| Wellington Williams - Canada - 1848 - 438 pages
...Warehouses rise over the wharves, or tower aloft in different parts of the town, and dwelling-houses and public buildings rear their heads over each other,...as they stretch along and up the sides of the hill. The spires of the different churches, the building above the town, in which the town-clock is fixed,... | |
| Society of Friends - 1850 - 654 pages
...Warehouses rise over the wharfs and tower aloft in different parts of the town, and dwelling-houses and public buildings rear their heads over each other,...as they stretch along and up the sides of the hill. The spires of the different churches, a building above the town, in which a clock is fixed, a rotunda-built... | |
| Wellington Williams - Canada - 1850 - 588 pages
...Warehouses rise over -he wharves, or tower aloft in different parts of the town, and dwelling-houses and public buildings rear their heads over each other,...as they stretch along and up the sides of the hill. The spires of the different churches, the building above the town, in which the town-clock is fixed,... | |
| Wellington Williams - United States - 1851 - 596 pages
...Warehouses rise over .he wharves, or tower aloft in different parts of the town, and dwelling-houses and public buildings rear their heads over each other,...as they stretch along and up the sides of the hill. The spires of the different churches, the building above the town, in which the town-clock is fixed,... | |
| Wellington Williams - Atlantic States - 1855 - 402 pages
...Warehouses rise over .he wharves, or tower aloft in different parts of the town, and dwelling-houses and public buildings rear their heads over each other,...as they stretch along and up the sides of the hill. The spires of the different churches, the building above the town, in which the town-clock is fixed,... | |
| Samuel Griswold Goodrich - Geography - 1856 - 802 pages
...discharging their cargoes. Warehouses rise over the wharves, as well as in different parts of the town ; and dwelling houses and public buildings rear their heads...as they stretch along and up the sides of the hill. The spires of different churches ; the building above the town in which the town-clock is fixed; a... | |
| T. ADDISON RICHARDS - 1861 - 256 pages
...dwelling-houses and public buildings rear their heads over each Description of Halifax. Halifax, Nova Scotia. other, as they stretch along and up the sides of the hill. The spires of the different churches, the building above the town, in which the town-clock is fixed,... | |
| Kensey Johns Stewart - Geography - 1864 - 268 pages
...the water is peculiar and prepossessing. The wharves are lined with vessels ; and the dwelling-houses and public buildings rear their heads over each other...between Halifax and St. John in New Brunswick, and other neighbouring towns. LABRADOR is included in the government of Newfoundland. Several hundred schooners... | |
| Sophia S. Cornell - Geography - 1867 - 424 pages
...are the timber, plaster and coal trade, and the fisheries. Gold is found in considerable quantities. Inhabitants, etc.—The present population is mainly...the sides of the hill on which the city is built. LIVERPOOL, situated oh the south coast, about seventy miles from Halifax, carries on a flourishing... | |
| J. Maurice Dempsey - Geography - 1871 - 726 pages
...mostly macadamized. The front of the town is lined by wharves. Warehouses rise over the wharves, and dwelling houses and public buildings rear their heads...as they stretch along and up the sides of the hill. The dockyard covers 14 acres, and forms the chief depot of naval stores in the British N. American... | |
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