New Brunswick ( ; ) is one
of Canada
's three
Maritime provinces and is the only
constitutionally bilingual province (French and English) in the confederation.
The
provincial capital is Fredericton
. Statistics
Canada estimates the provincial population in 2009 to be
748,329; a majority are English-speaking, but there is also a large
Francophone minority (32%), chiefly of
Acadian origin.
The
province's name comes from the English and French translation for
the city of Braunschweig
in north Germany
, the
ancestral home of the Hanoverian
King George III of
the United Kingdom
.
Geography
New
Brunswick is bounded on the north by Quebec
's Gaspé
Peninsula
and by Chaleur Bay
. Along the east coast, the Gulf of Saint
Lawrence
and Northumberland Strait
form the boundaries. In the southeast
corner of the province, the narrow Isthmus of Chignecto
connects New Brunswick to the Nova Scotia
peninsula
. The south of the province is bounded by the
Bay of
Fundy
, which, with a rise of , has some of the highest
tides in the world. To the west, the province borders the
U.S. state of Maine
.
New Brunswick differs from the other Maritime provinces
physiographically, climatologically, and ethnoculturally.
Both
Nova
Scotia
and Prince Edward Island
are either surrounded or almost surrounded by
water; oceanic effects, therefore, tend to define their climate,
economy, and culture. On the other hand, New Brunswick—although it
has a significant seacoast—is sheltered from the Atlantic
Ocean
proper and has a large interior that is removed
from oceanic influences. As a result, the climate tends to
be more
continental in character
rather than
maritime. The settlement
patterns and the economy of New Brunswick also are different from
its Maritime neighbours in that they are based more on the
province's river systems rather than its seacoasts.
The major
river systems of the province include the St. Croix
River
, Saint John River
, Kennebecasis
River, Petitcodiac River,
Miramichi
River
, Nepisiguit River
, and the Restigouche
River. Northern New Brunswick lies within the
Appalachian
Mountains
, and the New Brunswick Lowlands form the eastern
and central portions of the province. The Caledonia
Highlands and St. Croix Highlands extend along the Bay of Fundy
coastal region, reaching elevations of more than .
The northwestern part
of the province consists of the remote and more rugged Miramichi
Highlands as well as the Chaleur Uplands and the Notre Dame
Mountains
, with a maximum elevation at Mount
Carleton
of .
The total land and water area of the province is , over 80% of
which is forested. Agricultural lands are found mostly in the upper
Saint John River valley, with lesser amounts of farmland in the
southeast of the province, especially in the Kennebecasis and
Petitcodiac river valleys. The three major
urban centres are in the southern third of the
province.
History
First Nations People have lived in New
Brunswick since before contact with Europeans. Many are called
Mi'kmaq.
The Augustine mound was built during this
time, in 2500 BC, near Metepnákiaq
(Red Bank First
Nation). The western portion of the province was the
traditional home of the
Wolastoqiyik
(Maliseet) people.
The French Colonial era
The first
known exploration of New Brunswick was that of French
explorer
Jacques Cartier in 1534.
The next
French contact was in 1604, when a party led by Pierre du Gua de Monts and
Samuel de Champlain set up camp
for the winter on St.Croix Island
, between New Brunswick and Maine.
The
colony relocated the following year across the Bay of Fundy to
Port Royal,
Nova Scotia
. Over the next 150 years, other French
settlements and seigneuries were founded
along the St. John River, the upper Bay of Fundy region, in the
Tantramar
Marshes
at Beaubassin, and finally at St. Pierre (site of
present day Bathurst
). The whole maritime region (as well as
parts of Maine) were at that time proclaimed to be part of the
French colony
Acadia.
One of
the provisions of the Treaty of
Utrecht of 1713 was the surrender of peninsular Nova Scotia to
the British
. The bulk of the Acadian population found
themselves residing in the new British colony of Nova Scotia; the
remainder of Acadia (including the New Brunswick region) was only
lightly populated and poorly defended.
