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HALIFAX COUNTY
Goffs

LOCATION:

Goffs is located about twenty-eight kilometers north east of Halifax at the beginning of the Old Guysborough Road, which connects a number of small communities to the county of Guysborough.

WHAT'S IN A NAME?

Thomas Goff received a land grant on the Guysborough Road in 1843,� relocating his family here from Bedford. He was married to Eleanor� Holland, sister of Anthony Holland the founder of the Acadian� Recorder. Their eldest son William received a land grant on the� Guysborough Road in 1846 and their son Henry received a land grant in� 1859. William married Hannah Dickey, daughter of Samuel Dickey of� Meaghers Grant. William and Hannah built a large farmhouse that also� served as an overnight inn for stage coaches enroute to Guysborough.� The stage coach stop at Goff's inn, and frequent references to it,� eventually led to the community being named Goffs. The former farm of� William Goff is now the Airlane Golf Club."

SETTLEMENT HISTORY:

The first land grants in the Goffs regions were issued in 1784, mainly five to seven hundred acre lots destined for military officers in the British army and government dignitaries and their families. Most recipients looked on their grants as investments and never bothered to settle on them.

Land was also granted to the Polluck family who built the Polluck Inn (former Thirteen Mile House) in the early 1800s. Many a famous person spent a night or two at the inn, including, in 1861, Edward, Prince of Wales, who went hunting in the area. Arthur and Sarah (MacDonald) Wilson bought the inn from her father William MacDonald around 1900. The Wilson's demolished it and erected a family home in its place. The property stayed in the Wilson family for several generations.

MORE GENEALOGY:

Other families arrived over the years. Michael and Catherine Smith came from Ireland in 1812 with their two children. Their daughter Catherine married Henry MacDonald who had purchased land from Theophiles Chamberlain in 1830. For the next one hundred years, three generations of MacDonalds stayed on the farm.

Others who came included Captain John William Coote, an Irishman and a widower who arrived in Halifax in 1849 with two young sons while his other twelve remained in Ireland. He built a home on a 500-acre grant near Miller Lake, remarried and had a daughter who married a MacDonald. Many of her descendants remain in the community, Michael Bone of England, a former sergeant in the British army, arrive in 1847.

William and James Topp of Scotland arrived in the 1850s to set up a blacksmith shop. Sometime later, Irishman James Mulligan built a home considered to be unusual for the times. He attached outbuildings to the main house in a more European style. Not long after came Michael Riley, another Irishman who specialized in successfully planting orchards in rocky soil.

GOFFS TODAY:

Much of the original settlement of Goff now lies under the paved runways of the Halifax International Airport constructed in 1960 and the nearby 2000-acre AeroTech Industrial Park, which opened in 1985 - one of the fastest growing business parks in the province.

The Old Guysborough Road now passes by woods and scrub, dotted with a few old farmhouses, although modern bungalows are now slowly replacing some of those old buildings.



© 1999-2004 by Halifax County NS Canada GenWeb and/or it's contributors
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Halifax County Genweb Project gratefully acknowledges the following sources:

Historical Information on many community pages is from : One City...Many Communities" co - published by Halifax Regional Municipality and Nimbus, funded By the HRM Millennium Committee.Author : Alfreda Withrow.

Mapeeze: Free map linking on Destination Nova Scotia.

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