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Point Pleasant Park is a large, mainly forested municipal park at the southern tip of the Halifax peninsula. It once hosted several artillery batteries , and still contains the Prince of Wales Tower - the oldest Martello tower in North America (1796). [ 1 ]
St. Peter's Cemetery, later St. Mary's Cemetery, is the oldest Catholic cemetery in Halifax, Nova Scotia, containing an estimated 3,000 graves dating from 1784 until 1843. It is located in Downtown Halifax at the corner of Spring Garden Road and Grafton Street under a parking lot beside the St. Mary's Basilica and owned by the Roman Catholic ...
The Prince of Wales Tower is the oldest martello tower in North America and is located in Point Pleasant Park, Halifax Regional Municipality, Nova Scotia, Canada. [1] It was built in 1796 by Captain James Straton and was used as a redoubt and a powder magazine. Restored, it was designated a National Historic Site of Canada in 1943. [2] [3]
St. Peter's Cemetery may refer to: St. Peter's Cemetery (Halifax), Nova Scotia; St. Peter's Cemetery (Jefferson County, Arkansas), on the National Register of Historic Places; Saint Peter's Cemetery (Jersey City, New Jersey) St. Peter's Cemetery (Lewiston, Maine) St. Peter's Cemetery (Baltimore, Maryland), home to Jonah House
St. Peter's Anglican Church is a church in West LaHave, Nova Scotia (formerly New Dublin) that was established in 1818 by Roger Aitken, the missionary at Lunenburg for Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts (1817–1825). The first church was built in 1829 and consecrated in 1834.
The isthmus of St. Peter's St. Peter's NS 45°39′00″N 60°51′58″W / 45.6501°N 60.8662°W / 45.6501; -60.8662 ( St. Peters National Historic Site of
As of April 2021, there were 91 National Historic Sites designated in Nova Scotia, 26 of which are administered by Parks Canada (identified below by the beaver icon ). [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Numerous National Historic Events also occurred across Nova Scotia, and are identified at places associated with them, using the same style of federal plaque which ...
[citation needed] Shakespeare By The Sea brought the show back to Point Pleasant Park for production in the summer of 2011, garnering significant popular and critical success. [2] In January, 2013, Toronto's Hart House Theatre presented a three-week run of the newest incarnation of the show, now entitled "Robin Hood: The Legendary Musical Comedy".