Nova Scotia’s pioneer cemeteries are disappearing, but not without a fight
HALIFAX — A secluded and overgrown cemetery in rural Cape Breton, the final resting place for some of Nova Scotia’s earliest settlers, is slowly crumbling into a nearby river.
“They would be descendants of the Scots … who came over here and settled,” says Bruce Morrison, warden of Victoria County, where fishing and tourism are the main employers. “There’s no simple solution to this. It’s isolated. It’s remote.”
But local resident Jeffrey Parks says the graves in the Centre Glen Cemetery near Big Baddeck, many of which date back to the 1860s, should be saved from such an ignominious fate.
“Nobody is doing anything about it because everyone is pointing fingers at who’s responsibility it is,” says Parks, an antiques dealer from nearby Middle River, N.S.