- Bass River, Nova Scotia
Bass River is an unincorporated
rural community in western Colchester County, north-centralNova Scotia , in the Maritimes ofCanada .Location
Bass River is located along an approximate 4 km stretch of
Cobequid Bay northshore line, from the bordering communities of Upper Economy to the west, Porta(u)pique to the east, and Castlereagh in theCobequid Hills to the north. The community is centred at approximately 45°24' North, 63°46' West. Most of its residents live along or just off of the Trunk 2, theGlooscap Trail . Bass River's jurisdiction is thought locally to extend north from the bay approximately 5 km to include Upper Bass River and Hoeg(')s Corner, east to incorporate Little Bass River (which includes the areas Edgewood and Saint's Rest), and south to include Birch Hill and King's Rest.Population
Bass River has a population of approximately 300 permanent residents. The number of residents increases in summertime by 20 to 40 per cent with the influx of those with
cottage s in the area.The region suffers from
out-migration . More than half of those who grow up in Bass River leave the area to live, with Halifax, Ontario,Alberta and its petroleum products industry,British Columbia , and theCanadian Forces being common destinations.Name
The community is named after the small river, Bass River, which runs south from its source in the
Cobequid Hills at Upper Bass River, through the village centre, and out toCobequid Bay .Industrial heyday
At its height, economic activity in the village of Bass River was centred around wooden
furniture production, woodenship-building , andtimber export. The furnituremanufacturer Dominion Chair Company employed 40 to 70 workers at any one time from the late 19th century to February 1989, when fire destroyed most of the company's operating facilities. Shipbuilding took place in two locales, at Saint's Rest, site of the (no longer in use) villagelighthouse , with the building of thebrig 'Jos. Howe' in 1867, and between 1884 and 1918 in Little Bass River with the construction of a further seven wooden ships (Hemeon, 1987). Bass River timber was famously also used to buildstaging used in construction of theEmpire State Building .Other former industry included
grist mill operations,shad fishing , andsilica mining . In the early 20th century, there was abank and ahotel located in the village. The population then was two or three times what it is now.Present-day economic activity
Present-day economic activity includes a few commercial
farm s (cultivatedstrawberries ,dairy , andsheep ), pulp wood, fire wood, andtimber harvesting, lowbushblueberry andChristmas tree production, andclam mollusc harvesting (ie. "clam digging ").Most present-day residents however commute to assorted work done outside the community. Most commuters go to Truro and its surrounding area.
Heritage and history
Bass River was founded by members of the
Ulster emigrant "Judge" James Fulton's family, who himself in c.1767 was the first to settle the area (at King's Rest) a decade after the tragic explusion ofAcadian s from the region. Those who settled Bass River and its neighbouring communities were largely of directUlster-Scottish descent. Many of these settlers' descendants have remained in the community as is evident from a list ofsurname s prevalent in the area today. Ulster-ScottishCampbell s,Creelman s,Davison s/Davidsons,Fulton s, Fishers,Fulton s,McLellan s,Starratt s/Starritt s,Vance s, andWilson s settled the area, as did Lewis's fromScotland .Other common surnames of the area include
Burns , Cameron,Carde , Carr,Cooke , Corbett,Dickie , Faulkner,Fletcher ,Gilbert ,Grue , Jordan,Lawson ,McIntosh ,Rushton ,Rutherford , Smith, Taggart, Taylor, Thompson, and Welch. Most of these names have Ulster-Scottish or Scottish origins, as much of Colchester County was settled by Ulster Scots.Settlement took place in what was then merely an unnamed parcel of the Township of Londonderry, an area centred around the present-day community of Londonderry. Prior to British settlement, it is believed that Acadian families lived in what are now the neighbouring communities of Economy and Portapique (or Portaupique), places whose names were most likely derived from
Acadian French language.Mi'kmaq Indigenous Peoples /First Nations peoples are thought to have hunted and gathered in Colchester County for several hundred years prior to British control and settlement.Education
West Colchester Consolidated district public school for grades 4 to 9 and Bass River Elementary School for grade primary to 3 are both located on Mines Road, Bass River. (Mines Road, the designated official name, is referred to locally, until it reaches Hoeg's Corner, as "Maple Avenue".)
References
* [http://bassriver.ednet.ns.ca/History%20of%20Bass%20River.htm S. Ward Hemeon. History of Bass River, Nova Scotia. 1987: (unpublished manuscript)]
External links
* [http://bassriver.ednet.ns.ca Bass River Heritage Society]
* [http://destination-ns.com/common/map/Map.asp?PlaceID=455&KmsWide=5&Layer=All Destination: Nova Scotia Maps by Mapeze with a road map of the Bass River area]
* [http://www.lhdigest.com/database/uniquelighthouse.cfm?value=1103 Lighhouse Depot online with a photograph and information on Bass River lighthouse]
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