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Lower Sackville, Nova Scotia


FieldValue
official_nameLower Sackville
native_name
settlement_typeCommunity
image_skylineLower sackville.JPG
imagesize250px
image_captionAerial view of Lower Sackville
image_mapNovascotiahrm-sackville.png
map_captionMap of Sackville planning area in Halifax, Nova Scotia
pushpin_mapNova Scotia
pushpin_label_positionright
pushpin_map_captionLocation of Lower Sackville, Nova Scotia
coordinates
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_name
subdivision_type1Province
subdivision_name1Nova Scotia
subdivision_type2Municipality
subdivision_name2Halifax
subdivision_type3Community
subdivision_name3Lower Sackville
subdivision_type4Municipal District
subdivision_name4District 15 (Lower Sackville)
established_titleFounded
established_date1749
extinct_titleAmalgamated with Halifax
extinct_dateApril 1, 1996
area_footnotes
area_total_km25.66
population_total51749
population_as_of2023
postal_code_typeCanadian Postal code
postal_codeB4C, B4E, B4G
area_codes782, 902
website
timezoneAST
utc_offset-4
timezone_DSTADT
utc_offset_DST-3
blank_nameTelephone Exchange
blank_info252, 864, 865, 869
blank1_nameNTS Map

Lower Sackville is a suburban community of the Halifax Regional Municipality, Nova Scotia, Canada.

History

Main article: History of the Halifax Regional Municipality

Before European colonization in 1749, the Mi'kmaq lived in this area for thousands of years.

In August 1749, Captain John Gorham, acting on orders from Governor Edward Cornwallis to establish a military fort named Fort Sackville. (The community was named after George Germain, 1st Viscount Sackville.).

In the 1950s and 1960s it was a destination for Haligonians seeking entertainment at a drive-in cinema, a harness racing track (Sackville Downs), and an World War II bomber-plane ice cream parlour. Sackville Downs closed in 1986.

Lower Sackville experienced intensive suburban development from the 1970s onward due to new highway connections as well as a major development scheme by the Nova Scotia Housing Commission, later the Nova Scotia Department of Housing. Suburbanization contributed to a decline in agriculture in the community.

Before amalgamation into the Halifax Regional Municipality in 1996, Lower Sackville was an unincorporated part of Halifax County.

On 1 April 1996, Halifax County was dissolved and all of its places (cities, suburbs, towns, and villages) became communities of a single-tier municipality named Halifax Regional Municipality.

Today, Lower Sackville is a commuter town of Halifax home to many established businesses, parks, and places of interest.

Geography

According to the 2013 Halifax Regional Municipality Urban Forest Master Plan, the community of Lower Sackville covers approximately 566 ha of land area.

Lower Sackville is east of Lucasville; north—north-east of Bedford; south-east of Middle Sackville; and south-west of Windsor Junction.

The community is located approximately 18 km from Downtown Dartmouth, approximately 27 km from Downtown Halifax, and approximately 25 km from Halifax Stanfield International Airport.

Districts of Lower Sackville

The following are the districts of Lower Sackville, their geographical location, and/or main road:

  • Cobequid - Upper half of Cobequid Road
  • Downtown - Upper half of Sackville Drive, close to Beaver Bank Road
  • East Sackville - First Lake Drive
  • Industrial Park - Lower half of Cobequid Road and Glendale Avenue
  • North Sackville - Stokil Drive and Armcrest
  • Olde Sackville - Old Sackville Road and Riverside Estates
  • Sackville Estates - Below Century Park, connected to Millwood
  • Seawood - Seawood Avenue
  • South Sackville - Between the lower half of Sackville Drive and Glendale Drive, also includes Chandler Peninsula
  • Stonemount - Stonemount Drive
  • Sunnyvale - Sunnyvale Crescent
  • West Sackville - Riverside Drive
  • Walker Area - Walker Avenue

Some neighbourhoods of Lower Sackville are also known by their tendency to use street names starting with the same letter:

  • "C" Section: Cavalier Dr, Cavendish Dr, Cartier Cres, Cabot Cres, Crimson Dr
  • "L" Section: Lennox Dr, Lumsden Cres, Lynville Dr, Lydgate Dr
  • "N" Section: Nordic Cres, Neilly Dr, Nappan Dr, Newcombe Dr, Nictaux Dr
  • "P" Section: Polara Dr, Polara Ct, Phoenix Cres
  • "Q" Section: Quaker Cres, Quinn Dr, Queens Ct
  • "R" Section: Rogers Dr, Rankin Dr, Riverside Dr, Rothesay Ct
  • "S" Section: Smokey Dr, Stokil Dr, Sampson Dr, Saratoga Dr, Saturn Dr, Spinner Cres, Sappire Cres

Other streets are named after the Fathers of Canadian confederation: Brown, Cartier, Chandler, Chapais, Cockburn, Coles, Dickie, Haviland, Howland, Johnson, Langevin, MacDougall, McGee, Mowat, Nelson, Pope, Shea, Steeves, Tache, Tilley, Tilloch, and Wilmot.

Parks and recreation

Arenas

  • Sackville Community Arena
  • Sackville Sports Stadium (home of the Lakeshore Curling Club)

Community centres

  • Acadia Centre
  • Kinsmen Community Centre
  • Sackville Heights Community Centre

Library

  • Sackville Public Library

Museums

  • Fultz House

Parks

  • Acadia Park
  • Sackville Lakes Provincial Park

Pools

  • Sackville Sports Stadium

Trails

  • Bedford-Sackville Connector

Demographics

The only demographic information that pertains to Lower Sackville is provided by Halifax Regional Council, and pertains to District 15 (Lower Sackville). District 15 (Lower Sackville) has 21,379 people living within its boundaries. However, the community itself does not have any recent demographic information.

Transportation

The community is located northwest of the Halifax-Dartmouth urban core. Highway 101, Highway 102, Route 354, and Trunk 1 (called Sackville Drive within Lower Sackville) are highways that connect the community to the rest of the urban area, or beyond.

Lower Sackville is serviced by many Halifax Transit routes. The agency operates two transit terminals in the community: Cobequid Terminal in the south, and Sackville Terminal in the north.

References

References

  1. "Halifax Regional Municipality Urban Forest Master Plan". Government of the Municipality of Halifax.
  2. (20 April 2020). "Nova Scotia Archives - Error".
  3. "Halifax Regional Municipality Urban Forest Master Plan". Government of the Municipality of Halifax.
  4. "Archived copy".
  5. "Welcome to Fultz House". Fultz House Museum.
  6. "Districts & Councillors". Government of the Municipality of Halifax, Halifax Regional Council.
  7. "Routes & Schedules". Government of the Municipality of Halifax/Halifax Transit.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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