Brunswick Parish, New Brunswick

Brunswick
Location within Queens County, New Brunswick.
Location within Queens County, New Brunswick.
Coordinates: 45.84°N 64.59°W / 45.84; -64.59
Country Canada
Province New Brunswick
County Queens County
Erected 1816
Area
 • Land 703.20 km2 (271.51 sq mi)
Population
 (2021)
 • Total 224
 • Density 0.3/km2 (0.8/sq mi)
 • Change 2016-2021
Increase 10.3%
 • Dwellings
193
Time zone UTC-4 (AST)
 • Summer (DST) UTC-3 (ADT)

Brunswick is a civil parish in the northeastern corner of Queens County, New Brunswick, Canada.

Prior to the 2023 governance reform, for governance purposes it formed the local service district of the parish of Brunswick, which was a member of Regional Service Commission 8 (RSC8).

Origin of name

The parish was probably named in honour of the Duke of Brunswick, German military leader against Napoleon, killed at the Battle of Quatre-Bras the year before the parish's erection.

History

In 1786 New Brunswick chose to set up the province's system of counties and parishes as first Act of the legislation, replacing the counties established the year before through a series of Letters Patent and the township system that was inherited from Nova Scotia in 1784. The eastern boundary of Queens County passed approximately through Coles Island and the Gaspereau Forks on the Salmon River but the rear lines of Waterborough and Wickham Parishes ran approximately through Hunters Home and Chipman, extending into Westmorland and Northumberland Counties. The county line was moved eastward in 1787 by as much as 30 miles (48 km) in the north, created a large area that was not part of any parish; this area included large parts of Chipman and Waterborough Parishes in addition to most of modern Brunswick.

In 1816 this unassigned area was erected as Brunswick Parish; because the county line hadn't been surveyed yet, any inhabitants of the New Canaan settlement were to belong to Brunswick Parish.

In 1835 part of Brunswick was included in the newly erected Chipman Parish.

Boundaries

Brunswick Parish is bounded:

  • on the northeast east by the Kent County line;
  • on the east by the Westmorland County line;
  • on the southeast by the Kings County line;
  • on the west by a line running north-northwesterly from north of the end of Chittick Road in Marrtown, crossing the Canaan River east of Phillips Brook and striking the Waterborough Parish line about 2 kilometres northwest of Parks Lake;
  • on the northwest by a line running north 54º east from a point on the Saint John River about 1.8 kilometres southwest of the Route 715 bridge over McAlpines Brook.

Communities

Communities at least partly within the parish. bold indicates an incorporated municipality

Bodies of water

Bodies of water at least partly within the parish.

Other notable places

Parks, historic sites, and other noteworthy places at least partly within the parish.

  • Brookvale Protected Natural Area
  • Canaan Bog Protected Natural Area
  • Cranberry Lake Protected Natural Area

Demographics

Revised census figures based on the 2023 local governance reforms have not been released.

Access Routes

Highways and numbered routes that run through the parish, including external routes that start or finish at the parish limits:

See also