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New Brunswick (French, le Nouveau-Brunswick) is one of Canada's
provinces. Its capital is Fredericton. Its population is slowly
growing, and now exceeds 700,000 (New Brunswickers).
New Brunswick is located in the Canadian Maritimes, on the
country's east coast. It is bounded on the north by Quebec's
Gaspé Peninsula and by the Baie des Chaleurs and on
the east by the Gulf of Saint Lawrence and Northumberland
Strait. To the south, the narrow Isthmus of Chignecto connects
it to peninsular Nova Scotia, most of which is split off by
the Bay of Fundy; on its west, the province borders the American
state of Maine.
The total land and water area of the province is approximately
70,000 square kilometres. About 80% of the province is forested,
with the other 20% consisting of agricultural land and urban
areas. New Brunswick is at the northern limit of the Appalachian
Mountains, a chain of ancient, eroded mountains. The land
consists of river valleys and low, gently rolling hills.
The aboriginal nations of New Brunswick include the Mi'kmaq
(Micmac), Maliseet and Passamaquoddy. The population is majority
English-speaking but with a substantial (35%) French-speaking
minority who call themselves Acadians from Acadia, the former
name of the region in the French colonial period when large
numbers migrated from the Vienne area of France. New Brunswick
is the only officially bilingual province in the country.
The Province of New Brunswick was created in 1784, when recently-arrived
Loyalists to the British Crown who resented being governed
from distant Halifax, Nova Scotia, petitioned the British
Government to allow them to form a separate province consisting
of the mainland portion of Nova Scotia. The new province was
named in honour of the British monarch, King George III, who
was descended from the House of Brunswick. Fredericton, the
provincial capital, was likewise named for George III's second
son, Prince Frederick Augustus, Duke of York.
New Brunswick has eight officially incorporated cities, listed
here in descending order by population:
Saint John
Moncton
Fredericton
Miramichi
Edmundston
Dieppe
Bathurst
Campbellton
See also a List of communities in New Brunswick.
Saint John is a port city, with heavy industry in the form
of pulp and paper, oil refineries, and drydocks, all owned
by the family of the late K.C. Irving, as is much of the province's
economy and 3 out of 4 of its daily English language newspapers.
Saint John is conventionally written out in full, to distinguish
it from St. John's (Harbour), the capital of Newfoundland
and Labrador, with which it is commonly confused by those
outside of the Atlantic Provinces.
Fredericton, in addition to being the capital of the province,
is a genteel university town, and home to the Lord Beaverbrook
Art Gallery, Theatre New Brunswick, the New Brunswick Sports
Hall of Fame, and other amenities, including Christ Church
Cathedral, whose foundation is the oldest in Canada or the
United States. Fredericton is nicknamed the "City of
Stately Elms". It has boasted of the largest stand of
elms outside of Central Park since Dutch Elm Disease devastated
this species in the early twentieth century.
The economy of New Brunswick is a modern service economy
dominated by financial services, insurance and other services,
but is best known for forestry, mining, mixed farming and
fishing. The most valuable crop is potatoes, while the most
valuable fish catches are lobster and scallops. The largest
employers are the Irving family companies, the Government
of New Brunswick, and the McCain Foods Limited (french fries)
family companies.
The University of New Brunswick was founded as King's College
in 1785, one of the oldest educational institutions in North
America.
Mount Allison University is a small private undergraduate
university which has consistently topped the Maclean's magazine
survey of Canadian Universities in the undergraduate university
category since that poll began. It produces a Rhodes Scholar
about once every two years on the average, and was the first
university in the British Empire to grant a Bachelor's degree
to a woman.
Saint Thomas University is a small, Catholic institution
whose central liberal arts program is complemented by professional
programs in education and social work.
The Université de Moncton is a French-language university
with its principal campus in Moncton.
Atlantic Baptist University is an undergraduate university
offering three Bachelor's degrees; Science, Arts and Education.
It was founded mid-twentieth century as a bible training school,
and grew to an accredited and academically rigorous Liberal
Arts university in under fifty years. ABU is also located
in Moncton.
The Acadians are survivors of the Expulsion (1755) which
drove several thousand French residents into exile in North
America, the U.K. and France for refusing to take an oath
of allegiance to Britain during the time of high tension pending
war between France and Britain. Their American cousins, who
wound up in Louisiana and other parts of the American South,
are often referred to as Cajuns.
First Nations in New Brunswick include the Mi'kmaq and Maliseet.
See: Famous people from New Brunswick
The provincial flower is the purple violet. The provincial
bird is the black-capped chickadee, in common with the American
states of Maine and Massachusetts.
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Map
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See also
Canada
Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick
List of cities in Canada
List of New Brunswick premiers
List of New Brunswick lieutenant-governors
List of communities in New Brunswick
List of New Brunswick counties
List of Canadian provincial and territorial symbols
List of New Brunswick rivers
This article is licensed
under the GNU
Free Documentation License. It uses material from the
Wikipedia
article "New Brunswick".
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