Chebucto Head is a Canadian headland on
Nova Scotia's
Chebucto Peninsula located within the community of
Duncan's Cove.
Chebucto Head forms the most easterly point on the peninsula and is used to define the southwestern limit of
Halifax Harbour; historically known to the
Mi'kmaq Nation
The Mi'kmaq Nation (formerly the Aroostook Band of Micmac) is a federally recognized tribe of Mi'kmaq people, based in Aroostook County, Maine. Their autonym is Ulustuk. Of the 28 bands of Mi'kmaq people, the Mi'kmaq Nation is the only one in the ...
as "Jipugtug", (anglicised as "Chebucto") meaning "the biggest harbour", or simply, "the big harbour". A line drawn northeast from Chebucto Head to
Pennant Point defines the southern geographic limit of the harbour. The actual legal limit of the harbour is located further inland to the north of this line.
Lighthouse

The first lighthouse at Chebucto Head was built in 1872 with a steam foghorn just below it. It was replaced by a second tower in 1928. This tower was demolished in 1940 and a new lighthouse and combined keeper's dwelling was built several hundred metres to the north to make way for a gun battery. In 1967 the light was moved from the house to the a new concrete tower which still stands today. The house remained the keeper's dwelling until the light was destaffed in the 1990s. The house fell prey to repeated vandalism after the
Canadian Coast Guard (CCG) cancelled the lease of the tenants who lived in and looked after the house. The plight of the lighthouse helped to inspire the
Nova Scotia Lighthouse Preservation Society to push for the
Heritage Lighthouse Protection Act
The ''Heritage Lighthouse Protection Act'' (long title:An Act To Protect Heritage Lighthouses (french: Loi sur la protection des phares patrimoniaux)) is an Act of the Parliament of Canada (designated Bill S-215) for the designation and preservat ...
, a campaign that was launched at the Chebucto Head lighthouse on March 11, 1999. The house was destroyed by a suspicious fire on March 25, 2004. The Chebucto Head Lighthouse Society, a group formed to try to save the lighthouse continues to work to keep the site preserved and open to the public.
Chebucto Head was used by the CCG as the control centre for the
vessel traffic service or VTS that controlled vessel movements in Halifax Harbour until the 1980s when a new control centre was opened at Shannon Hill, above the
Bedford Institute of Oceanography
The Bedford Institute of Oceanography (BIO) is a major Government of Canada ocean research facility located in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia. BIO is the largest ocean research station in Canada. Established in 1962 as Canada's first, and currently l ...
in
Dartmouth Dartmouth may refer to:
Places
* Dartmouth, Devon, England
** Dartmouth Harbour
* Dartmouth, Massachusetts, United States
* Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, Canada
* Dartmouth, Victoria, Australia
Institutions
* Dartmouth College, Ivy League university i ...
. It continues as a Remote Aids to Navigation Station.
Chebucto Head inspired the name of the large harbour tug ''
Point Chebucto
''Point Chebucto'' is a harbour tug that was built at the Halifax Shipyard in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada in 1992. She is one of very few harbour tugs that were built at the Halifax Shipyards. She has been aiding ships in and out of Halifax Harbo ...
'', built at
Halifax Shipyard
The Halifax Shipyard Limited is a Canadian shipbuilding company located in Halifax, Nova Scotia.
Founded in 1889, it is today a wholly owned subsidiary of Irving Shipbuilding Inc. and is that company's largest ship construction and repair facili ...
in 1992.
Gun battery
During
World War II, Halifax Harbour was the primary fast
convoy departure and arrival point in eastern North America. The
Royal Canadian Artillery operated a searchlight and
coastal gun battery at Chebucto Head as part of "Fortress Halifax" as a means of providing an integrated defence for the port. The Chebucto Head battery was the key outer battery of the western side of harbour defending it from possible attacks by German
U-boats or surface raiders. The fortified battery was armed with three
Elswick naval guns with associated searchlight,
director tower, generators, a long-range optical rangefinder and by 1943 a radar artillery control unit. The battery was decommissioned in the early 1950s but many bunkers remain, now privately owned.
On 16 April 1945, , a
minesweeper, was
torpedoed and sunk off Chebucto Head by , becoming the last
Royal Canadian Navy warship lost to enemy action in World War II.
References
External links
Webcam view of Chebucto Head
{{Coord, 44, 30, 03, N, 63, 31, 14, W, region:CA-NS_type:landmark_source:http://www4.rncan.gc.ca/search-place-names/unique/CAGXI, display=title
Headlands of Nova Scotia
Landforms of Halifax, Nova Scotia
History of Halifax, Nova Scotia
Military forts in Nova Scotia
Landforms of Halifax County, Nova Scotia