Kingston (Bay of Fundy and Annapolis Valley, B0P 1R0)
1. Kingston Your Host(s): Canada Post, - Leave a Public Review
John Terry received a grant of 3,000 acres here in 1771 which included the site of Kingston and nearby Kingston Village. The name was given because residents hoped the place would become a town.
2. Melvern Square Your Host(s): Canada Post, - Leave a Public Review
Settlement here began in 1790 and the place was first called Milltown. The name was later changed to reflect the intersection of two roads here.
3. Kingston (Kingston, 191km) Your Host(s): Canada Post, - Leave a Public Review
John Terry received a grant of 3,000 acres here in 1771 which included the site of Kingston and nearby Kingston Village. The name was given because residents hoped the place would become a town.
4. Melvern Square (Kingston, 191km) Your Host(s): Canada Post, - Leave a Public Review
Settlement here began in 1790 and the place was first called Milltown. The name was later changed to reflect the intersection of two roads here.
  5. East Kingston Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  6. Green Acres (Greenwood) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  7. North Kingston Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  8. South Farmington Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  9. East Kingston (Kingston, 191km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  10. Green Acres (Greenwood) (Kingston, 191km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  11. North Kingston (Kingston, 191km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  12. South Farmington (Kingston, 191km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  13. Canadian Forces Base Greenwood (Greenwood, 2km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  14. East Tremont (Greenwood, 2km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
15. Greenwood (Annapolis Valley) (Greenwood, 2km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
First called Greenwood Square because the lands of the first settlers after 1814 were heavily forested. In 1942 Greenwood Air Base was built here as an operational training unit for the Royal Air Force.
  16. Greenwood Square (Greenwood, 2km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
17. Meadowvale (Greenwood) (Greenwood, 2km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
The name is descriptive for a stream in a small valley. The Banks family settled here in the early 1800s.
  18. Rockville Notch (Greenwood, 2km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  19. South Greenwood (Greenwood, 2km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  20. South Tremont (Greenwood, 2km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  21. Torbrook East (Greenwood, 2km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  22. Torbrook Mines (Greenwood, 2km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
23. Tremont (Greenwood, 2km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
First named Conquerall, the name was changed in 1856. Tremont derives from 'trimountaine,' the first name given to Boston, MA, a variation of 'three mountains.'
24. Auburn (Auburn, 7km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
The place is named from a line in a poem. The Deserted Village was written by Anglo-Irish poet Oliver Goldsmith (1728-74).
  25. Clairmont Provincial Park (Auburn, 7km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  26. Harmony (Aylesford) (Auburn, 7km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
27. Morden / French Cross Point / Refugee Cove (Auburn, 7km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
28. Selfridge Corner (Auburn, 7km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
The site was part of a 5,000acre grant made in 1783 to James Morden and was named for an early settler.
29. Weltons Corner (Auburn, 7km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
The settlement's site was part of a 5,000-acre grant made to James Morden in 1783.
30. Aylesford (Aylesford, 10km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
Aboriginal peoples called the place Kobetek, ‘a beaver's home.' The executive council of Nova Scotia issued a proclamation in 1786 that 'the part of the Township of Wilmot which lies in Kings County is to be called Aylesford.'
  31. Aylesford East (Aylesford, 10km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  32. Aylesford Lake (Aylesford, 10km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  33. Aylesford Mountain (Aylesford, 10km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  34. Aylesford Mountain Nature Reserve (Aylesford, 10km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
35. Dempseys Corner (Aylesford, 10km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
Likely named for an early settler. The first land grantee was Andrew Beckwith in 1783.
36. Factorydale (Aylesford, 10km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
Likely named for a carding mill and sash factory that was here in the late 1800s. Elias Graves and Joseph Orpin were granted land here in 1810.
  37. Hamilton Meadows (Aylesford, 10km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
38. Lake George (Aylesford) (Aylesford, 10km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
Named for an explorer or early settler. Harvey Barteaux had two 100-acre grants here by 1854.
  39. Lake George Provincial Park (Aylesford, 10km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
40. Lake Paul (Aylesford, 10km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
Named for an explorer or early settler. John and Lemuel Merton received their land grants here in 1845.