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Southampton is a Canadian rural community in York County, New Brunswick.. The community is located on the east side of the Saint John River, 3.71 km south of Southampton Junction, a station located within the village of Nackawic-Millville, created when the New Brunswick Railway was constructed in the 1870s.
Southampton is a geographic parish in York County, New Brunswick, Canada. [2]Prior to the 2023 governance reform, for governance purposes it was divided between the town of Nackawic, the village of Millville, and the local service district of the parish of Southampton, [3] all of which were members of Capital Region Service Commission (RSC11).
Hampton is a town in Kings County, New Brunswick, Canada.. Located on the Kennebecasis River 30 kilometres northeast of Saint John, Hampton is the shire town of Kings County. . It functioned as the seat of county government between 1870 [2] and 1966 (when county governments were abolished) and is today a service centre for the central Kennebecasis River valley, as well as being a suburb of Saint J
Kings County is located in southern New Brunswick, Canada.Its historical shire town is Hampton and it was named as an expression of loyalty to the British Crown. [2] Both the Saint John and Kennebecasis rivers pass through the county.
Hampton-Fundy-St. Martins is a provincial electoral district for the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick, Canada. It was first contested in the 2014 general election as Hampton , having been created in the 2013 redistribution of electoral boundaries .
Hampton is a geographic parish in Kings County, New Brunswick, Canada. [2]Prior to the 2023 governance reform, it was divided for governance purposes between the towns of Hampton and Quispamsis and the local service district of the parish of Hampton, which further included the service area of Fairmont Subdivision.
The Anglophone South School District (ASD-S) is a public Anglophone school district in the Canadian province of New Brunswick that serves the southern part of the province, covering English-language public schools within the Saint John, Charlotte and Kings counties. [2]
The county lines were strategically drawn to align with the watersheds, a logical decision given that New Brunswick's settlements were developed along waterways. [13] Additionally, the counties were able to be divided into three groups: the Bay of Fundy, the Saint John River and the North Shore.