List of National Historic Sites of Canada in New Brunswick

This is a list of National Historic Sites (French: Lieux historiques nationaux) in the province of New Brunswick. There are 63 National Historic Sites designated in New Brunswick, as of 2018, eight of which are administered by Parks Canada (identified below by the beaver icon ).[1][2] The first National Historic Sites to be designated in New Brunswick were Fort Beauséjour – Fort Cumberland and Fort Gaspareaux in 1920. However, the first historical property in the national park system was Fort Howe National Park in Saint John, created in 1914.

Numerous National Historic Events also occurred across New Brunswick, and are identified at places associated with them, using the same style of federal plaque which marks National Historic Sites. Several National Historic Persons are commemorated throughout the province in the same way. The markers do not indicate which designation—a Site, Event, or Person—a subject has been given.

This list uses names designated by the national Historic Sites and Monuments Board, which may differ from other names for these sites.

National Historic Sites

Site[1]Date(s)DesignatedLocationDescriptionImage
1 Chipman Hill[3]1854 (c.) (completed)1984Saint John
45°16′26.66″N 66°3′47.43″W / 45.2740722°N 66.0631750°W / 45.2740722; -66.0631750 (1 Chipman Hill)
Symbolic of upper-middle class urban housing in Saint John during the mid-19th century; features a variety of decorative trompe-l'œil wall and ceiling murals
Arts Building[4]1827 (completed)1951Fredericton
45°56′53.93″N 66°38′28.65″W / 45.9483139°N 66.6412917°W / 45.9483139; -66.6412917 (Arts Building)
A classically inspired masonry structure at the University of New Brunswick; the oldest university building in Canada still in continuous use
Augustine Mound[5]500 (c.) BCE (established)1975Metepenagiag Mi'kmaq Nation
46°55′48.37″N 65°49′20.06″W / 46.9301028°N 65.8222389°W / 46.9301028; -65.8222389 (Augustine Mound)
A circular ritual site surrounding a burial mound; a sacred site representative of Mi'kmaq spirituality, exhibiting Adena burial rituals
Beaubears Island Shipbuilding [6]1790 (established)2001Miramichi
46°58′39″N 65°33′42″W / 46.977535°N 65.561670°W / 46.977535; -65.561670 (Beaubears Island Shipbuilding)
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)1975Lincoln
45°54′49.39″N 66°35′14.05″W / 45.9137194°N 66.5872361°W / 45.9137194; -66.5872361 (Belmont House / R. Wilmot Home)
A large neoclassical country house associated with Robert Duncan Wilmot, a Father of Confederation
Boishébert [8]1756 (camp established)1930Miramichi
46°58′11.17″N 65°34′42.99″W / 46.9697694°N 65.5786083°W / 46.9697694; -65.5786083 (Boishébert)
The site of a camp at Wilson's Point and additionally comprising most of the adjacent Beaubears Island where Acadians, under the leadership of Charles Deschamps de Boishébert, sought refuge from 1756 to 1760 during the Expulsion of the Acadians
Carleton Martello Tower [9]1815 (completed)1930Saint John
45°15′7.53″N 66°4′33.54″W / 45.2520917°N 66.0759833°W / 45.2520917; -66.0759833 (Carleton Martello Tower)
A martello tower located across the harbour from downtown Saint John, built to protect the city from an American land attack during the War of 1812; representative of the type of coastal defence used by the British during the Napoleonic era
Chandler House / Rocklyn[10]1831 (completed)1971Dorchester
45°53′54.78″N 64°30′54.56″W / 45.8985500°N 64.5151556°W / 45.8985500; -64.5151556 (Chandler House / Rocklyn)
