Valley Journal Advertiser

Joe Bell Road and hill should be recognized

- Ed Coleman

at one time. As can be seen from the following, there also are documents, historical articles and newspaper references indicating that Joe Bell Road and Joe Bell Hill once were in common use.

Writing in a Kings County newspaper in the 1890s, Arthur W. H. Eaton (the author of the History of Kings County) notes that a road that came into Kentville from the north ran “through the Dry Hollow by Charles Jones and over the Joe Bell Hill.” In his county history, Eaton writes that the Dry Hollow road enters Kentville after crossing Gallows Hill or Joe Bell Hill.

Kentville magistrate Edmond Cogswell, who wrote historical articles in country newspapers in the 1880s and 1890s, confirms that Joe Bell’s residence was on what we now call Cornwallis Street. “The most remarkable thing about this road,” Cogswell wrote in 1892, “is that for many years, right on the steepest part of the hill …. lived old Joseph Bell, from which the hill takes its name.” Cogswell mentions Joe Bell Hill and Joe Bell several times in his newspaper articles. Bell, said Cogswell, lived to be about 100 years old.

Young’s digging into various old property deeds establishe­s that some parts of Cornwallis Street, the section running north from the Kentville town bridge, once was referred to as Joe Bell Road. Young cites many examples of deeds referring to the northern section of Cornwallis Street, just over the bridge, as Joe Bell Road. An 1893 issue of the Western Chronicle, which was published in Kentville, also confirms that what is commonly referred to as Gallows Hill today was once called Joe Bell Hill.

So there it is. I‘ve made a case for Joe Bell Hill and Joe Bell Road being authentic names that once were in common use and I’ve put a challenge out. I’m not suggesting we change the name of Cornwallis Street to Joe Bell Road but, in some way, the old names for the hill and the road should be publicly recognized.

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