Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Perth Parish is bounded: [2] [12] [13] on the north by a line running true east from the northwestern corner of the Tobique 20 Indian reserve on the Saint John River;; on the east by the Royal Road, [a] starting about 14.5 kilometres inland and running southerly or south-southeasterly along a path passing west of Birch Ridge, through Red Rapids, to the Carleton County line north of Chapmanville;
Perth-Andover is a former village in Victoria County, New Brunswick, Canada. It held village status prior to 2023. It held village status prior to 2023. It is now part of the village of Southern Victoria .
This is a list of the seven census metropolitan areas and agglomerations in the Canadian province of New Brunswick. As defined by Statistics Canada as of the 2021 census, three entries in the list are identified as a census metropolitan area (CMA) and four as a census agglomeration (CA), with Campbellton's CA containing a portion of Quebec. [1]
The Canadian province of New Brunswick is divided by the Territorial Division Act [1] into 152 geographic parishes, [a] units which had political significance as subdivisions of counties until the Municipalities Act of 1966. [b] Parishes still exist in law and include any municipality, rural community, or regional municipality within their ...
Maintained by New Brunswick Department of Transportation: Length: 35.94 km [1] (22.33 mi) Existed: 1965–present: Major junctions; West end: Route 105 in Perth-Andover: East end: Route 108 in Tobique Valley: Location; Country: Canada: Province: New Brunswick: Highway system; Provincial highways in New Brunswick; Former routes
The peninsula was the site of the first United Empire Loyalist settlement in New Brunswick in 1783. The 2001 Census reports a population of 3,477 on the Kingston Peninsula, consisting of Kingston Parish and the section of Westfield Parish east of the Saint John River.
Location of New Brunswick in Canada. New Brunswick is one of the three Maritime provinces located within Eastern Canada. [1] According to the 2021 Canadian census, it is the eighth most populous province in Canada with 775,610 inhabitants, and the third smallest by land area, covering 71,248.5 square kilometres (27,509.2 sq mi). [2]
Maintained by New Brunswick Department of Transportation: Length: 307 km [1] (191 mi) Existed: 1965–present: Major junctions; South end: Route 10 in Youngs Cove: Route 2 (TCH) in Jemseg Route 8 in Fredericton Route 104 in Mouth of Keswick Route 2 (TCH) in Hartland Route 2 (TCH) in Florenceville Route 107 in Bristol Route 109 in Perth-Andover