A Classical Revival–style house associated with Edward Barron Chandler, a Father of Confederation
Charlotte County Court House[11]1840 (completed)1981St. Andrews
45°4′32.47″N 67°2′57.26″W / 45.0756861°N 67.0492389°W / 45.0756861; -67.0492389 (Charlotte County Court House)
A simple wood-frame courthouse with a pedimented portico; the best preserved example in New Brunswick of the typical mid-19th century Maritime courthouse
Christ Church Anglican[12]1856 (completed)1990Maugerville
45°52′17.08″N 66°26′46.72″W / 45.8714111°N 66.4463111°W / 45.8714111; -66.4463111 (Christ Church Anglican)
A wooden church illustrative of the eccclesiological phase of Gothic Revival architecture in Canada
Christ Church Cathedral[13]1853 (completed)1981Fredericton
45°57′27″N 66°38′5.86″W / 45.95750°N 66.6349611°W / 45.95750; -66.6349611 (Christ Church Cathedral)
A cathedral whose spire is a landmark in the historic centre of Fredericton; one of the best examples of ecclesiological Gothic Revival architecture in Canada, and one which established an architectural pattern followed in the design of many churches in 19th-century Canada
Connell House[14]1840 (completed)1975Woodstock
46°9′3.96″N 67°34′30.36″W / 46.1511000°N 67.5751000°W / 46.1511000; -67.5751000 (Connell House)
A Greek Revival wooden mansion distinguished by a double-height columned verandah; in the early 19th century, large homes inspired by classical temples were common in the United States, but comparatively rare in Canada
Denys Fort / Habitation[15]1600s (c.) (established)1952Shippagan
47°52′52.75″N 64°35′22.02″W / 47.8813194°N 64.5894500°W / 47.8813194; -64.5894500 (Denys Fort / Habitation)
Archaeological remains of a 17th-century French trading post; became a common resort for French fishermen, fur traders and missionaries, and a trading point between them and the Micmac Indians; the Jesuits operated a mission for the inhabitants living there
Fort Beauséjour – Fort Cumberland [16]1751 (established)1920Aulac
45°51′52.49″N 64°17′29.62″W / 45.8645806°N 64.2915611°W / 45.8645806; -64.2915611 (Fort Beauséjour – Fort Cumberland)
A star-shaped fort that defended French interests in the Chignecto isthmus; after its capture by the British in 1755, the fort repulsed an attack by American revolutionary sympathizers in 1776, which contributed to keeping Nova Scotia in the British Empire
Fort Charnisay[17]1645 (established)1923Saint John
45°15′46.04″N 66°4′32.63″W / 45.2627889°N 66.0757306°W / 45.2627889; -66.0757306 (Fort Charnisay)
The site of a succession of military forts between 1645 and 1775 due to its strategic position on the western edge of the city's harbour and overlooking the Saint John River; today the site is marked by a cairn and a boulder
Fort Gaspareaux [18]1751 (established)1920Strait Shores
46°2′34.4″N 64°4′14.7″W / 46.042889°N 64.070750°W / 46.042889; -64.070750 (Fort Gaspareaux)
An archaeological site containing traces of a French fort; symbolic of the struggle between France and Britain for North America in the 1750s
Fort Howe[19]1777 (established)1914/1966Saint John
45°16′36″N 66°04′23″W / 45.27667°N 66.07306°W / 45.27667; -66.07306 (Fort Howe)
The partial reconstruction of a fort that guarded Saint John from the American Revolutionary War through to the War of 1812; the fort's designation as a National Historic Park in 1914 marked the beginning of Canada's emerging system of National Historic Sites. Fort Howe was in the national park system from 1914 to 1930, when it was given to the city. It was later designated a National Historic Site in 1966 outside the park system.
