Related posts:
- Victoria at Ochterloney ...
- Masonic Hall demolition Now “Founder’s corner”, at the corner of Wentworth and Ochterloney Streets....
- City of Dartmouth Police Station At the corner of Wentworth and Ochterloney Streets looking north east, land that has since passed into new hands and is now a residential building. Ochterloney Street between Dundas and Wentworth looking south, Town Hall was at left, Police Station...
- Dartmouth from Mount Amelia Dartmouth and Dartmouth Cove from near the corner of what would be Blink Bonnie and Old Ferry Road today. It is dated to 1929, but it seems to be meant to represent a much earlier time, perhaps more than 60...
- 1812 From The Story of Dartmouth, by John P. Martin: Word came to Halifax that England and the United States had declared war. This aroused great activity around the Dockyard and Halifax wharves where privateers were continually being fitted out for...
- 1839 From The Story of Dartmouth, by John P. Martin: “At this stage of our story, we turn to the columns of the Dartmouth “Atlantic Weekly” to give readers a first-hand account of life in Dartmouth in the 1830s, as written...
- Five and dime Ochterloney, between Wentworth and King; Lahey’s at left, what used to be a corner store at center (Jean’s), shortly before demolition....
- Greenvale Apartments, Ochterloney Street ...
- 1770s From The Story of Dartmouth, by John P. Martin: During the 1770s, the weekly newspaper of Halifax kept Dartmouthians informed of the growing discontent in the American colonies leading up to the Revolution. Captain Preston, involved in the so-called Boston...
- 1780s From The Story of Dartmouth, by John P. Martin: Most of the material In the Halifax weekly newspaper comprises advertisements and clippings from Old Country journals. Local items are largely limited to movements of ships. Incidents hereabouts had to be...