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12 Neighbours is a Canadian non-profit tiny house community in Fredericton, New Brunswick.Started in 2021 by multi-millionaire software engineer Marcel LeBrun, the community includes 96 tiny homes built between 2021 and 2024.
Roosevelt Campobello International Park preserves the house and surrounding landscape of the summer retreat of Franklin D. Roosevelt, Eleanor Roosevelt and their family. It is located on the southern tip of Campobello Island in the Canadian province of New Brunswick, and is connected to the mainland by the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial Bridge, at Lubec, Maine in the United States.
This is a list of communities in New Brunswick, a province in Canada. For the purposes of this list, a community is defined as either an incorporated municipality, an Indian reserve , or an unincorporated community inside or outside a municipality.
Gondola Point is a former Canadian village and current neighborhood of the town of Quispamsis located in Kings County, New Brunswick. It was amalgamated with the town of Quispamsis in 1998. It is the location site of the Gondola Point Ferry , a cable ferry crossing that connects the Gondola Point Arterial to Route 845 at Reed's Point on the ...
class=notpageimage| Location of Lincoln in New Brunswick Lincoln (2011 pop.: 6,458) is a Canadian suburban community in Sunbury County, New Brunswick. Geography Located on the west bank of the Saint John River between Fredericton and Oromocto, Lincoln was one of the original United Empire Loyalist settlements established in the province following the American Revolution. History Lincoln was ...
Prince William Parish is bounded: [2] [13] [14] on the northeast by the Saint John River;; on the southeast by the southeastern line of a grant to Francis Horsman at Wheeler Cove and its prolongation southeasterly about 9.2 kilometres to a line running north 45º west, [a] the prolongation of the southwestern line of a grant to James Taylor on the western side of Route 640, then along the ...
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
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.