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central and western New Brunswick, parts of southeastern Quebec NB 46°10′18″N 67°34′03″W / 46.1718°N 67.5675°W / 46.1718; -67.5675 ( Wolastoq National Historic Site of Federal ( 18954 )
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 5 January 2025. Town in New Brunswick, Canada Hartland Town Hartland Bridge, with Hartland in the background Seal Nickname: Home of the World's Longest Covered Bridge Hartland Coordinates: 46°17′51″N 67°31′39″W / 46.29742°N 67.52742°W / 46.29742; -67.52742 Country Canada Provinces ...
Hartland (St. Thomas, Simonds) District of Carleton North (remainder) The parish of Simonds: Saint John 1976-10-13 [91] Fundy-St. Martins (most) Fundy rural district (Sands Road and Upper Golden Grove Road) Somerville: Carleton Wakefield 1971-10-13 [92] Hartland The parish of South Esk: Northumberland Southesk
Portage-based Green Development and Allen Edwin Homes proposed the neighborhood on about 39 acres on the south side of Highland Road east of Hartland Glen Lane and west of Pleasant Valley Road.
Hartland Covered Bridge. Wakefield is a dispersed Canadian rural community located in Wakefield Parish, Carleton County, New Brunswick. [1] Located approximately 9 km southeast of Hartland, [2] Wakefield sits along Route 103 by the Saint John River. The nearby Hartland is home to the Hartland Bridge, the world's longest covered bridge.
New Brunswick's largest town by population is Riverview with 20,584 residents and largest town by area was Sackville with a land area of 73.91 km 2 (28.54 sq mi). [7] New Brunswick's smallest town by population was Hartland with 933 residents and the smallest by land area was Saint-Quentin at 4.24 km 2 (1.64 sq mi). [7]
Carleton County (2016 population 26,220 [1]) is located in west-central New Brunswick, Canada.. The western border is Aroostook County, Maine, the northern border is Victoria County, and the southeastern border is York County from which it was formed in 1831.
A 24-hectare (59-acre) site featuring the remains of an early 19th-century shipyard typical of a New Brunswick one in its time; an undisturbed cultural landscape combining national and archaeological features associated with 19th-century shipbuilding in eastern Canada Belmont House / R. Wilmot Home [7] 1820 (completed) 1975 Lincoln