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Dalhousie, New Brunswick

Dalhousie
Town
Official seal of Dalhousie
Seal
Dalhousie is located in New Brunswick
Dalhousie
Dalhousie
Location within New Brunswick.
Coordinates: 48°03′58″N 66°22′08″W / 48.066°N 66.369°W / 48.066; -66.369
Country Canada
Province New Brunswick
County Restigouche
Parish Dalhousie
Founded 1827
Town Status 1905
Electoral Districts
Federal

Madawaska—Restigouche
Provincial Dalhousie-Restigouche East
Government
 • Type Dalhousie Town Council
 • Mayor Normand Gerard Pelletier
Area
 • Land 14.51 km2 (5.60 sq mi)
Population (2011)
 • Total 3,512
 • Density 242.1/km2 (627/sq mi)
 • Pop 2006-2011 Decrease 4.5%
 • Dwellings 1,816
Time zone AST (UTC−4)
 • Summer (DST) ADT (UTC−3)
Postal code(s) E8C
Area code(s) 506
Highways Route 134
Route 275
Route 11
Website www.dalhousie.ca
Dalhousie Island Lighthouse
Dalhousie, New Brunswick is located in New Brunswick
Dalhousie, New Brunswick
New Brunswick
Location Dalhousie
New Brunswick
Canada
Coordinates 48°4′20.36″N 66°21′51.41″W / 48.0723222°N 66.3642806°W / 48.0723222; -66.3642806
Year first constructed 1886 (first)
1905 (second)
Year first lit 1974 (current)
Deactivated 1905 (first)
1974 (second)
Foundation concrete basement (corrent)
Construction metal skeletal tower (current)
wooden tower (first and second)
Tower shape square prism skeletal tower with daymark and light (current)
square prism tower (first)
octagonal frustum tower with balcony and lantern (second)
Markings / pattern red and white daymark with green square at the center (current)
white tower (first)
white tower, red lantern (second)
Height 19 metres (62 ft)
Focal height 21 metres (69 ft)
Light source solar power
Range 15 nautical miles (28 km; 17 mi)
Characteristic Fl W 5s.
Admiralty number H1620
CHS number CCG 1344
NGA number 7152
ARLHS number CAN-909
Managing agent Canadian Coast Guard

Dalhousie is a Canadian town located in Restigouche County, New Brunswick.

Dalhousie is the shire town of Restigouche County and dates European settlement to 1800. The Town of Dalhousie has been through some very distinct periods between its founding in 1825 and today. Prior to 1825, few showed much interest in the northern part of the province, but in that year the Great Miramichi Fire raged through central New Brunswick and into Maine, destroying the forests that were the mainstay of the province's economy. Lumbermen looked north to the great pine stands of the Nipisiguit and the Restigouche.

Dalhousie, located at the mouth of the Restigouche, began to grow. Soon it was a booming town and became the Shiretown of the newly created Restigouche County. Lumber and fishing were the main interests, although agriculture was more important in the early days than it is today.

Dalhousie was the leading town of the area until the arrival of the railway following confederation. With steep hills at its back, the Intercolonial Railway (ICR) bypassed the town while its nearby rival, Campbellton, surged ahead. That would be the situation until the late 1920s, when Dalhousie was picked as the site of a giant paper mill. The International Paper Company built what was then one of the largest newsprint mills in the world and the town changed forever. From 1929 on, the mill would dominate life in Dalhousie. For a time, the deepwater port attracted ships to move ore from the Bathurst Mining Camp deposits (e.g. Heath Steele Mines) to various offshore smelters.

Parents of some of our older citizens would tell their children that, in some ways, it was a better town before the mill. Certainly the mill is one of the town's most imposing features. It occupies much of one side of the main street, blocking access to and even views of the shore. Dalhousie has been called "a waterfront town without a waterfront." The mill also meant that the town had a high average income. It brought a new and different kind of prosperity. Still, Dalhousie was in the situation of many one-industry towns – dependent on the success of that one main sector of its economy.

The hilly town site was first laid out in 1826 with the first settlement established by Scottish settlers in 1827. It was named after the 9th Earl of Dalhousie, who was then the governor of both Upper Canada and Lower Canada. Some Acadians displaced in the Great Upheaval also settled in Dalhousie, and to this day there is a very close balance between anglophones and francophones. Many of the present residents can trace ancestry back to the original European settlers in the region. The Eel River Bar First Nation, adjacent to Dalhousie, is home to many Micmac natives, who were the original residents of the region.


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