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woodlawn+nova+scotia Latitude and Longitude:

44°40′50″N 63°31′17″W / 44.6806°N 63.5214°W / 44.6806; -63.5214
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Woodlawn
Location within Dartmouth
Woodlawn, Nova Scotia is located in Nova Scotia
Woodlawn, Nova Scotia
Location within Nova Scotia
Coordinates: 44°40′50″N 63°31′17″W / 44.6806°N 63.5214°W / 44.6806; -63.5214
Country  Canada
Province  Nova Scotia
Municipality Halifax Regional Municipality
Community Dartmouth
Community council Harbour East - Marine Drive Community Council
District6 - Harbourview - Burnside - Dartmouth East
Postal code
B2W
Area code 902, 782
GNBC codeCBPEB

Woodlawn is an area of eastern Dartmouth, Nova Scotia in the Halifax Regional Municipality, Nova Scotia that is mainly residential and retail. It is situated within an area with Highway 111 on the west, Portland Street ( Route 207) on the east and Main Street ( Trunk 7) on the North side. The first three digits of the postal code are B2W.

History

Settlement in the Woodlawn area began as early as 1754 when the road between the Dartmouth ferry and the community of Lawrencetown was under construction. Some of the first settlers were United Empire Loyalists who moved to Nova Scotia after the American Revolution. The area initially got its name from the Woodlawn Cemetery, established by Ebenezer Allen in the late 1700s for local residents. Among those buried in the graveyard are Jane and Margaret Meagher, otherwise known as the "Babes in the Woods", who disappeared from their home in 1842. After an exhaustive search of the surrounding woods, they were found dead several days later and were subsequently interred in the cemetery. Woodlawn Methodist Church was built in the area in 1884. It became Woodlawn United Church in 1925, following church union. [1]

Until the 1950s, Woodlawn had mainly been a rural farming community before the general subdivision boom of the late 1940s and 1950s reshaped the areas surrounding Dartmouth. [2]

Area neighbourhoods

Schools

References

  1. ^ Chapman, Harry (2001). In the wake of the Alderney : Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, 1750-2000. Dartmouth Historical Association (2nd ed.). [Dartmouth, N.S.]: Dartmouth Historical Association. p. 382. ISBN  1-55109-374-X. OCLC  48398897.
  2. ^ Chapman, Harry (2001). In the wake of the Alderney : Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, 1750-2000. Dartmouth Historical Association (2nd ed.). [Dartmouth, N.S.]: Dartmouth Historical Association. p. 380. ISBN  1-55109-374-X. OCLC  48398897.



woodlawn+nova+scotia Latitude and Longitude:

44°40′50″N 63°31′17″W / 44.6806°N 63.5214°W / 44.6806; -63.5214
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Woodlawn
Location within Dartmouth
Woodlawn, Nova Scotia is located in Nova Scotia
Woodlawn, Nova Scotia
Location within Nova Scotia
Coordinates: 44°40′50″N 63°31′17″W / 44.6806°N 63.5214°W / 44.6806; -63.5214
Country  Canada
Province  Nova Scotia
Municipality Halifax Regional Municipality
Community Dartmouth
Community council Harbour East - Marine Drive Community Council
District6 - Harbourview - Burnside - Dartmouth East
Postal code
B2W
Area code 902, 782
GNBC codeCBPEB

Woodlawn is an area of eastern Dartmouth, Nova Scotia in the Halifax Regional Municipality, Nova Scotia that is mainly residential and retail. It is situated within an area with Highway 111 on the west, Portland Street ( Route 207) on the east and Main Street ( Trunk 7) on the North side. The first three digits of the postal code are B2W.

History

Settlement in the Woodlawn area began as early as 1754 when the road between the Dartmouth ferry and the community of Lawrencetown was under construction. Some of the first settlers were United Empire Loyalists who moved to Nova Scotia after the American Revolution. The area initially got its name from the Woodlawn Cemetery, established by Ebenezer Allen in the late 1700s for local residents. Among those buried in the graveyard are Jane and Margaret Meagher, otherwise known as the "Babes in the Woods", who disappeared from their home in 1842. After an exhaustive search of the surrounding woods, they were found dead several days later and were subsequently interred in the cemetery. Woodlawn Methodist Church was built in the area in 1884. It became Woodlawn United Church in 1925, following church union. [1]

Until the 1950s, Woodlawn had mainly been a rural farming community before the general subdivision boom of the late 1940s and 1950s reshaped the areas surrounding Dartmouth. [2]

Area neighbourhoods

Schools

References

  1. ^ Chapman, Harry (2001). In the wake of the Alderney : Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, 1750-2000. Dartmouth Historical Association (2nd ed.). [Dartmouth, N.S.]: Dartmouth Historical Association. p. 382. ISBN  1-55109-374-X. OCLC  48398897.
  2. ^ Chapman, Harry (2001). In the wake of the Alderney : Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, 1750-2000. Dartmouth Historical Association (2nd ed.). [Dartmouth, N.S.]: Dartmouth Historical Association. p. 380. ISBN  1-55109-374-X. OCLC  48398897.



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