In 1750, in order to
protect their territorial interests in what remained of Acadia,
France built two forts (Fort
Beauséjour and Fort Gaspareaux
) along the frontier with Nova Scotia at either end
of the Isthmus of Chignecto. A major French fortification (Fortress of
Louisbourg
) was also built on Ile Royale (now Cape Breton
Island
), but the function of this fort was mostly to
defend the approaches to the colony
of Canada, not Acadia.
As part of the
Seven Years' War
(1756–63), the British extended their control to include all of New
Brunswick.
Fort Beauséjour (near Sackville
) was captured by a British force commanded by
Lt. Col. Robert
Monckton in 1755; Acadians of the nearby Beaubassin and
Petitcodiac
regions were subsequently expelled in the Great Upheaval. Some of the Acadians
in the Petitcodiac and Memramcook
region escaped, and under the leadership of
Joseph Broussard continued to
conduct guerrilla action against
the British forces for a couple of years. Other actions in
the war included British expeditions up the St. John River in both
1758 and 1759. Fort Anne (Fredericton) fell during the 1759
campaign, and following this, all of present-day New Brunswick came
under British control.
The British Colonial era
After the
Seven Years' War, most of New Brunswick (and parts of Maine) were
absorbed into the colony of Nova Scotia and designated Sunbury
County
. New Brunswick's relatively isolated
location on the Bay of Fundy, away from the Atlantic coastline
proper tended to hinder settlement during the postwar period.
There
were exceptions however, such as the coming of New England Planters to the Sackville
region and the arrival of Pennsylvania Dutch settlers in Moncton
in 1766. In both these cases, the new
settlers took up land originally belonging to displaced Acadians
after the deportation.
The
American Revolutionary
War had little effect on the New Brunswick region, aside from
an attack on Fort Cumberland
(the renamed Fort Beauséjour) by rebel sympathizers
led by Jonathan Eddy.
Significant population growth in the area finally came when 14,000
refugee
Loyalists from the
United States arrived on the Saint John River in 1783.
Influential Loyalists
such as Harvard
-educated Edward Winslow saw themselves as
the natural leaders of their community and that they should be
recognized for their rank and that their loyalty deserved special
compensation. However they were not appreciated by the
pre-loyalist population in Nova Scotia. As Colonel Thomas Dundas
wrote from Saint John, "They [the loyalists] have experienced every
possible injury from the old inhabitants of Nova Scotia." Therefore
55 prominent merchants and professionals petitioned for 5,000-acre
grants each. Winslow pressed for the creation of a "Loyalist
colony" — an asylum that could become "the envy of the American
states". Nova Scotia was therefore partitioned, and the colony of
New Brunswick was created on August 16, 1784; Sir
Thomas Carleton was appointed as
Lieutenant-Governor in 1784,
and in 1785 a new
assembly was
established with the first elections.
During the late 18th and early 19th centuries, some of the deported
Acadians from Nova Scotia found their way back to "Acadie," where
they settled mostly along the eastern and northern shores of the
new colony of New Brunswick. Here, they lived in relative (and in
many ways, self-imposed) isolation.
Additional immigration to New Brunswick in
the early part of the 19th century was from Scotland
; western England
; and Waterford
, Ireland
, often after first having come through (or having
lived in) Newfoundland.
A large
influx of settlers arrived in New Brunswick after 1845 from Ireland
as a result of the Potato
Famine; many of these people settled in Saint John or Chatham
.
The northwestern border between Maine and New Brunswick had not
been clearly defined by the
Treaty of Paris that had ended the
American Revolution. By the late
1830s, population growth and competing lumber interests in the area
created the need for a definite boundary. In the winter of 1838–39,
the situation quickly deteriorated, with both Maine and New
Brunswick calling out their respective militias. The "
Aroostook War" was bloodless, and the boundary
was subsequently settled by the
Webster-Ashburton Treaty of
1842.