Fort Jemseg [fr][20]1659 (established)1927Jemseg
45°46′6.72″N 66°7′56.01″W / 45.7685333°N 66.1322250°W / 45.7685333; -66.1322250 (Fort Jemseg)
Site of an English trading post, captured by the Dutch in 1674 under Captain Jurriaen Aernouts, who named the country New Holland, claiming possession for the Prince of Orange
Fort La Tour [fr][21]1631 (established)1923Saint John
45°16′21.76″N 66°4′20.18″W / 45.2727111°N 66.0722722°W / 45.2727111; -66.0722722 (Fort La Tour)
An archaeological site containing the remains of a 17th-century fortified fur-trading post established by Charles de Saint-Étienne de la Tour; one of the earliest centres of the French fur trade with the Aboriginal peoples in the region
Fort Nashwaak (Naxoat)[22]1691 (established)1924Fredericton
45°57′40.87″N 66°37′36.07″W / 45.9613528°N 66.6266861°W / 45.9613528; -66.6266861 (Fort Nashwaak (Naxoat))
The site of a French fort that had once sat at the mouth of the Nashwaak River where it meets the Saint John River; the base of many raids against New England, one of which resulted in the Siege of Pemaquid in 1696
Fort Nerepis[23]1659 (fort established)1930Grand Bay–Westfield
45°22′12″N 66°14′3.12″W / 45.37000°N 66.2342000°W / 45.37000; -66.2342000 (Fort Nerepis)
A cairn marking the approximate site of a fortified Maliseet stronghold, and then a small French fort, at the confluence of the Nerepis River and Saint John River; the remains of the fortifications and their precise locations have never been found
Fredericton City Hall[24]1876 (completed)1984Fredericton
45°57′48.87″N 66°38′35.29″W / 45.9635750°N 66.6431361°W / 45.9635750; -66.6431361 (Fredericton City Hall)
A three-storey, Second Empire style town hall; the oldest municipal hall in Atlantic Canada still used for civic administration
Fredericton Military Compound[25][26]1784 (established)1960Fredericton
45°57′45.58″N 66°38′26.64″W / 45.9626611°N 66.6407333°W / 45.9626611; -66.6407333 (Fredericton Military Compound)
An important grouping of British colonial-era military buildings, which has served as premises for both military and government institutions for over 200 years
Free Meeting House [fr][27]1821 (completed)1990Moncton
46°5′38.59″N 64°46′26.52″W / 46.0940528°N 64.7740333°W / 46.0940528; -64.7740333 (Free Meeting House)
A simple wood-frame meeting house that, as the only local place of worship at the time, was used by all denominations; a symbol of religious tolerance in the Maritimes
Greenock Church[28]1824 (completed)1994St. Andrews
45°4′36.8″N 67°3′13.18″W / 45.076889°N 67.0536611°W / 45.076889; -67.0536611 (Greenock Church)
A church noteworthy for its role in the development of Presbyterianism in New Brunswick; an excellent example of the Palladian style in Canadian church architecture
Hammond House[29]1889 (completed)1990Sackville
45°53′58.65″N 64°22′37.16″W / 45.8996250°N 64.3769889°W / 45.8996250; -64.3769889 (Hammond House)
A house built for artist John A. Hammond and now located on the campus of Mount Allison University; an excellent example of the Queen Anne Revival Style in Canadian domestic architecture
Hartland Covered Bridge[30]1921 (completed)1980Hartland
46°17′47.77″N 67°31′50.65″W / 46.2966028°N 67.5307361°W / 46.2966028; -67.5307361 (Hartland Covered Bridge)
A wooden covered bridge crossing the Saint John River; the longest existing covered bridge in the world
Imperial / Bi-Capitol Theatre[31]1913 (completed)1985Saint John
45°16′21.82″N 66°3′27.82″W / 45.2727278°N 66.0577278°W / 45.2727278; -66.0577278 (Imperial / Bi-Capitol Theatre)
An early 20th-century theatre facing onto King's Square; a nationally significant example of a theatre built specifically for live performances
La Coupe Dry Dock [fr] [32]1700s (c.) (established)1933Aulac
45°54′57″N 64°16′01″W / 45.915908°N 64.266962°W / 45.915908; -64.266962 (La Coupe Dry Dock)
Site may represent 18th-century Acadian construction
Loyalist House[33]1817 (completed)1958Saint John
45°16′28.42″N 66°3′40.51″W / 45.2745611°N 66.0612528°W / 45.2745611; -66.0612528 (Loyalist House)
An excellent example of New England–style Federal architecture, and representative of the houses built by prosperous United Empire Loyalists; one of the oldest residences in the city and a survivor of the Great Fire, the house was maintained by five generations of the same family until 1959
