| |
Birthplace of Ice Hockey Windsor, Nova Scotia, Canada - c. 1800 by Garth Vaughan © 2001 | |||
|
Birthplace Long Pond Story
|
King's Frog & Bog Pond,
The Devil's Punch Bowl and Clifton's Piper's Pond The existence of two ponds on the "Plan of Lands" for King's College was a puzzle to me. I grew up in Windsor and between 1970 - 1984, spent much time in College Woods at the pond which my friends and I knew as "King's Frog Pond" or by our favorite, dramatic name, "the Devil's Punch Bowl"! There was only one pond, as far as I knew, on the college grounds. As I learned from my father a few years ago, the name of "Devil's Punch Bowl" was originally given to another, small, circular pond, located away from the ponds as shown on the "Plan for a College", (neither being a round "bowl" shape). "The Devil's Punch Bowl" was one of the gypsum sink holes, also known as "Punch Bowls" or "Kettle Holes" as I learned from Haliburton in his Historical and Statistical Account "in which the bones of animals and the skeletons of Indians have sometimes been found, who had falled into these caverns, and were unable to extricate themselves from their prison".1 ("Truth is stranger than fiction." T.C.H.) ["Honey Pots" - Sam Slick, the Clockmaker] The original Devil's Punch Bowl was similar to "Piper's Pond" on the Clifton Property in that "it was one of the few "punch-bowls" in gypsum regions that are not found dry" 2 . Titus Smith and Haliburton tell us that the whole of Windsor and the surrounding land rests on a bed of Gypsum which was covered in these sink holes of varying sizes 3 . A map of Windsor and the surrounding farmlands (not signed or dated), owned by Richard Bulkeley and Jonathan Belcher (who was Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia 1761 - 1763) shows the extent of these holes 4 which made farming difficult in their area 5 . King's College grounds, particularly the Woods, and the adjoining property which eventually became Clifton were very uneven due to these holes. Haliburton used the top soil excavated from his large gypsum quarry to fill in many of the sink holes and give his property a more uniform contour 6 . But the King's College "Frog Pond" that I remember had no immediate neighbour, and as the John Clarke's "Plan for the College" shows "Two ponds not dry in any season" next to one another, I wondered what had happened to the second pond. In reading the King's College Record, written by the students of King's College School in Windsor, I found a note on improvements being made to the College grounds, Oct. 1880. "We are glad to be able to state that the drainage has been greatly improved about the College. It is said that the Bog Pond is to be filled up, which doubtless, will be regarded by all as a act of pure philanthropy on the part of the authorities" 7 . This may be an explanation for why only one pond remains in the vicinity of the two ponds shown on the "Plan" but it is not conclusive, only conjecture on my part. "College Ponds" Bibliography 1
- An Historical and Statistical Account of Nova Scotia. 2
- Thomas Chandler Haliburton : A Centenary Chaplet 3 - Plan of a Survey by Titus
Smith, Sept. & Oct. 1838 4
- Crown Lands Office 5
- Plan of a Survey by Titus Smith, Sept. & Oct. 1838 6 - Thomas Chandler
Haliburton : A Centenary Chaplet 7 - Kings College Halifax Library
|
| ||
|
Origin Evolution Hockeyists Windsor Home Site Map Contact Links © | ||||
| All text contained in the birthplaceofhockey.com website © by Garth Vaughan 2001. All rights reserved. All images contained in the birthplaceofhockey.com website © Garth Vaughan 2001. All rights reserved. No part of the contents of this site may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including printing, recording, or by any information storage or retrieval system without written permission from Garth Vaughan, except for the inclusion of brief quotations in a review. | ||||
|
| ||||