Original Mi'kmaq name: Elsetkook, meaning 'running close by high rocks'
Current official name: Hillsborough, after the British Earl of Hillsborough
Source: Groundwater springs in the centre of Prince Edward Island
Mouth: Northumberland Strait
Direction of flow: southwest
Length : 45 kilometres
Main Characteristic: Prince Edward Island's passageway to the sea.
THE HILLSBOROUGH RIVER IS SYMBOLIC OF PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND
ITSELF. A river in miniature, its personality is formed by
the mixing of Prince Edward Island's rich agricultural heritage
with the inescapable presence of the sea.
Prince Edward Island was densely wooded with oak, maple,
and giant white pine when it was the quiet domain of the Mi'kmaq
natives. The natural harbour formed by the mouth of the Hillsborough
River became the logging basin when the island's forests were
stripped by early British settlers.
Half of the river's length is an ocean estuary in which fresh
water and saltwater blend to create a rich marshland habitat
for fish and birds. For three-quarters of its entire length,
the level of the Hillsborough rises and falls under the influence
of the ocean tides. Nowhere does the river empty directly into
the sea. Instead, it dissolves softly into the seawater of
Charlottetown Harbour.
Charlottetown nestles around its harbour like a colony of
roosting seabirds. The city is often called the 'Cradle of
Confederation.' It was here, in 1864, that the political leaders
of all of the British colonies in North America met and planned
a union to form a single, self-governing colony. The image
of Canada's 'Fathers of Confederation' standing together in
Charlottetown's Colonial Building has become a lasting symbol
of Canada's first big step towards nationhood. Renamed, 'Province
House,' the building continues to serve as the seat of Prince
Edward Island's government.
Canada's smallest province is known as the 'Garden of the
Gulf' because of its rich, red soil, moderate climate and,
above all, its well-kept, beautiful farms that seem to come
straight from a storybook. The island's fields are separated
by hedgerows that provide a home for pheasant, rabbit, and
fox. Many farms run down to wide beaches of fine sand decorated
by long, lacy fringes of white ocean surf.
Agriculture, especially potato-growing, and tourism have become
the mainstays of the island economy. Today the Hillsborough
is valued for its history and its marshland habitat for waterfowl.
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