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William Joseph Kent (December 24, 1860 – September 8, 1943) was a business and political leader in Bathurst, New Brunswick in Canada. [1] Kent's business enterprises were significant in the economic development of the region, and Kent was a founding alderman in Bathurst's first town council for sixteen years before serving as mayor of ...
Canadian Tire Corporation purchased Mark’s Work Wearhouse for $109 million in early 2002. [2] At this time, Mark's Work Wearhouse operated 325 corporate and franchisee stores in Canada. The acquisition provided Mark’s Work Wearhouse with additional capital which allowed it to grow between 2001 and 2008 to 372 stores across Canada.
New Brunswick More images: Gloucester Hotel 100 Main Street Bathurst NB Bathurst municipality Upload Photo: Herman J. Good V.C Branch No.18 Royal Canadian Legion War Museum 575 St. Peter Ave Bathurst NB
Earlier SaveEasy logo, in use in 2007. Final SaveEasy Logo before conversion to Independent Banner Save Easy Logo 80-90s, saveeasy. SaveEasy (formerly Atlantic Save-Easy) was a chain of small retail grocery store franchises in the Atlantic Provinces of Newfoundland and Labrador, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Prince Edward Island, owned by Loblaw Companies.
Route 315 is a 20 km (12 mi) local highway in northwestern New Brunswick, Canada. The road runs from New Brunswick Route 180 in Bathurst to its northern terminus at New Brunswick Route 134 in Petit-Rocher, its route running mostly parallel to the west with New Brunswick Route 11 .
Government survey document indicating 1789 landholdings near Bathurst Harbour (formerly Nepisiguit Harbour) and Baie des Chaleurs New Brunswick. Seen at the upper centre-right is the "Capt Gould" land grant, which was obtained some time after 1828 by Cunard. Cunard seems to have been the only shipbuilder at Bathurst from 1841 to 1847. [3]
The K.C. Irving Regional Centre (French: Centre Régional K.C. Irving) is an indoor arena located in Bathurst, New Brunswick. The arena is home to the Acadie–Bathurst Titan, a hockey team of the QMJHL. It was named in honour of businessman K. C. Irving. Opened in September 1996 and built at a cost of $21 million, it is the largest arena in ...
Connolly's quarry, now closed, was located five miles south of Bathurst, New Brunswick, in Canada.The quarry was the source of the distinctive pink-grey granite employed in various prominent government and institutional buildings of the late Victorian, Edwardian and Georgian eras throughout Gloucester County.