Throughout the 19th century,
shipbuilding, both on the Bay of Fundy shore
and also on the Miramichi River, was the dominant industry in New
Brunswick; the
Marco
Polo, the fastest
clipper ship ever
built, was launched from Saint John in 1851. Resource-based
industries such as logging and farming were also important
components of the New Brunswick economy.
A Canadian province
New Brunswick, one of the four original provinces of Canada,
entered the
Canadian
Confederation on July 1, 1867. The
Charlottetown Conference of 1864,
which ultimately led to the confederation movement, originally had
been intended to discuss only a
Maritime
Union, but concerns over the
American Civil War as well as
Fenian activity along the border led to an
interest in expanding the scope of the proposed union.
This interest in an
expanded union arose from the Province of Canada (formerly Upper and Lower
Canada, later Ontario
and Quebec), and a request was made by the Canadian
political leaders to the organizers of the Maritime conference to
have the meeting agenda altered. Although the Maritime
leaders were swayed by the arguments of the Canadians, many
ordinary residents of the Maritimes wanted no part of this larger
confederation for fear that their interests and concerns would be
ignored in a wider national union. Many politicians who supported
confederation, such as
Sir Samuel
Leonard Tilley (New Brunswick's best-known
Father of
Confederation), found themselves without a seat after the next
election; nevertheless, backers of the wider confederation
eventually prevailed.
Following
confederation, the fears of the anti-confederates were proven
correct as new national policies and trade barriers were soon
adopted by the central government, thus disrupting the historic
trading relationship between the Maritime Provinces and New England
. The situation in New Brunswick was
exacerbated by both the Great Fire of
1877 in Saint John
and the decline of the wooden shipbuilding
industry; skilled workers were thus forced to move to other parts
of Canada or to the United States to seek employment. As the
20th century dawned, however, the province's economy again began to
expand. Manufacturing gained strength with the construction of
several textile mills; and in the crucial forestry sector, the
sawmills that had dotted inland sections of
the province gave way to larger
pulp and paper
mills. The railway industry, meanwhile, provided for growth and
prosperity in the Moncton region. Nevertheless, unemployment
remained high throughout the province, and the
Great Depression brought another setback.
Two influential families, the
Irvings
and the
McCains, emerged from
the Depression to begin to modernise and
vertically integrate the provincial
economy—especially in the vital forestry, food processing, and
energy sectors.
The Acadians in northern New Brunswick had long been geographically
and linguistically isolated from the more numerous
English-speakers, who lived in the south of the province.
Government services were often not available in French, and the
infrastructure in predominantly Francophone areas was noticeably
less developed than in the rest of the province; this changed with
the election of Premier
Louis
Robichaud in 1960. He embarked on the ambitious
Equal Opportunity
Plan, in which education, rural road maintenance, and health care
fell under the sole jurisdiction of a provincial government that
insisted on equal coverage of all areas of the province. County
councils were abolished, and the rural areas came under direct
provincial jurisdiction. The 1969
Official
Languages Act made French an official language.
Demographics
Ethnicity
First Nations in New Brunswick include the Mi'kmaq and
Maliseet (Wolastoqiyik). The first European
settlers, the Acadians, are today survivors of the
Great Expulsion (1755), which drove several
thousand French residents into exile in North America, Britain, and
France for refusing to take an oath of allegiance to King George
III during the
French and Indian
War.
American Acadians, who were deported to
Louisiana
, are referred to as Cajuns.
Much of the English Canadian population of New Brunswick is
descended from Loyalists who fled the American Revolution. This is
commemorated in the province's motto,
Spem reduxit ("hope
was restored"). There is also a significant population with Irish
ancestry, especially in Saint John and the
Miramichi Valley.
People of Scottish
descent are scattered throughout the province, with higher
concentrations in the Miramichi and in Campbellton
.
