Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Nova Scotia Christmas Tree On The Way To Boston, Premier Attends Send Off

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Nov, 2016 01:01 PM
    HALIFAX — Nova Scotia dispatched its annual gift of thanks to Boston today, sending a 14-metre white spruce to the city that pitched in 99 years ago after the Halifax Explosion killed or injured 11,000 people.
     
    Premier Stephen McNeil stood under grey, drizzly skies outside city hall as a flatbed truck loaded with the towering tree headed out on the 1,800-kilometre journey to Boston.
     
    Aboriginal drummers performed in front of the tree, which for the first time was harvested in Cape Breton on Crown-owned land close to the Waycobah First Nation.
     
    McNeil said the tradition has helped forge close ties with the New England city, which will light the tree during a ceremony on the Boston Common that is expected to draw 30,000 people — with 240,000 more watching live on TV.
     
    Boston Parks Commissioner Chris Cook says the city "could not be more grateful" for the evergreen gift and the bond it has strengthened over the last century.
     
    Boston famously sent medical personnel and supplies after the Halifax Explosion, which killed almost 2,000 people, injured 9,000 and levelled a Mi'kmaq village when a munitions ship exploded in Halifax harbour on Dec. 6, 1917.
     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    As Seas Heaved, 20-tonne Pipe Fell To Within 12 Metres Of Offshore Oil Well

    As Seas Heaved, 20-tonne Pipe Fell To Within 12 Metres Of Offshore Oil Well
    When heaving waters in the North Atlantic wrenched a string of massive steel pipes from a drilling ship off Nova Scotia's coast, one of the 20-tonne sections of the plummeting coil struck the seabed just 12 metres from the top of an undersea oil exploration well.

    As Seas Heaved, 20-tonne Pipe Fell To Within 12 Metres Of Offshore Oil Well

    KPU psychology instructor named open education research fellow

    KPU psychology instructor named open education research fellow
    The OEG is an interdisciplinary organization that conducts research on the impact of open education resources. 

    KPU psychology instructor named open education research fellow

    Police Investigate Hit And Run In New Westminster, Woman injured

    When officers arrived, an injured adult female was located, but the vehicle that struck her was no longer on scene.

    Police Investigate Hit And Run In New Westminster, Woman injured

    Burnaby Police Seek Person Of Interest In Case Of Missing Student Natsumi Kogawa

    Burnaby Police Seek Person Of Interest In Case Of Missing Student Natsumi Kogawa
    Natsumi KOGAWA was last seen in Burnaby on September 7, 2016 and reported missing on September 12, 2016.

    Burnaby Police Seek Person Of Interest In Case Of Missing Student Natsumi Kogawa

    Notorious B.C. Fraudster Rashida Samji Get 6 Years In Jail For $200 Million Ponzi Scheme

    Notorious B.C. Fraudster Rashida Samji Get 6 Years In Jail For $200 Million Ponzi Scheme
    estors lost between $44,000 and $8 million from 2003 to 2012, Crown prosecutor Kevin Marks said.

    Notorious B.C. Fraudster Rashida Samji Get 6 Years In Jail For $200 Million Ponzi Scheme

    Too Many Grizzly Bears Seeking Berries Dying In British Columbia: Study

    Too Many Grizzly Bears Seeking Berries Dying In British Columbia: Study
    The fruit the grizzlies want to eat is in the same Elk Valley area where lots of people live and work, so bears end up being hit by vehicles and trains or being killed by hunters and poachers.

    Too Many Grizzly Bears Seeking Berries Dying In British Columbia: Study