Roxbury, Nova Scotia Explained

Roxbury
Settlement Type:Ghost town
Pushpin Map:Canada Nova Scotia
Coordinates:44.8133°N -65.1676°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:Canada
Subdivision Type1:Province
Subdivision Name1:Nova Scotia
Established Title:Established
Established Date:Mid-1800s (approximate)
Population Total:0
Unit Pref:Metric

Roxbury is a small ghost town outside of Paradise, Nova Scotia.

History

Legend has it that about sixty of the Acadian settlers took flight up the river and hid on the South Mountain to escape the Expulsion.[1] Their allies, the Mi’kmaq, raced on canoe from Grand-Pré, Nova Scotia to warn them what was coming in 1755.[2] [3]

Lost Acadian Gold

Rumours persist that the fleeing Acadians left stashes of gold under Mile Rock on Roxbury Road,

Development

The Acadians had expanded the Mi’kmaq toe-path into a lane, and the Loyalists made it a road off what’s now Route 201. By the mid-1800s, it had a population of about 70, with a school, a church and homes. A mill exported lumber to the railway station in Paradise. In the late 1800s Roxbury was a logging community with a population of several dozens, but the community ended after the face of the South Mountain was destroyed by a forest fire in 1903 and the community income was lost.[4]

Cemetery

Notes and References

  1. Halifax Herald,1889
  2. Web site: Lost in the Woods. davewhitman.ca. 29 December 2018.
  3. Web site: Walpole History of the Acadians in Walpole. www.walpolelibrary.org. 29 December 2018.
  4. Web site: Roxbury. Jon. Attrie. 2013-08-21. https://web.archive.org/web/20140406144743/http://www.jontattrie.ca/Roxbury.htm. 2014-04-06. dead.