In the 2001 Canadian census, the most commonly reported ethnicities
were 193,470
French (26.9%); 165,235
English
(23.0%); 135,835
Irish (18.9%);
127,635
Scottish (17.7%); 27,490
German (3.8%); 26,220
Acadians (3.6%); 23,815
"North American Indian" (3.3%); 13,355
Dutch (1.9%); and 7,620
Welsh (1.1%). It should
be noted that 242,220 people (33.7%) identified themselves as
simply
"Canadian" or "Canadien,"
while 173,585 (24.1%) also selected another ethnicity—for a total
of 415,810 (57.8%) calling themselves
Canadian. (Each person could choose
more than one ethnicity.)
Population since 1851
| Year |
Population |
Five Year
% change |
Ten Year
% change |
Rank Among
Provinces |
| 1851 |
193,800 |
n/a |
n/a |
4 |
| 1861 |
252,047 |
n/a |
30.0 |
4 |
| 1871 |
285,594 |
n/a |
13.3 |
4 |
| 1881 |
321,233 |
n/a |
12.5 |
4 |
| 1891 |
321,263 |
n/a |
0.0 |
4 |
| 1901 |
331,120 |
n/a |
3.1 |
4 |
| 1911 |
351,889 |
n/a |
6.3 |
8 |
| 1921 |
387,876 |
n/a |
10.2 |
8 |
| 1931 |
408,219 |
n/a |
5.2 |
8 |
| 1941 |
457,401 |
n/a |
12.0 |
8 |
| 1951 |
515,697 |
n/a |
12.7 |
8 |
| 1956 |
554,616 |
7.5 |
n/a |
8 |
| 1961 |
597,936 |
7.8 |
15.9 |
8 |
| 1966 |
616,788 |
3.2 |
11.2 |
8 |
| 1971 |
634,560 |
2.9 |
6.9 |
8 |
| 1976 |
677,250 |
6.7 |
9.8 |
8 |
| 1981 |
696,403 |
2.8 |
9.7 |
8 |
| 1986 |
709,445 |
1.9 |
4.8 |
8 |
| 1991 |
723,900 |
2.0 |
3.9 |
8 |
| 1996 |
738,133 |
2.0 |
4.0 |
8 |
| 2001 |
729,498 |
-1.2 |
0.8 |
8 |
| 2006 |
729,997 |
0.1 |
-0.1 |
8 |
Languages
The
2006 Canadian census showed a
population of 729,997. Of the 708,145 singular responses to the
census question concerning "mother tongue," the most commonly
reported languages were:
In addition, there were 560 responses of both English and a
"nonofficial language"; 120 of both French and a nonofficial
language; 4,450 of both English and French; 30 of English, French,
and a nonofficial language; and about 10,300 people who either did
not respond to the question, reported multiple nonofficial
languages, or gave some other unenumerated response. New
Brunswick's official languages are shown in
bold.
Figures shown are for the number of single-language responses and
the percentage of total single-language responses.
Religion
The largest denominations by number of adherents according to the
2001 census were the
Roman
Catholic Church, with 385,985 (54%);
Baptists, with
80,490 (11%); the
United Church
of Canada, with 69,235 (10%); the
Anglicans, with 58,215 (8%); the
Pentecostals with 20,155 (3%).
Economy
New Brunswick's urban areas have modern, service-based economies
dominated by the health care, educational, retail, finance, and
insurance sectors. These sectors are reasonably equitably
distributed in all three principal urban centres. In addition,
heavy industry and port facilities are found in Saint John;
Fredericton is dominated by government services, universities, and
the military; and Moncton has developed as a commercial, retail,
transportation, and distribution centre with important rail and air
terminal facilities.
The rural primary economy is best known for
forestry,
mining, mixed
farming, and
fishing.
Forestry is important in all areas of the province, but especially
in the heavily forested central regions.
There are many
sawmills in the smaller towns and several large pulp and paper
mills located in Saint John, Miramichi
, Nackawic
, and Edmundston
.
