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Trivia
- New Brunswick is one of the four Atlantic provinces in Canada.
- It is the third smallest province.
- The province is named for the British royal family of Brunswick-Lüneburg.
- It is called the Loyalist Province.
- New Brunswick is Canada’s only officially bilingual province.
- N.B. has a mainland and many islands.
- Fredericton is the capital city.
- flower – Purple Violet, tree – Balsam Fir, bird – Black-capped Chickadee
- motto – “Hope was restored.”
THE PEOPLE
- The population was 729,997 (Statistics Canada, 2006)
- Estimated population in 2008 was 747,300.
- The largest and oldest city is Saint John.
- Other major cities are Fredericton (the capital city) and Moncton.
- Many people are of French, British, Scottish and Irish origin.
- Over 32 percent of the population are Francophones.
- Other groups include native people, Germans, Dutch, Scandinavians, Italians and Asians.
CLIMATE
- The northern half of the province has cold winters and warm summers.
- Areas near the sea have milder winters and slightly cooler summers.
- Moist air from the Atlantic Ocean produces mild weather in the winter and cool summers.
- Winter storms bring rain to the Bay of Fundy coast and snow to the interior.
- It is often foggy in the spring and early summer along the Bay of Fundy.
HISTORY
- The first people to live in N.B. include the Micmac and Malecite.
- The Micmac and Malecite hunted and fished and were guides for the French explorers.
- The French mariner Jacques Cartier visited the east coast in 1534.
- In 1604 Samuel de Champlain and the French established the first settlement.
- The French called the east coast area Acadia.
- By 1608 French settlers (called Acadians) were farming around the Bay of Fundy.
- Acadia became an English colony in 1713.
- Some of the people would not swear loyalty to England. Their homes were burned and they were sent away. Some went to Louisiana in the United States.
- Amercan settlers founded the city of Saint John (oldest city in Canada).
- In 1784 the north section of the colony became the new colony of New Brunswick.
- The lumbering industy grew. Shipbuilding was a big industry.
- The ships carried masts and other wood products around the world.
- Thousands came from Ireland after 1846 to work in the lumber industry or to farm.
- On July 1, 1867 New Brunswick became one of the first four provinces of Canada.
WATER AND LAND
- More than half of the province is surrounded by water.
- There are two coasts. The east coast faces the Gulf of St. Lawrence and Northumberland Strait; The Bay of Fundy is along the south coast.
- Many bays and inlets along the coasts provide safe harbours for boats.
- There are many rivers in the province.
- The longest river is the Saint John River ( 670 km.long).
- The Bay of Fundy between N.B. and Nova Scotia has the world’s highest tides (over 15 metres high).
- Forests (mainly black spruce and fir) cover about 85 percent of N.B.
- The Appalachian Mountains run along the western edge of the province.
RESOURCES/INDUSTRY
- N.B. is the main producer of lead, zinc, copper and bismuth in Canada.
- Gypsum, potash, antimony, silver, gold, natural gas and oil are also mined.
- There are fishing ports where more than fifty kinds of fish and shellfish are caught (scallops, shrimp, herring, lobsters, snow crabs, mussels, oysters, etc. )
- Lobster is the most valuable catch. Crab is second.
- Aquaculture farms harvest salmon, trout, arctic char, oysters and mussels.
- The main industry is forestry.
- Paper, newspaper, magazines, tissue, wooden doors and windows are made.
- There are livestock, dairy, poultry, potato and berry farms.
- The main crop is potatoes. The Saint John River Valley is called the “Potato Belt.”
- Apples, blueberries, strawberries, and cranberries are also grown.
- Fiddleheads (sprouts of the ostrich fern) are gathered in early spring for eating.
PEOPLE AND PLACES
- R. Foulis invented the first steam foghorn (1860).
- Romeo LeBlanc was the first Acadian to become a Governor-General of Canada.
- Roch Voisine (song writer and singer ) won a Juno Award in 1993 for male vocalist.
- Bliss Carmen (1861-1929) was one of Canada’s best known poets.
- Sir Charles G.D. Roberts (1860-1943) was known as the Father of Canadian Poetry.
- Donald Sutherland (1934- ) is a famous Hollywood actor.
- The McCain Brothers established McCain Foods in 1957. The company is the largest producer of french fries and other oven-ready frozen food products in the world.
- Hartland Bridge – world’s longest covered bridge (390 m. or 1283 ft. long)
- Confederation Bridge (12.9 kilometres or 8 miles long ) – longest bridge in the world crossing ice-covered water. The bridge connects N.B. to Prince Edward Island.
- Magnetic Hill in Moncton – an optical illusion.
- Reversing Falls at St. John -water rushes uphill against the normal flow of the falls.
- Whale watching – off the Bay of Fundy
- Rocks Provincial Park (Bay of Fundy) – strange-shaped rocks called Flowerpot Rocks rise out of the sea