Fairview, Nova Scotia

Fairview (2016 population: 12,300)[3] is a former community and current neighbourhood within the urban core of Halifax in Nova Scotia, Canada.

Fairview
Urban Community
Main Avenue, Fairview - with Tuft's Cove's smokestacks in the distance
Coordinates: 44°39′17″N 63°38′17″W
CountryCanada
ProvinceNova Scotia
MunicipalityHalifax Regional Municipality
CommunityHalifax
Community councilHalifax and West
Municipal DistrictHalifax South Downtown
Area
  Total3.25 km2 (1.25 sq mi)
Population
 (2016 Census)[2]
  Total12,300
  Density3,784.6/km2 (9,802/sq mi)
Canadian Postal code
B
Area code(s)902, 782

Geography

Fairview is named after Fairview Cove, which forms the extreme southern end of Bedford Basin at the northern edge of the isthmus connecting the Halifax Peninsula with the larger Chebucto Peninsula.

As such, Fairview sits astride and is bisected by several major transportation corridors:

  • CN Rail lines from yards in nearby Rockingham to the Halifax Ocean Terminal, as well as to the Richmond Terminals, and to the Bayer's Lake Business Park.
  • Highway 102 expressway, (Bicentennial Drive or "Bi-Hi") which crosses through the neighbourhood on a 1960s-era overpass which crosses several major streets and rail lines
  • Trunk 2, (the Bedford Highway), which has its southern terminus in Fairview along the shore of Bedford Basin and connects to the North End community of Halifax via the 1950s-era Fairview Overpass
  • Joseph Howe Drive, which runs the length of the Halifax Peninsula's isthmus
  • Dutch Village Road, which in 2002 was shortened to operate as a small loop through the old business district in Fairview - it originally ran along much of the alignment for Joseph Howe Drive
  • Bayers Road, which used to run from Halifax's North End neighbourhood to Bayers Lake, a freshwater lake northwest of Fairview - and now runs to an intersection with Joseph Howe Drive

History

Fairview was established at the junction of several railway lines operated by various companies in the 19th century. Fairview Station was in a former German settlement of Dutch Village.

The Dutch Village was one of the original homes of the Foreign Protestants, who arrived in Halifax in the 1750s. First known as the Westerwald ("western forest"), it was called the Dutch (Deutsch) Village by non-German locals. Some of the passengers of the Foreign Protestant ships settled temporarily in the Dutch Village while they waited for a more permanent settlement in Lunenburg County.

A section of the original, old Dutch Village Road, which had been an exit to Highway 102, was renamed "Westerwald Street" in November 2002 in honour of the old settlement. Dutch Village Road now forms the main commercial street at the foot of Fairview's slope, the corner of Westerwald Street, Bayers Road to the basin end of Joseph Howe Drive.

In a series of corporate mergers following World War I, railway lines in the Fairview area came under control of Canadian National Railways (CNR). CNR established its new locomotive servicing shops and roundhouse for the Halifax area in the community, which was named Fairview Station on March 1, 1921.

Until the 1950s, the majority of Fairview's residents were employed by the railway. Most of the current suburban street network in the area was established in the early 20th century, forming a regular grid pattern up the eastern slope of Geizers Hill, facing toward Halifax and the Bedford Basin.

The community name was shortened to Fairview on January 19, 1956.

In the early 1960s all of the homes on School Avenue's southern side were appropriated by the province and demolished to make way for the construction of the Bicentennial Highway. School Avenue itself is still owned by the Province of Nova Scotia and is the only civic street in the area not under municipal authority.

During the late 1960s and early 1970s, Fairview developed into a major shopping destination after Halifax's first suburban shopping mall, the Bayers Road Shopping Centre, was constructed. The 1969 amalgamation of unincorporated Halifax County communities such as Fairview, Rockingham, and Spryfield saw the village become part of the City of Halifax. Fairview also became home to one of Halifax's first suburban high schools in 1958 when Halifax West Municipal High School (later changed to Halifax West High School in 1969, opened on Dutch Village Road.

