Falmouth

Falmouth, Nova Scotia

Falmouth and area was known as Pisiquid by the Acadians. Having migrated from Port Royal (current day Annapolis Royal), the Acadians first settled the area in the early 1680s as the 1686 census lists a number of families on well established farms utilizing productive dyked fields.During Queen Anne’s War, in response to the French Raid on Deerfield, Massachusetts, in the Raid on Pisiquid (1704), Benjamin Church burned the many villages of the two parishes (Ste. Famille and Notre Dame de l’Assumption) that made up the district to the ground and took prisoners to Boston. One of these prisoners was Acadian leader Noel Doiron. As with the other Acadian districts of the Bay of Fundy region the Acadians of Piziquid were deported in the fall of 1755.

By 1760 the land left vacant by the deportation of the Acadians began to be resettled by New England Planters. Amongst these new settlers was a young Henry Alline, who in the 1770s would start a Great Awakening religious revival. His New Lights ideas and followers quickly spread across the region and into northeastern New England.

Falmouth is home to Avon Valley Greenhouses, Sainte-Famille Wines, the Avon Valley Golf & Country Club, numerous farms and several small businesses. Falmouth District Elementary School is also located in Falmouth. The village is located exactly halfway between the North Pole and the Equator.

With the town of Windsor close by, there is no shortage of activities or things to do in the area.

 

Here are just a few points of interest:
• ONTREE Fun & Adventure Park
• Haliburton House Museum (home to the Windsor Hockey Heritage Centre)
• Ski Martock
• Dill’s Giant Atlantic Pumpkin Farm
• Fort Edward National Historic Site
• Dakeyne Farm Sunflower Maze, a visual feast for the eyes in the Summer.