Samuel de Champlain's first settlement was called Port Royal, established in 1605 in present-day Nova Scotia, Canada.
The first premanent settlement in Nova Scotia was at Port Royal in 1605; Samuel de Champlain settled there with emmigrants from France and the entire colony almost perished during the harsh North American winter.
Two settlements founded by Champlain are Quebec City in Canada and Port Royal in Acadia (now Annapolis Royal in Nova Scotia, Canada).
Halifax is the capital of the province of Nova Scotia, Canada.
I believe that the habitation in Port Royal is what you are looking for in response to this question. Fort Ann I believe belonged to the British (and that is in Annapolis Royal).
We have two, possibly more, ports of call for cruise ships in Nova Scotia. Halifax, Nova Scotia is our capital city. Sydney, Nova Scotia also receives many cruise ships throughout the season.
The driving distance (not "as the crow flies") is 131 kilometers, or about 1-3/4 hours.
Sydney is the port city in eastern Nova Scotia where you can catch a ferry to Newfoundland. The Marine Atlantic ferry service operates from Sydney to Port aux Basques, Newfoundland. It's a convenient way to travel between the two provinces by sea.
Yes, it goes from Port Borden in PEI to a the transcanada highway located between Spence Settlement and Bayfield Nova Scotia.
During WWII Halifax, Nova Scotia was used as a staging port for convoys going to Britain.
Liverpool is a port, so it is at Sea Level.
The first settlement established by Samuel de Champlain was called "Port Royal" in present-day Nova Scotia, Canada. Later, he founded Quebec City in 1608, which became one of the earliest permanent European settlements in North America.