centre.
Highway 102 is a north–south highway in the Canadian province of Nova Scotia that runs from Halifax to Onslow, immediately north of the town of Truro. It is the busiest highway in Atlantic Canada. Nova Scotia's Oldest 100 Series highway. In 2000, the section of Highway 102 between Fall River and Truro was redesignated as Veterans Memorial ...
Veterans Memorial Highway is the name chosen for the following roads: Canada. Alberta. Highway 36; British Columbia. Part of Highway 14; ...
A stretch of Robie Street running north from its junction with Quinpool Road (bottom) past the Halifax Commons (right). Robie Street is a north-south artery that runs for 7 km in the Halifax Peninsula area of the Halifax Regional Municipality from Memorial Drive in the North End to Gorsebrook Avenue in the South End.
Eastern Shore Memorial Hospital (Sheet Harbour) Hants Community Hospital ; Musquodoboit Valley Memorial Hospital (Middle Musquodoboit) Nova Scotia Environmental Health Centre ; Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre Halifax Infirmary Site Abbie J. Lane; Camp Hill Veterans' Memorial; Halifax Infirmary; Victoria General Site
The Veterans Memorial Parkway was commissioned in 1993. [3] [4] Both US 25 Byp. and US 301 Byp. were completed at the same time as two-lane highways. [citation needed] Several years later, US 25 Byp. was widened to become a four-lane divided highway. [citation needed] In March 2007, work began on the widening of US 301 Byp.
Fort Massey Cemetery is a military cemetery in Halifax, Nova Scotia dating back to the 1750s, and is the resting place for British and Canadian soldiers, veterans and spouses. The cemetery is named after Major General Eyre Massey. The cemetery is maintained by Veteran's Affairs Canada.