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To All Newsletter Readers
Since Ronald Mizon, who was sent here from Britain
with his sister Bessie during the war, contacted our Newsletter via e-mail several years ago offering to write
about their “visit” to our community and surrounding communities, it has
tweaked the interest of a lot of our newer residents as to the history of our
community. Ronald’s stories will
continue but we thought it would be nice to resurrect some of the stories of
the history of our community as seen/experienced through the eyes of one of our
late, older residents.
We know there are many, many people out there who
could share their knowledge and experiences of our community’s history with all
our new community residents, and we urge you to do so.
Beginning in 1979, one of our older residents, the
late Sadie Siroy, wrote many, many articles on the history of Mount
Uniacke/Lakelands for the Uniacke Newsletter and since we have been requested
for historical stories relating to our community, we have decided to re-write
Sadie’s stories in this issue and coming issues to relive the history of the
building of Mount Uniacke/Lakelands and what it means to the older residents
and their families.
We hope you enjoy them.
The Symbol of Peace in a Steeple
It matters
not from which direction the Lakelands Church of the Holy Spirit comes into
view. If you stroll up the hill opposite and look down there seems to glide
past your mind’s eye all these churches you have heard of in song and verse and
they seemed to be summed up in the spire reaching up towards the sky among the
evergreens. It is as if it had been
created and set down on this spot by a pair of loving hands.
The little
chapel was built on land whose fingers reach out to touch history. We tend to think of the upper Counties as being the homes of the Acadians. The Acadians reached their places of
settlement by the waterways. The Avon
River coming in from the Minas Basin was one of these. Newport Landing (Avonport), Ardoise, even as
far as Cameron Lake, had Acadians on the land.
After 1755 the land lay idle for a few years. Then, in the 1750’s, the Loyalists and some
settlers from England, Ireland and Scotland came to claim land grants. You may see the descendent farms on the hills
and in the valleys as you drive through and often wonder how they came to be
there in the first place.
Mount
Uniacke, whose district may contain more lakes than any other in Nova Scotia,
looked good to those who wanted to leave the city behind.
Richard J.
Uniacke would now take advantage of his land grant and in 1815 he would build
his handsome summer home here. His
son-in-law would follow him. Thomas N.
Jeffery had married Martha Uniacke, Richard J’s eldest daughter. It seemed they also liked lakes so they built
their Manor House between two of them (Piggott Lake and Lily Lake). This house had the appearance of a huge
Villa, sitting on a high foundation with the rear part of the house dropping
down to suit the slant of the land behind it.
It had many dormer windows jutting out from the almost dome-shaped
roof. Its tall double chimneys told of
the many fireplaces within. The house
stood almost opposite the church.
The house was destroyed by fire in 1918.
From the
early days Newport was the centre for the Churches. It was from these Churches that the Clergymen
of different denominations went out to serve their flocks, often holding
services in a farm kitchen. The nearest
Anglican Church for this district was at Newport.
In 1816
the Church near the entrance to Newport on the Post Road offered, with the
Bishop’s approval, to raise fivehundred pounds, providing
the Inhabitants raise a like sum of five hundred pounds. This plan did not seem to gain much ground.
In 1831, Judge Uniacke put forth a
suggestion. If the Governor would
release the five hundred pounds to build a church near Mount Uniacke, the
Uniacke family would give three hundred pounds and an altar piece worth one
hundred guineas. To make the offer more
tempting Judge Norman Uniacke stated he would give one hundred pounds annually
if the Bishop would appoint Mr. Richard Uniacke, then at Oxford and about to be
ordained, to the new Church. The
donation would be paid for as long as Richard Uniacke served as the Rector. The Bishop declined Uniacke’s offer. Since most of the congregation lived nearer
Newport than Mount Uniacke and since this plan did not seem to fit with the
original conditions of the grant of money, the Bishop turned it down.
The Uniackes waited thirteen years, then
in 1844 they decided to go ahead and build a chapel of their own, however, for
some reason or other, and maybe because they did want to share it with the
neighbours, they built it not at Mount Uniacke but on the estate of Thomas
Jeffery at Lakelands. By this time the
new Rev. Richard Uniacke had been in Newport since 1837. He in fact had the distinction of being the
first Priest to live in the new rectory.
The
Rev. Richard was indeed at the first Service for the little Church. It was he who assisted the Rev. Fitzgerald
Uniacke of St. George’s in Halifax, and his sister Martha Jeffery, with the
laying of the corner stone. At that time
they called the Church “All Saints”.
When the Church was completed in 1845, it had the look of graceful
dignity it would carry into the years ahead.
The Chapel would not see people enter its
doors in the wintertime. She had to
learn she was a summertime Church. Her Clergy, in most instances, were guests
of the Uniackes and Jefferys. The people
who came to the Services from the neighbourhood were glad to have a Church
nearby, even if Services were only for a few months of the year. The winter was a lonely time for the
Church. The only sound the Church heard was
sleigh runners on the snow taking the farmers to Halifax. These sleighs were the means of opening up
the road after a snowstorm. No tracks
led into the Church and she must have often murmured an answer to the creaking
and croaking hardwood trees on a cold winter’s night.
Spring and summer came and with it the
opening of the big houses, and her people came again. It was a time of brightness and usefulness
for the Chapel. She often heard the
wagon wheels going past now at the break of dawn. The farmers had left their homes in the early
hours to start their trip to the city.
The Church could picture those on the other side of the Ardoise Hill
taking along an extra man and horse to help get up the hill. When the hill was topped the man and extra
horse could turn back for home. They
would be alright from now on. How
welcome those Inns along the way must have been to these travelers! They were the service stations and motels of
yesterday. A man could get a meal, rest
the night and have his team put up – all for 25 cents!
The journey to the city took three days
round trip. When they met another team
on the road they didn’t have to worry about traffic. They must have just leaned over the backs of
their patient horses and exchanged the news of the day. On the return trip the wagons would be loaded
with supplies for the homes. The problem
of Ardoise Hill was still there, only this time in reverse. When they reached the top of the hill a pair
of oxen was hitched to the rear of the wagon.
They would act as the brakes going down the hill. A neighbour living on the hill was always
willing to lend his oxen for the job.
In 1847, sadness came to the Jeffery
family. Thomas Jeffery died. He had been the Customs Collector for the
Province and held several minor offices as well. He left his widow in moderate circumstances,
but she did not think it beneath her to write and ask for her husband’s salary,
nor to ask that a position be found for her youngest son James Woodhouse. A job was found for him – he became the
Surveyor of Lands and Waters. He went to
live in a home called Cleverden, in Newport.
It seems that in 1857 Martha must have
decided to sell the Estate, but before she did this she deeded the Chapel and
seventeen acres of land to The Colonial Church and School Society. It was to be held in trust for its successors. The first buyer of the Estate must have been
W.I. Cledon, for it was he who offered it for resale in 1862. The Newspapers of the day described the sale
as “the former Estate of the late Thomas Jeffery with two hundred acres of
land, a Manor house, coach house and stables,
The grounds are well laid out and there is a Church on the
property”. The new owners, however,
would only get the mention of the Church for Martha had done well by the little
Chapel. She had put it beyond the reach
of any private buyers. The Chapel was
now part of the Parish of Rawdon. (Sadie
Siroy) to be cont’d
next month
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