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Moncton's Capitol Theatre is a performing arts venue and hosts productions for the Atlantic Ballet Theatre of Canada, and Theatre New Brunswick. Moncton's Capitol Theatre , an 800-seat restored 1920s-era vaudeville house on Main Street, is the main centre for cultural entertainment for the city.
As the council worked on developing the original county lines, they desperately needed maps of the province, which, at the time, they seemingly lacked. As a result, they relied on two maps by Joseph Frederick Wallet DesBarres from 1780, the best candidates for a map of New Brunswick at the time. [11]
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]
Greater Moncton has a population of 157,717 (2021). Migration is mostly from other areas of New Brunswick (especially the north), Nova Scotia (13%), and Ontario (9%). 62% of new arrivals to the city are Anglophone and 38% are Francophone. The census metropolitan area (CMA) grew by 9% between 2016 and 2021.
Sunny Brae was incorporated as a township from 1915 to 1954, when it amalgamated with the city of Moncton. [1] It now exists as a neighbourhood, with no markings to suggest its name or borders. The neighborhood is served by the bus line 61 Elmwood of Codiac Transpo. Today Sunny Brae is among the oldest established neighbourhoods in the city.
Most settlement in the peninsula occurred as a result of the Expulsion of the Acadians during the Gulf of St. Lawrence Campaign (1758), where British personnel forcibly removed them from their homes, mostly in southern New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. Fishing is the dominant industry on the peninsula, with a large agricultural sector as well.
The image shows the wide median that the Province of New Brunswick generally employs on its divided highways. This portion of highway was completed about 1970. Route 15 only extended from Shediac to Strait Shores until the early 1970s, when the Shediac Four-Lane Highway (the first rural expressway in New Brunswick) was built from Dieppe to Shediac.
This article is a list of historic places in Moncton, New Brunswick entered on the Canadian Register of Historic Places, whether they are federal, provincial, or municipal. Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap