Sunday, March 23, 2014

What is physically as big a part of peninsula Halifax as Central Park is of Manhattan - but much less visible ?

If you answered The Halifax Commons correctly you're probably a member of The Friends Of The Commons !

Both take up about 5% of the land space but the Central Park is much much more visible , because it is outlined by fences and is vivid park greenery surrounded by dull grey concrete buildings.

By contrast, only a relatively small portion of the Halifax Commons remains a flat piece of short cropped conventional 'parkland'.

But almost all of the original Commons, in the wider and truer sense of that word , is still here, still acting as a common space for all citizens of Halifax.

It runs from Cunard Street in the north to South Street in the south and between between Robie Street to the north and the street extension of  North Park, Ahern, Bell Road and South Park to the east  --- roughly 250 acres of out of the 4500 acres of peninsula Halifax.

Today when some ideology-driven government leaders propose that if something is not private property that it does not exist or should not exist, it is good to know that earlier governments didn't feel that way at all.

More than 250 years ago , the Commons was a public 'wild' space where all were able to search for firewood or water, or herd their animals.

Today it still remains home to public - common - activities of a more modern sort.

Among them :  hospitals, museums, schools, universities , libraries , cemeteries , military bases and parade squares, a site for public hangings, public gardens , sports and concert grounds, music halls , skating ovals, children's playgrounds and yes plum-ordinary grassed parkland.

When Haligonians gather en masse, either to hear the Stones and a Beatle or to protest nuclear arms , The Commons is still where they gather.

This blog is dedicated to letting you know more about upcoming events in and around this lively central core at the heart of Halifax.

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