Albert Bridge, Nova Scotia

Albert Bridge (2001 pop.: 159) is a Canadian rural community in Nova Scotia's Cape Breton Regional Municipality.

Mira Ferry and Union Church c.1905
Albert Bridge in Nova Scotia

Situated on the Mira River, the community was previously named Mira Ferry for the location of a small ferry crossing the river. It received its present name after Albert Munro, the son of William Henry Munro, Nova Scotia's representative in the British Parliament who used his influence to have the ferry replaced with a bridge in 1849.

The Mira River offers numerous water-based recreational opportunities during the summer months, including swimming, boating and canoeing. The bridge connects the two sides of the community, straddling the river.

The community's economy is tied to the summer recreational months with numerous cottages making the area most active during this time; much of the business activity is centred on servicing these seasonal residents.

Trunk 22 is the main road through the village and connects Sydney and Louisbourg.

Nearby attractions

  • Mira River Provincial Park, near Albert Bridge, off Trunk 22
  • Albert Bridge - The eponymous bridge built during the 1970s replacing an older bridge that crossed the Mira River. Though officially discouraged, the northwestern portion of the span is a popular platform for bridge diving and jumping into the water below[1]
  • Union Church in Mira Ferry - Built in 1857, is the oldest Presbyterian Church in Cape Breton.

Notable residents

Notes

  1. "Bridge jumping discouraged on Cape Breton", CBC News, July 22, 2003. Retrieved January 8, 2007.


gollark: Primarily batteries, and kind of screens if you're prone to dropping them a lot like me. Also charging ports.
gollark: Some parts tend to degrade over time, and I'd definitely want those to be swappable.
gollark: I at least want hardware I can actually replace/upgrade parts in.
gollark: Also software designed that way.
gollark: This might be a mindset thing. I like "hackable" devices I can actually control.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.