... Between 1871 and 1911, the number of businesses in Moncton increased fivefold, from 46 to 249. ...
From Sikniktuk to Kent
... Patricia Thornton, “The Problem of Out-Migration from Atlantic Canada, 1871-1921: A New Look,” Acadiensis 15, no. 1, (1985), 3-34. ...
... 45 INTRODUCTION CHART 11 Religious Groups in Kent (%) 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 1861 1871 1881 Catholic 1891 1901 1911 Presbyterian 1921 1931 1941 1951 1961 Church of England/Episcopalian 1971 1981 United Church ...
... 1886 Saint-Ignace-de-Loyola et Saint-James Kouchibouguac 1873 1887 Notre-Dame-du-Sacré-Coeur Notre-Dame 1861 1889 Immaculée-Conception Acadieville 1871 1897 Saint-Joseph’s Kent Junction 1871 1897 Saint-Timothée Adamsville 1883 1911 ...
... Marc-Adélard Tremblay, Famille et parenté en Acadie (Ottawa: Musée national du Canada, 1971). ...
... Tremblay, Famille et parenté. 140. Couturier and Johnston. ...
... The list also included Cocagne Island, the Bouctouche Dune and Saint-Thomas-de-Kent.148 The provincial and federal governments signed an agreement for the creation of Kouchibouguac Park that ultimately led to the expropriation of 260 families’ land between ...
... He attributed this fragmentation to the family structure of the communities. In a letter sent to Bishop Plessis in 1818, he noted that “each village was populated in principle only by families that were 155. ...
... The remarkable stability of the geographical distribution of families as well as the density of place names based on surnames is indicative of the extent of this phenomenon which underlies how space is structured throughout the area.”157 The dislocation ...
... This is the case of Kingston and Liverpool (Rexton and Richibucto), but also of Galloway, where many Scottish families settled, Trafalgar and Balla Philip. Among the Acadians, we find Louisbourg (Saint-Norbert), Brest, Normandie and Bretagneville. ...