Through the 1960s, Fairview continued to fill in as its housing densified and the last subdivision to be completed in the community was Keystone Court in 1990. Newer residential developments in outlying areas during the 1970s-1990s, such as the modern development in adjacent Clayton Park, along with a demand by families for larger homes, saw Fairview's working-class neighbourhoods of smaller homes become a less desirable location over time. Gradually, certain streets in the community became known for criminal activity, culminating in the late 1990s when the Nova Scotia chapter of the Hells Angels outlaw motorcycle gang established a club house in the centre of the old business district on the Halifax City side of Fairview as Dutch Village Road was the boundary line between Halifax City and Fairview.

Following police action and a community outcry, Fairview has been gradually gentrifying as urban professionals seeking shorter commutes into Halifax are rediscovering the neighbourhood and its century-old charm.

In 1996, the City of Halifax was merged with all other municipalities in Halifax County to form the new Halifax Regional Municipality (HRM). Under HRM, Fairview (along with its 1969 amalgamation neighbours of Rockingham and Spryfield) was jurisdictionally placed in Mainland Halifax.[4]

Community

Sport facilities are located near the centre of the neighbourhood in W.D. Piercey Park.

Royal Canadian Legion (Fairview Branch No. 142) is on Hillcrest Street.

The food bank had operated out of Saint John's basement, but In September 2005 the food bank was forced to close. It has since found a new location at the Salvation Army on 50 Gesner Street.

The Fairview Freemason's Hall (formerly St. Pius X Church) is at 165 Coronation Avenue. home of the Oldest Masonic Lodge in the British Commonwealth outside England itself. ST. Andrew's Lodge No.1 established in 1750 AD.

The Fairview United Family Resource Centre is a community registered charity located at 6 Titus Street. It is open 5 days a week. Before 2015 the centre was located within the Fairview United Church located at 3524 Dutch Village Road. The website is www.ffcns.ca for a list of programs and services.

The West End Ecumenical Food Bank is located at the Salvation Army on 50 Gesner Street. It is open on Tuesdays.

St Lawrence Roman Catholic Church was demolished in November 2010 after the parish was relocated to the new St Benedict's Roman Catholic Church on Radcliffe Drive in adjacent Clayton Park.

Places of worship

Education

Public school education in Fairview is governed by the Halifax Regional School Board. Fairview lies within District 7.

Current schools

  • Fairview Junior High (1973–present)
  • Clayton Park Junior High - like Halifax West, this school is outside Fairview's traditional boundaries but many students from Fairview go there.
  • Fairview Heights Annex Elementary
  • Fairview Heights Elementary
  • Ecole Burton Ettinger Elementary

Notable residents

Well-known natives of Fairview include:

  • "The Dutch Village Philosopher", Titus Smith, Jr. (1768–1850), a writer, surveyor, geologist and botanist;
  • Tim Garrigan, leader of the 1970s rock band Pepper Tree.

Fairview is also the home to

  • Scott Kendall, the lead singer/songwriter of Halifax's legendary Jellyfishbabies, (who pre-dated the band Sloan), and who knew Tim Garrigan personally, as a child, as his Father was Married to Tim Garrigan's sister (2nd wife).
  • Minnie (Alders) Snow, wife of Hank Snow. They were married in Fairview's St. John's Anglican Church in 1935 (now demolished).[5]
  • NHL hockey player Eric Boulton.
  • Quake Mathews Rap Artist
  • Tyson Cave Pro Boxer Super bantamweight
  • Roger Hollet MMA Fighter

Political representation

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References

  • Devonna and Don Edwards, The Little Dutch Village: Historic Halifax West - Armdale and Fairview, Halifax: Nimbus Publishing, 2003
  • "Bell, Winthrop Pickard, The "Foreign Protestants" and the Settlement of Nova Scotia: The History of a piece of arrested British Colonial Policy in the Eighteenth Century, Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1961
  1. "A Community Profile: Fairview, Nova Scotia" (PDF). theoryandpractice.planning.dal.ca. GRANT, Jill; HILL, Andrew; MILLER, Alexis; MCDAID, Logan; KNECHT FARN-GUILLETTE, Jared. Retrieved 12 March 2020.
  2. Pilkey, Dennis. "Fairview Highlights" (PDF). dennispilkey.ca. Dennis Pilkey. Retrieved 14 March 2020.
  3. Pilkey, Dennis. "Fairview Highlights" (PDF). dennispilkey.ca. Dennis Pilkey. Retrieved 14 March 2020.
  4. http://www.G.L.N.S.com%5B%5D
  5. NS Scotia vital statistics, marriage record
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