Heavy metals, including
lead and
zinc, are mined in the north around Bathurst.
One of
the world's largest potash deposits is
located in Sussex
; a second potash mine, costing over a billion
dollars, is in development in the Sussex region. Oil and
natural gas deposits are also being developed in the Sussex
region.
Farming is concentrated in the upper Saint John River valley (in
the northwest portion of the province), where the most valuable
crop is potatoes. Mixed and
dairy
farms are found elsewhere, but especially in the southeast,
concentrated in the Kennebecasis and Petitcodiac river
valleys.
The most valuable fish catches are
lobster,
scallops
and
king crab.
The farming of
Atlantic salmon in the Passamaquoddy Bay
region is an important local industry.
The largest employers in the province are the
Irving group of companies, several large
multinational forest companies, the government of New Brunswick,
and the McCain group of companies.
Tourism
Some of
the province's tourist attractions include the New Brunswick Museum, Kouchibouguac National Park
, Mactaquac Provincial Park
, the Beaverbrook Art Gallery, Kings Landing Historical
Settlement, Village
Historique Acadien, Les Jardins de la
Republique, Parlee
Beach
, Hopewell
Rocks
, La Dune de Bouctouche, Saint John Reversing Falls, Magnetic Hill and the Magnetic Hill Zoo, Crystal
Palace
, Magic Mountain Water Park
, Cape Jourimain
National Wildlife Preserve, Sugarloaf
Provincial Park
, Sackville
Waterfowl Park, Fundy National Park
, and the Fundy Hiking Trail.
Government and politics
New Brunswick has a
unicameral
legislature with 55 seats. Elections are held at least every five
years, but may be called at any time by the
Lieutenant
Governor (the viceregal representative) on consultation with
the
Premier. The Premier is
the leader of the party that holds the most seats in the
legislature.
There are two dominant political parties in New Brunswick, the
Liberal Party and
the
Progressive
Conservative Party. While consistently polling approximately
10% of the electoral vote since the early 1980s, the
New Democratic Party has
elected few members to the
Legislative Assembly.
From time to time, other parties, such as the
Confederation of
Regions Party, have held seats in the legislature, but only on
the strength of a strong protest vote.
The dynamics of New Brunswick politics are different from those of
other Canadian provinces. The lack of a dominant urban centre in
the province means that the government has to be responsive to
issues affecting all areas of the province. In addition, the
presence of a large Francophone minority dictates that consensus
politics is necessary, even when there is a majority government
present. In this manner, the ebb and flow of New Brunswick
provincial politics parallels the federal stage.
Since 1960, the province has elected a succession of young
bilingual leaders. This combination of attributes has permitted
recent premiers of New Brunswick to be disproportionately
influential players on the federal stage. Former Premier
Bernard Lord (Progressive Conservative) has
been touted as a potential leader of the
Conservative Party of Canada.
Frank McKenna (premier, 1987–97), had
been considered to be a front-runner to lead the
Liberal Party of Canada.
Richard Hatfield (premier, 1970–87) played
an active role in the
patriation of
the
Canadian constitution and
creation of the
Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms. Louis Robichaud (premier, 1960–70) was
responsible for a wide range of social reforms.
On September 18, 2006, the Liberals won a majority, with 29 out of
55 seats, making 38-year old
Shawn
Graham the
new
Premier of New Brunswick.
Municipalities
Metropolitan Moncton (Moncton
, Riverview
, Dieppe
), with a population of 126,424 (Canada 2006
census), is the largest urban centre in the province.
Saint
John is the largest city and has a metropolitan population
(Saint
John
, Quispamsis
, Rothesay
) of 122,389. Greater Fredericton
has a census agglomeration population of
85,000.
Moncton is the fastest-growing metropolitan area in the province
and among the top ten fastest growing urban areas in Canada. Its
economy is principally based on the transportation, distribution,
information technology, commercial, and retail sectors. Moncton has
a sizeable Francophone Acadian minority population (35%) and became
officially bilingual in 2002.
