| Island OverviewMcNabs and Lawlor Islands Provincial Park, located 
              at the mouth of Halifax Harbour, comprises all of Lawlor Island 
              and most of McNabs Island. Fort McNab National Historic Site of 
              Canada is operated by Parks Canada and is situated on McNabs Island. McNabs Island is the larger and more diverse of 
              the two islands. McNabs is about 5 km long and up to 1.5 km wide. 
              Its 400 ha (1000 acres) present a combination of historical and 
              natural features, and recreational and educational opportunities. 
              The second island, Lawlor, is not open to the public.  McNabs Historical Perspective A 5000 year-old shell midden (refuse heap) is evidence 
              of pre-European contact Mi’kmaq use of McNabs Island. In the 1690s, the French used the island as a fishing 
              centre and planned to build a fortress similar to 
              “Louisbourg” on McNabs. In 1713, mainland Nova 
              Scotia was ceded to the British, and the French built 
              Fortress Louisbourg on Cape Breton Island.  When Edward Cornwallis established a British settlement 
              in Halifax in 1749, he granted most of McNabs Island to his nephews. 
              Then in 1782, Peter McNab purchased the island for £1000 from 
              the Cornwallis family. Under the McNab family, the island was cleared 
              and tenant farms were established. The McNabs remained a presence 
              on the island for over 150 years. Beginning in the 1860s, the British Admiralty bought 
              large parcels of land from the McNab family and established Ives 
              Point Battery, Fort McNab and Hugonin Battery to better defend Halifax. 
              Most of the northern end of the island remained in private hands. 
              Since the early days of Halifax, McNabs Island has been a popular 
              recreational destination. During the 19th century, thousands would 
              leave the city to attend picnics and socials at the island’s 
              picnic grounds. This 
              trend continued until the 1920s when Bill Lynch, who had bought 
              one of the island’s fair grounds, took the fair off the island 
              and created the Bill Lynch Shows.  During WWI and WWII, the island was largely under 
              military control. The island played a key role in controlling access 
              to Halifax Harbour. Searchlights on McNabs Island patrolled the 
              Harbour and submarine nets were laid between the island and mainland.  In the 1960s, the military transferred most of 
              their holdings on McNabs to Parks Canada for use as parkland. Then 
              in 1983, the Province assumed responsibility for assembling a park 
              on the Halifax Harbour islands. In 2000, Parks Canada transferred 
              all but Fort McNab National Historic Site of Canada to the Province 
              for park purposes. Today, less than 1% of McNabs Island is privately 
              owned.  For a more detailed history on the island see Discover 
              McNabs Island by the Friends of McNabs Island Society.  McNabs Natural History McNabs comprises nine large drumlins overlaid on 
              slate and granite bedrock. Drumlins are glaciallyformed deposits 
              of rocks and earth, and are generally well drained and suited to 
              farming.  The island was originally covered in forest, which 
              the founders of Halifax were quick to exploit. Over the years, most 
              of the island was cultivated and the wood lots harvested.  Today, the island’s forests are of various 
              ages. Older forests date to the 1800s and comprise red maple, beech 
              and red spruce with an understory of hayscented fern. Old abandoned 
              fields have become colonized by white spruce.  In the 1880s, Frederick Perrin, who was a keen 
              gardener, introduced several hundred plant species to his Victorian 
              estate on the island (near the site of the former teahouse). Many 
              of the original trees and shrubs are still standing.  The island’s shoreline varies from cobbled 
              stone to fine sand, with salt marshes in a few sheltered coves. 
              McNabs Cove became McNabs Pond with the construction of the causeway 
              to the Maugers Beach Lighthouse. The causeway also caused the formation 
              of the dune system on Maugers Beach.  Deer, rabbits, coyotes and other animals inhabit 
              the island. The island is known to birders, who have documented 
              206 species of birds on the McNabs Island.     |