Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Times & Transcript is a newspaper from Moncton, New Brunswick. It serves Greater Moncton and eastern New Brunswick. Its offices and printing facilities are located on Main Street in Downtown Moncton. The paper is published by Postmedia Network. The Times & Transcript building also houses the presses that print all Brunswick News newspapers ...
It is the highest daily circulated newspaper in New Brunswick. Moncton's daily newspaper is the Times & Transcript, which has the highest circulation of any daily newspaper in New Brunswick. [142] More than 60 percent of city households subscribe daily, and more than 90 percent of Moncton residents read the Times & Transcript at least once a week.
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.
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
A subsidiary company, New Brunswick Publishing Ltd., owned the two Saint John newspapers, the Telegraph-Journal and the Evening Times Globe. New Brunswick Publishing Ltd. in turn had subsidiaries, one of which was Moncton Publishing, which published the two Moncton papers, the Times and the Transcript.
Downtown Moncton is a central neighbourhood in the city of Moncton, New Brunswick. ... Government of Canada Building, Moncton: ... Times Building: Commercial Times ...
1935 - Georgetown and Parkton Amalgamated with Moncton and became neighbourhoods. [10] 1935 – Moncton High School founded. 1936 - The last hanging in New Brunswick. 1940 – CFB Moncton is established as the main military supply base in Atlantic Canada. 1954 – Moncton's first TV station, CKCW-TV goes on the air. 1959 – Dieppe Commandos ...
Susan Stultz (1952/1953 – April 8, 2024) was a Canadian politician, who was elected to the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick in the 2010 provincial election.She represented the electoral district of Moncton West as a member of the Progressive Conservatives until the 2014 election, when she was defeated by Cathy Rogers.