Birthplace
  
Overview
  Long 
Pond Story  Long 
Version  Short Version 
    Supporting 
Maps  1786 
– "Plan" for King’s  Windsor 
– Anson Map   1871 
– Church Map  1879 
– Hendry Map
  
1880 – Roe Bros Map  1878 
– Bird’s Eye View     BIG 
Maps  1786 
– "Plan" for King’s  Windsor 
– Anson Map   1871 
– Church Map  Aerial 
View/Church  1879 
– Hendry Map
  
1880 – Roe Bros Map  1878 
– Bird’s Eye View  Map 
to Long Pond  
  
Other
  
1842 – 
TCH/King’s Deed
  
Compilation of Maps    Tourism 
Links 
Long 
Pond Photos 
  
  
  
  
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The Long "Long Pond" Story
  
Haliburton’s Long Pond –  Researched and Written by Holly Hammett-Vaughan (Link 
to Short Version of the Long Pond Story)
  
Map to Haliburton’s Long Pond   
In 1789, an Act of 
Legislature was passed for the permanent establishment and effectual support of 
a college at Windsor 1.
  
  1786, John Clarke had been granted 500 acres in the township 
of Windsor, in Hants County 2. 
Clarke was a quarrier 3 
and exporter of Gypsum 4. 
He owned his own wharf on the bustling 
Windsor waterfront. Three years after the land was granted to him, Clarke submitted 
"A Plan of Lands Proposed by John 
Clarke Esquire for the Academy or College at Windsor 1789". This plan 
shows a strip of 69 acres along what is now known as College Road in Windsor. 
It shows two "Ponds of water never dry in any Season", the ponds being 
in close proximity to one another and near the Northwestern boundary. It also 
shows John Clarke’s "Plaister [plaster] of Paris" [Gypsum Quarry] above 
the location of the two ponds, closer to the Northern boundary of the property 
5. 
This property was deigned suitable to the purpose and was purchased from Mr. Clarke 
for a sum of £150 in 1790 6 
. Work began on the College the following year 7 
. 
William & Lucy Haliburton, wrote a letter to their daughters Charlotte 
and Lucy and son-in-law in Tobago from their home in Windsor dated July 29, 1790 
[six years before their son Thomas was born]. In the letter they express, "…Here 
with us, our Noble Windsor Looks forward with Expectation…[to] Fattening Sheaves 
and fruitful seasons of promise to fill the Horn of Plenty till it can hold no 
more…Windsor hopes to be a seat of the Muses. Academies and Colleges shall distinguish 
this from all Acadien villages…8." 
Thomas 
attended King’s Preparatory School and King’s College. Originally both branches 
of the school were "under 
the same roof". Haliburton attended for at least part of this "unified" 
period. He matriculated, or began, at King’s College in 1810 at age fourteen 9. 
This means that the time spent at the Preparatory school was prior to 1810. 
Historian and Haliburton biographer Victor 
Lovitt Oakes Chittick says the following "evidently autobiographical 
passage" from Haliburton’s book The Attaché, second series, II, [chapter 
55, Paying and Returning Visits] may be "unhesitatingly 
assigned" to Haliburton’s attendance of the Preparatoy school – [Sam 
Slick in speaking to the Squire who is going to visit an old schoolfellow, and 
how that must bring back memories of the Squire’s boyhood]"… (Memory acts 
on thought like sudden heat on a dormant fly, it wakes it from the dead, puts 
new life into it, and it stretches out its wings and buzzes round as if it had 
never slept. When you see him, [your old schoolfellow,] don’t the old school master 
rise up before you as nateral [natural] as if it were only yesterday? and the 
school-room, and the noisy, larkin’ happy holidays, and you boys let out racin’, 
yelpin’, hollerin, and whoopin’ like mad with pleasure, and the play-ground, and 
the games at bass [base] in the fields, or hurly on the long pond on the ice, 
or campin’ out a-night at Chester lakes to fish – catchin’ no trout, gettin’ wet 
thro’ and thro’ with rain like a drowned rat, – eat up body and bones by black 
flies and muschetoes [mosquitos], returnin’ tired to death, and callin’ it a party 
of pleasure…9"
  