Saint John is one of the busiest shipping ports in Canada in terms
of gross tonnage.
Saint John is a major energy hub for the
East
Coast
. It is the home of Canada's biggest oil
refinery; an
LNG terminal is
being constructed in the city; and there are major oil-fired and
nuclear power plants located in or around the town. The retail,
commercial, and residential sectors are currently experiencing a
resurgence.
Fredericton, the capital of the province, is
home to the Beaverbrook Art Gallery, the University
of New Brunswick
, and St. Thomas
University. Canada's largest military base, CFB Gagetown
, is located in suburban Oromocto
. The economy of Fredericton is tied to the
governmental, military, and university sectors.
Education
Public education in the province is
administered by the
Department of
Education, a
department of the
Government of New
Brunswick.
New Brunswick has a comprehensive parallel system of Anglophone and
Francophone
public
schools providing education to both the
primary and
secondary levels. There are also several
secular and religious
private schools
in the province.
The
New
Brunswick Community College
system has campuses in all regions of the
province. This comprehensive trade school system offers
roughly parallel programs in both official languages at either
Francophone or Anglophone campuses. Each campus, however, tends to
have areas of concentration to allow for specialisation. There are
also a number of private colleges for specialised training in the
province, such as the
Moncton
Flight College, one of the top pilot-training academies in
Canada.
There are four publicly funded secular universities and four
private degree-granting institutions with religious affiliation in
the province.
The two comprehensive provincial
universities are the University of New Brunswick
and Université
de Moncton. These institutions have extensive
postgraduate programs and
Schools of Law.
Mount Allison University
, in Sackville, consistently ranks as one of the
best liberal arts universities in
Canada and has produced 47 Rhodes
Scholars—more than any other liberal arts university in the
British
Commonwealth.
- Publicly funded provincial comprehensive universities
Publicly funded undergraduate liberal arts
universities
Private Christian undergraduate liberal arts
university
Private degree granting religious training
institutions
Culture
Early New Brunswick culture was
aboriginal in flavour,
influenced by the native populations who made their home along the
coast and riverbanks until the arrival of French-speaking (in the
early 17th century) and English-speaking settlers (in the 18th
century).
As
described by Arthur Doyle in a paper written in 1976, an invisible
line separated the two founding European cultures, beginning on the
eastern outskirts of Moncton and running diagonally across the
province northwest towards Grand Falls
. Franco-New Brunswick (Acadie) lay to
the northeast of this divide, and Anglo-New Brunswick lay to the
southwest.
Doyle's statement was made not long after government reforms by
former premier Louis J. Robichaud had significantly improved the
status of French-speaking Acadians within the province and
initiated their journey towards cultural recognition and equality
with their English-speaking counterparts.
Nineteenth-century New Brunswick was influenced by colonial ties to
France, England, Scotland, and Ireland as well as by its
geographical proximity to New England and the arrival of about
40,000 Loyalists.
As local society was founded in forestry and seaborne endeavours, a
tradition of lumber camp songs and
sea
chanties prevailed. Acadian
cloggers
and
Irish and Scots
step dancers competed at festivals to expressive
fiddle and
accordion
music. The art of storytelling, well-known to the native
populations, passed on to the early settlers, and poetry—whether
put to music or not—was a common form of commemorating shared
events, as the voice of a masterful poet or soulful musician easily
conquered the province's language barriers.
Other cultural expressions were found in family gatherings and the
church; both French and English cultures saw a long and early
influence of
ecclesiastical
architecture, with Western European and American influences
dominating rather than any particular vernacular sense. Poets
produced the first important literary contributions in the
province. Cousins
Bliss Carman and Sir
Charles G.D. Roberts found inspiration in the
landscape of the province, as would later writers as well. In
painting, individual artists such as
Anthony Flower worked in obscurity, either
through design or neglect. Few 19th-century artists emerged, but
those who did often benefited from fine arts training at Mount
Allison University in Sackville, which began classes in 1854. The
program came into its own under
John
A. Hammond, who served from 1893
to 1916;
Alex Colville and
Lawren Harris later studied and taught art
there. Both
Christopher Pratt and
Mary Pratt were trained at Mount Allison.
