On Dec. 6, 1917, a blast from a cargo ship in Halifax harbor destroyed the city.
It happened during the last year of World War I, when a relief vessel collided with an ammunition ship in the bustling Nova Scotia harbor on Dec. 6, 1917, instantly incinerating more than 1,600 people ...
On the morning of December 6th, 1917, a French cargo ship the "SS Mont Blanc" -- carrying tons of munitions bound for the allies during World War I -- collided with the "SS Imo," a Belgium relief ship ...
On the morning of Dec. 6, 1917, the SS Mont-Blanc, a French tramp steamer, made its way slowly into Halifax Harbor, a stopover on its way to deliver its cargo to the French army. The crew was starting ...
2:07 Fire at Halifax-area tent encampment has residents scrambling to get back on their feet Charred remains are all that is left of four tents that caught fire early Monday morning at the Green Road ...
If you ask most Americans who their country’s biggest trading partner is, you’re likely to hear China, Japan, Germany, or Mexico. But the answer is Canada, by a long shot — and it has been for decades ...
The case surrounding the tragic death of 16-year-old Gursimran Kaur has been reopened following an investigation into the circumstances of her death at a Walmart store in Halifax, Nova Scotia. On ...
A bakery worker has offered an insight into how walk-in ovens work amid intense speculation about how a teenage Walmart employee became trapped inside one. Gursimran Kaur, 19, tragically died inside a ...
HALIFAX, Nova Scotia - When the Titanic left Southampton, England, on her maiden voyage on April 10, 1912, she was the largest moving object ever created. Measuring 883 feet from bow to stern, the ...