See full TCH Attaché 
quote    A "Plan of the Township of Windsor 
from an Actual Survey by William Anson Deputy Surveyor of the Township of Windsor, 
1820" shows the land that King’s 
Board of Governors purchased from John Clarke and his adjoining land which in 
1833 became Haliburton’s property. 10 
[NOTE: 
The photocopy of this map in the WHHS archive, obtained from the Public Archives 
of Nova Scotia, is from a map which was redrawn in 1893 by J. A. McCallum from 
the work done by Anson in 1822. Anson’s original map was commissioned by Haliburton 
11 
for his history, the General Description of Nova Scotia [pub. 1823], the precursor 
of his Historical and Statistical Account of Nova Scotia [pub. 1829] 12, 
and a copy of a previous map. Making the WHHS photocopy a copy of a copy of a 
copy… HHV]
  In his Historical and Statistical Account 
of Nova Scotia (pub. 1829) Haliburton speaks warmly of King’s College. He says, 
"the situation of the College is extremely pleasant, and the most eligible 
that could be selected. It is about one mile from the town of Windsor, which is 
the most central point in the Province. The climate is peculiarly healthy; and 
it is remarkable that there never has occurred an instance of mortality among 
the Students since the first establishment of the institution. The buildings are 
erected upon an elevated spot, commanding in front a delightful view of the most 
improved and best cultivated parts of Nova-Scotia [Nova Scotia]. In the rear the 
scenery is equally fine, the landscape being much embellished by the meanderings 
of the Avon and St. Croix. The ground belonging to the College consists of about 
one hundred acres. The respectability of this establishment, its liberal endowments, 
the learning and exemplary conduct of its officers, the number of Gentlemen whom 
it has educated, and its influence it exerts upon the morals and manners of the 
Country, render it an object of the highest importance, that should be cherished 
and promoted. 13" 
Haliburton liked the situation of his alma mater so much 
that in January 1833 he purchased thirty acres 14 
"bounding to the eastward on the village, to the north on the river, and 
to the South on the lands of King’s College 15", 
had Clifton House erected and moved in with his wife, Louisa, their five daughters 
ranging in age from 5 to 18, and three sons, aged 15, 4 and 3 16. 
[Haliburton had married in 1816, at the age of 19, before he had graduated from 
King’s College.] He and his family took possession of Clifton at Christmas time 
in 1835. Haliburton was 39 17 
by that time, graduated from King’s College some twenty years. 
Although 
Haliburton’s view was as lovely as neighbouring King’s College, the land of Clifton 
itself was typical of the land in the area. Clifton was much more akin to the 
present landscape of King’s College Woods, composed of small hills, gullies and 
those infamous "punch bowls" or "kettle holes" that Haliburton 
describes in his History of Nova Scotia. 
"Underlaid by gypsum, 
it was much broken up and very uneven; and the enormous amount of earth excavated 
in opening the gypsum quarries was all needed to make the property a comfortable 
and suitable place of residence 18 
."    On the whole Windsor is a pleasant area. Archibald MacMechan 
described Windsor [c1900] as "a rolling country, a land of hills, not high, 
or steep, or rugged, with shallow valleys between. From any summit attained, other 
hills are to be seen in all directions. It is a land of hill-tops and wide horizons 
19."
  
  It was during his residence that Haliburton began writing stories for his 
friend Joseph Howe’s newspaper, "the Novascotian" in the hope that he 
could accomplish with humour 20 
that which he intended to achieve with his Historical and Statistical Account, 
that the world would learn of the beauty and varied natural resources of his "Colony" 
21 
[now known as the Canadian province of Nova Scotia] and that Nova Scotians themselves 
would be encouraged to develop these resources 
22 .
  
  In his Reminiscences of Windsor in the Seventies 
[1870s] written in 1934, Fenwick Williams 
Vroom, author of the King’s College Record serial column That 
Room-Mate of Mine, stated that "Clifton Avenue did not become a thoroughfare 
until some years later, and there was only a footpath from "Clifton" 
through the College woods. The right-of-way for this had been purchased from Judge 
Haliburton in exchange for an extensive field of several acres cut off from the 
College grounds and added to the "Clifton" property. This field contained 
the Long Pond which in winter was a favorite skating place, but some years ago 
the pond went dry…"23.
 
