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Cumberland County, Nova Scotia

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Cumberland County is a county in the Canadian province of Nova Scotia.

Cumberland was named in 1755 in honour of the Duke of Cumberland to replace Beausejour. The historic county was founded in 1759 when the English system of administration was installed to complement settlement during the Charles Lawrence governorship, and was later divided at the partitioning of the province and in 1840. The area thrived in the 19th century with the development of lumbering, shipbuilding, and coal mining, but rural outmigration and deforestation led to some communities being abandoned in the 20th century. The county spans an area of 4,271.23 km2 making it Nova Scotia's second largest county, with resources including extensive forest land, several mineral resources, and agricultural areas that concentrate on wild blueberry harvesting. As of the 2021 census, Cumberland County had a population of 30,538, with the majority residing in the Municipality of the County of Cumberland. The county includes two towns, Amherst and Oxford, and two large population centres, Parrsboro and Springhill.

History

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The name Cumberland was applied by Lieutenant-Colonel Robert Monckton to the captured Fort Beauséjour on June 18, 1755, in honour of the third son of King George II, William Augustus, Duke of Cumberland, victor at Culloden in 1746 and Commander in Chief of the British forces. The Mi'kmaq name for the area was Kwesomalegek meaning "hardwood point".

Cumberland County was founded on August 17, 1759, the largest of Nova Scotia's five original administrative divisions. It included the Passamoquody, Wolastoq and Mi'kmaq nations north of the Bay of Fundy which formed the mainland part of the province and former Acadia, including all of what would become the province of New Brunswick.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> 1765 saw for the partitioning of Sunbury County, Nova Scotia out of the western-most part of Cumberland, roughly dividing the county in half along Passamoquody/Wolastoqiyuk and Mi'kmaq territorial lines.

At the partitioning of the province, Cumberland county was severed by the provincial boundary at Chignecto isthmus, where the county now forms the northern-most part of the Province.

When the Township of Parrsboro was divided in 1840, one part was annexed to Cumberland County and the other part annexed to Colchester.

The dividing line between Cumberland and Colchester was established in 1840. In 1897, a portion of the boundary line between the Counties of Colchester and Cumberland was fixed and defined. The county thrived in the 19th century with the development of lumbering, shipbuilding and coal mining. Deforestation and rural outmigration in the 20th century led to the abandonment of some communities such as Eatonville and New Yarmouth.

Geography

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The county has a total area of Template:Convert.

Cumberland County is rich in natural resources with extensive forest land supporting lumber mills and pulp contractors. It has many mineral resources, including 2 operating salt mines. Until the 1970s it also had several coal mines which extracted coal from seams that run from Joggins to River Hebert and on to Athol and Springhill.

Agriculture is concentrated on wild blueberry harvesting throughout the Cobequid Hills, as well as mixed farms located in the Tantramar Marshes region, the Northumberland Strait coastal plain, and the Wentworth Valley.

The northwestern edge of Cumberland County forms part of the Isthmus of Chignecto, the natural land bridge connecting the Nova Scotia peninsula to North America. As such, the county hosts several important transportation corridors, including Highway 104 (the Trans-Canada Highway) and CN Rail's Halifax-Montreal railway line. The county line bordering New Brunswick is around 30 kilometres long (18.5 miles). Cumberland is the only county in Nova Scotia that borders another province.

Two towns are located in Cumberland County: Amherst and Oxford. Parrsboro and Springhill both have populations exceeding 1000 people, but lack their own town governments.

Lakes

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Demographics

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As a census division in the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, Cumberland County had a population of Template:Nts living in Template:Nts of its Template:Nts total private dwellings, a change of Template:Percentage from its 2016 population of Template:Nts. With a land area of Template:Convert, it had a population density of Template:Pop density in 2021.<ref name=2021census>Template:Cite web</ref>

Forming the majority of the Cumberland County census division, the Municipality of the County of Cumberland, including its Subdivisions A, B, C, and D, had a population of Template:Val living in Template:Val of its Template:Val total private dwellings, a change of Template:Percentage from its 2016 population of Template:Val. With a land area of Template:Convert, it had a population density of Template:Pop density in 2021.<ref name=2021censusCSD>Template:Cite web</ref>

Template:Col-begin Template:Col-2 Population trend<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Statistics Canada: 1996, 2001, 2006 census</ref>

Census Population Change (%)
2021 30,538 Template:Gain1.8%
2016 30,005 Template:Loss4.3%
2011 31,353 Template:Loss2.2%
2006 32,046 Template:Loss1.7%
2001 32,605 Template:Loss3.5%
1996 33,804 Template:Loss1.4%
1991 34,284 Template:Loss1.6%
1986 34,819 Template:Loss1.2%
1981 35,231 N/A
1941 39,476
1931 36,366
1921 41,191
1911 40,543
1901 36,168
1891 34,529
1881 27,368
1871 23,518 N/A

Template:Col-2 Mother tongue language (2011)<ref>Statistics Canada: 2011 census</ref>

Language Population Pct (%)
English only 29,645 97.32%
French only 370 1.21%
Non-official languages 345 1.13%
Multiple responses 100 0.33%

Template:Col-2 Ethnic Groups (2006)<ref name="SC2006-Ethnicity">Template:Cite web</ref>

Ethnic Origin Population Pct (%)
Canadian 14,580 46.8%
English 12,385 39.7%
Scottish 9,870 31.7%
Irish 6,775 21.7%
French 4,730 15.2%
German 2,470 7.9%
Dutch (Netherlands) 1,045 3.4%
North American Indian 945 3.0%

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Communities

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Towns
Villages
County municipality and county subdivisions

Highways

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See also

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References

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