The university’s art gallery—which opened in 1895 and is named for
its patron, John Owens of Saint John—is Canada’s oldest (it
actually opened in Saint John ten years earlier, but was moved to
Sackville). In French-speaking New Brunswick, it would not be until
the 1960s that a comparable institution was founded, the Université
de Moncton. Then, a cultural renaissance occurred under the
influence of Acadian historians and such teachers as Claude Roussel
through
coffeehouses, music, and
protest; an outpouring of Acadian art, literature, and music has
pressed on unabated since that time. Popular exponents of modern
Acadian literature and music include
Antonine Maillet and
Édith Butler. The current New Brunswick
Lieutenant Governor,
Herménégilde Chiasson, is a
poet.
(See also "Music of New
Brunswick").
Dr.
John Clarence Webster and
Max Aitken, 1st Baron
Beaverbrook have made important endowments to provincial
museums. Dr. Webster gave his art collection to the New Brunswick
Museum in 1934, thereby endowing the museum with one of its
greatest assets.
James
Barry's
Death of General Wolfe ranks as a
Canadian national treasure. Courtesy of Lord Beaverbrook, the
Beaverbrook Art Gallery in Fredericton has a collection of
world-class art, including works of such luminaries as
Salvador Dalí.
The performing arts have a long tradition in New Brunswick, dating
back to travelling road shows and 19th-century opera in Saint John.
The early crooner
Henry Burr was
discovered at the
Imperial
Theatre in Saint John. Based in Fredericton, the most important
proponent of theatre today is
Theatre New Brunswick, originally
under the direction of
Walter
Learning, which tours plays around the province; Canadian
playwright
Norm Foster saw
his early works premiere at TNB.
Other live theatre troops include
Théâtre
l’Escaouette in Moncton, the Théatre populaire d'Acadie in
Caraquet
, and Live Bait
Theatre in Sackville. All three major cities have
significant performance spaces. The refurbished Imperial and
Capitol Theatres are found
in Saint John and Moncton, respectively; the more modern
Playhouse is located in
Fredericton.
In modern literature, writers
Alfred
Bailey and
Alden Nowlan dominated
the New Brunswick literary scene in the last third of the 20th
century; world-renowned literary critic
Northrop Frye was influenced by his upbringing
in Moncton. The annual
Frye
Festival in Moncton celebrates his legacy. The expatriate
British poet
John Thompson, who
settled outside Sackville, proved influential in his short-lived
career.
Douglas Lochhead and
K. V.
Johansen are other prominent writers
living in the town of Sackville.
David Adams Richards, born in the
Miramichi, has become a well-respected
Governor-General's Award-winning
author. Canadian novelist, story-writer, biographer and poet,
Raymond Fraser, grew up in Chatham
and lives now in Fredericton.
The
Atlantic Ballet
Theatre of Canada, based in Moncton and featuring Russian and
European trained dancers, has recently flourished and has started
touring both nationally and internationally.
Symphony New Brunswick, based in
Saint John, also tours extensively in the province.
Media outlets
New Brunswick has four daily newspapers (three of which are in
English), the largest being the
Times & Transcript (40,000
daily), based in Moncton and serving eastern New Brunswick. Also,
there is the
Telegraph-Journal (37,000 daily),
which serves Saint John and is distributed throughout the province,
and the provincial capital daily
The Daily Gleaner (25,000 daily),
based in Fredericton. The French-language daily is
L'Acadie Nouvelle (12,000 daily),
based in Caraquet. There are also several weekly newspapers that
are local in scope and based in the province's smaller towns and
communities.
