The Acadia First Nation is composed of five Mi'kmaq First Nation reserves located in southwestern Nova Scotia. As of 2015, the Mi'kmaq population is 223 on-reserve, and 1,288 off-reserve. Acadia First Nation was founded in 1967 and covers the south shore area of Nova Scotia and Yarmouth County.[1] The community runs multiple businesses including five gaming centres, three gas stations and two Rose Purdy centers.[2]

Composition

Acadia First Nation is composed of five parts as shown:

CommunityAreaLocationPopulationDate established
Gold River 21270.2 hectares (668 acres)60.8 km. west of Halifax77May 8, 1820
Medway River 114.7 hectares (12 acres)108.8 km. southwest of Halifax0May 8, 1865
Ponhook Lake 10101.8 hectares (252 acres)115.2 km. southwest of Halifax15June 8, 1843
Wildcat 12465.4 hectares (1,150 acres)111 km. southwest of Halifax33June 8, 1820
Yarmouth 3327.7 hectares (68 acres)3.2 km. east of Yarmouth157June 8, 1887

See also

References

  1. "Acadia | Mi'kmaq Rights Initiative". Retrieved 15 March 2023.
  2. COVID-19 Economic Response Plan
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