In Vroom’s Notes on the History of King’s College he says, "…cricket 
was brought to Windsor about 1845. It was played on the field to the north of 
the College, part of which is now covered with spruces, and part attached to the 
Clifton property, having been given to Judge Haliburton in an exchange for a right-of-way 
through his property to town. The field was near the large elms in the hollow, 
which stood out prominently with no spruces about them, and hence the name of 
"the Three Elms Cricket Club", which is so well known in the history 
of cricket in this province…"24 
In 
another article about "the Three 
Elms" the author says, " … Long Pond was in the College grounds, 
and the level ground to the east of it was the cricket field … " 
NOTE: 
This field is the area now called Clifton Avenue Extension and contains many houses.  
 The deed of this transfer, 
dated January 28th, 1842, clearly lays out the land which was traded. This land 
makes up Clifton’s lower field along what is now known as Clifton Avenue Extension 
25 
. Maps from after that period show the new "Clifton Avenue ". 
Ambrose 
Church surveyed Windsor in 1871, and his meticulous map shows a large, distinctively 
shaped pond [three concentric, overlapping circles, with the central circle being 
of slightly larger size] situated in the field adjacent to King’s College Woods. 
26 
It was this field that came to Haliburton in the transfer with King’s. [Recent 
measurements by land surveyors coincide with those of the Ambrose Church Map of 
1871. The Long Pond was 900′ X 200′. Compare this with the size of the rinks today. 
The official NHL Rulebook states in Rule 2 that the dimensions of a rink should 
be 200′ x 85′.]
  The Roe Brothers 
map of Windsor from 1880 shows the pond on Clifton Property in less detail 27, 
but the shape is still distinctive.  
 During the 1800s, before airplanes 
and aerial photography, the illustrated "Perspective Map" or "Birds-eye 
View" was popularized in North America. Not drawn to scale but, rather, drawn 
to incorporate everything of importance in an area, it was easiest for the artist 
to accomplish this by illustrating the city or town "as seen from above". 
The Birds-eye View of Windsor – 
1878 28, 
shows Haliburton’s property and the long pond, adjacent to Clifton Avenue. 
A 
compilation of excerpts from "John 
Clarke’s Plan", the "William Anson Map" and the "Ambrose Church 
Map" shows more clearly the location of Haliburton’s Long Pond. 
The 
Windsor Hockey Heritage Society hopes one day to see the segmented pond reinstated 
and designated as a national historic site. With sink holes compacted with clay, 
it would hold water in all seasons and become a major tourist attraction to compliment 
the Windsor Hockey Heritage Society’s Museum and agenda of preserving the hockey 
history of the colony and province of Nova Scotia   
  
Perhaps there 
will be more information found about Haliburton’s Long Pond. The WHHS will continue 
researching. Unfortunately fire has destroyed many valuable documents, personal 
journals, &c. King’s College, Windsor, burned down in 1871 29 
and again in 192030 
. In between those two fires, Windsor itself was all but obliterated in the Great 
Windsor Fire of 1897 31. 
It 
is interesting to note that Reginald Vanderbilt in his "History of King’s 
College School", Windsor, says that after the first fire and the rebuilding 
of the College in 1877 that "…Among the improvements to the plants and 
buildings we find that the Board had the barn at the back of the building removed, 
a cricket pitch layed out, terraces built and the playing field drained, and an 
open-air skating rink built for winter use…32". 
So the students had an alternative site to Long Pond for ice skating. 
In 
1970 a "Tour Bus Route" was built running through ‘Centre Ice’. 
Recent measurements by land surveyors coincide with those of the Ambrose Church 
Map of 1871. The Long Pond was 900′ X 200′ in it’s heyday. Even though, as Vroom 
said, the Long Pond "went 
dry" , it still fills with water during rainfall. When this preceeds 
sub-zero temperatures, the old pond freezes, making two large rinks for the neighbourhood. 
It’s extreme length and the fact that it is usually bone dry and partly forested 
are the prime reasons why nobody in recent years recognized it for what it is. 
Many a Windsorian has skated on Haliburton’s now famous Long Pond, without knowing 
it! 
  
Haliburton’s Long Pond Fall 2002 
 NEW –  "Long 
Pond was the great swimming place; yet possibly some of the present [1930s] generation 
may not even know where it is, or was. Our road was up Clifton Avenue, and 
the turning to the left as if going to Mr. Burchell’s. When one got about opposite 
Clifton House, in the field was Long Pond… (see 
more)
   Excerpts from: "I Remember" by H. Percy Blanchard Capter 
10 – In Swimming (Windsor, Nova Scotia) First Published as a weekly column 
to the Hants Journal c. 1930.
 
  
  How to get to Haliburton’s Long Pond. | 
   
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