The three English-language dailies and the majority of the weeklies
are owned and operated by
Brunswick
News, privately owned by J.K. Irving. The other major media
group in the province is Acadie Presse, which publishes
L'Acadie Nouvelle.
The
Canadian
Broadcasting Corporation has various news bureaus throughout
the province, but its main Anglophone television and radio
operations are centred in Fredericton.
Télévision de
Radio-Canada (CBC French) service is based in Moncton.
Global has its New Brunswick base
in Saint John, with news and sales bureaus in Fredericton and
Moncton.
CTV Atlantic, the regional
CTV station, is based in
Halifax and has offices in Moncton, Fredericton, and Saint
John.
There are many private radio stations in New Brunswick, with each
of the three major cities having a dozen or more stations. Most
smaller cities and towns also have one or two stations.
Photo gallery
Image:Fundy_National_Park_of_Canada_9.jpg|Dickson
Falls,
Fundy
National Park
.
Image: mont-carleton-panorama-3.jpg|Mount
Carleton
Image:Ducks_danielaucoin_nb_botanicalgarden.jpg|New Brunswick Botanical
Garden
Image:HartlandBridge2.jpg|Longest covered bridge in the world, Hartland
,
in winter.
Image:Boardwalk_across_the_dunes_in_the_Irving_Eco-Centre.jpg|Boardwalk
across the dunes, Bouctouche
.Image:FortHoweSaintJohNBCanada.JPG|Fort HoweImage:Cape_Enrage.JPG|Cape Enrage
Image:Saint John, New Brunswick Imperial
Theatre.jpg|Imperial Theatre,
Saint
John.
Image:christchurch.JPG|Christ
Church Cathedral
, Fredericton
.Image:GrandFALLS 2.jpg|Grand
Falls
Image:Miramichi_river.JPG|Miramichi
River
Image:View Of Campbellton.jpeg|Restigouche RiverImage:Port Caraquet
3.JPG|Caraquet
See also
Notes
References
- L.W. Bailey and D.R. Jack, Woods and Minerals of New
Brunswick (Fredericton, 1876)
- William H. Benedict. New Brunswick in History
(2001)
- S.D. Clark, Movements of Political Protest in Canada,
1640–1840, University of Toronto Press, 1959.
- Tim Frink, New Brunswick: A Short History (1997)
- W. Reavley Gair and Reavley W. Gair, A Literary and
Linguistic History of New Brunswick (1986)
- Godfrey, W. G. "Carleton, Thomas," Dictionary of Canadian
Biography Online (2000) online edition
- James Hannay, History of New Brunswick (St. John,
1909)
- William Kingsford, History of Canada (London,
1887–98)
- Greg Marquis, "Commemorating the Loyalists in the Loyalist
City: Saint John, New Brunswick, 1883–1934" Urban History
Review, Vol. 33, 2004
- M.H. Perley, On the Early History of New Brunswick
(St. John, 1891)
- A.R.C. Selwyn and G.M. Dawson, Descriptive Sketch of the
Physical Geography and Geology of the Dominion of Canada
(Montreal, 1884)
- Robert Summerby-Murray, "Interpreting Deindustrialised
Landscapes of Atlantic Canada: Memory and Industrial Heritage in
Sackville, New Brunswick" The Canadian Geographer, Vol.
46, 2002
- William Menzies Whitelaw, The Maritimes and Canada before
Confederation Oxford University Press, 1934
- A.B. Willmott, The Mineral Wealth of Canada (London,
1898)
External links
- Official site of
the Government of New Brunswick
- New Brunswick at the Department of Canadian
Heritage
- Maritime Tourism
- Symbols of New Brunswick
- New Brunswick
Museum
- New
Brunswick Covered Bridges
- New
Brunswick Lighthouses
- Historical and Genealogical Resources of New
Brunswick historical census, birth, marriage and death records,
immigration, settlement, biography, cemeteries, burial records,
land records, First Nations and more
- From Louis to Lord: New Brunswick Elections,
1960–2003