Marine Hospital[34]1831 (completed)1989Miramichi
47°1′20.07″N 65°30′37.22″W / 47.0222417°N 65.5103389°W / 47.0222417; -65.5103389 (Marine Hospital)
A sandstone building with a domed cupola, overlooking the Miramichi River; the oldest surviving marine hospital in Canada
Marysville Cotton Mill[35]1885 (completed)1986Fredericton
45°58′41.65″N 66°35′19.69″W / 45.9782361°N 66.5888028°W / 45.9782361; -66.5888028 (Marysville Cotton Mill)
A four-storey, red-brick cotton mill building with a central tower; representative of the brick pier mills that were common in the Canadian textile industry
Marysville Historic District[36]1840 (c.) (established)1993Fredericton
45°58′44.01″N 66°35′17.44″W / 45.9788917°N 66.5881778°W / 45.9788917; -66.5881778 (Marysville Historic District)
A former industrial community on the banks of the Nashwaak River; a rare surviving example of a 19th-century, single-industry company town with both its plant and company housing intact
McAdam Railway Station (Canadian Pacific)[37]1901 (completed)1976McAdam
45°35′20.4″N 67°19′48″W / 45.589000°N 67.33000°W / 45.589000; -67.33000 (McAdam Railway Station (Canadian Pacific))
A stone, Chateau-style railway station and hotel; associated with the period of the rapid growth of the Canadian Pacific Railway and a rare surviving example of a combined station and hotel
Meductic Indian Village / Fort Meductic[38]1600s (c.)1924Lakeland Ridges
45°35′20.4″N 67°19′48″W / 45.589000°N 67.33000°W / 45.589000; -67.33000 (Meductic Indian Village / Fort Meductic)
The principal settlement of the Maliseet in the 17th century, and an important fur trading centre; the construction of the Mactaquac Dam in 1968 flooded the site, and the cairn marking the site was moved to nearby Fort Meductic Road
Minister's Island[39]1889 (estate established)1996St. Andrews
45°35′20.4″N 67°19′48″W / 45.589000°N 67.33000°W / 45.589000; -67.33000 (Minister's Island)
The picturesque summer estate and gentleman's farm of William Cornelius Van Horne on a 280-hectare (690-acre) island in Passamaquoddy Bay
Minister's Island Pre-contact Sites[40]1000 (c.) BCE (established)1978St. Andrews
45°35′20.4″N 67°19′48″W / 45.589000°N 67.33000°W / 45.589000; -67.33000 (Minister's Island Pre-contact Sites)
Archaeological sites containing the remains of four houses and a shell midden originating from a coastal winter settlement
Miscou Island Lighthouse[41]1856 (completed)1974Miscou Island
48°0′32.4″N 64°29′27.6″W / 48.009000°N 64.491000°W / 48.009000; -64.491000 (Miscou Island Lighthouse)
One of the few remaining wooden, octagonal, tapered lighthouses in Canada; among the oldest in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence region
Monument Lefebvre [42]1856 (completed)1994Memramcook
45°58′45.8″N 64°33′59.98″W / 45.979389°N 64.5666611°W / 45.979389; -64.5666611 (Monument Lefebvre)
Built in memory of Camille Lefebvre, who founded the first French language institution to confer university degrees in Atlantic Canada; now serves as an Acadian cultural centre
Number 2 Mechanics' Volunteer Company Engine House[43]1841 (completed)1995Saint John
45°16′24.56″N 66°3′24.61″W / 45.2734889°N 66.0568361°W / 45.2734889; -66.0568361 (Number 2 Mechanics' Volunteer Company Engine House)
The oldest remaining fire hall in Canada built to house hand-operated pumper fire engines; symbolic of the early phase in fire fighting in Canada when volunteer fire companies were the primary line of defence against fires in Victorian-era cities
Old Government House[44]1828 (completed)1958Fredericton
45°57′56.52″N 66°39′21.36″W / 45.9657000°N 66.6559333°W / 45.9657000; -66.6559333 (Old Government House)
The stone Palladian-style official residence of the Lieutenant Governor; the location of a historic 1866 meeting between Governor Arthur Gordon and Premier Albert James Smith which paved the way for the colony's entry into Confederation
Ordnance Building[45]1842 (built)2015Saint John
45°15′55″N 66°03′15″W / 45.265366°N 66.054256°W / 45.265366; -66.054256
Rare colonial-era military ordnance building, it survived the Great Fire of 1877
Our Lady of the Assumption Cathedral[46]1939–40 (built)2017Moncton
46°05′27″N 64°46′54″W / 46.09083°N 64.78167°W / 46.09083; -64.78167
Built as a symbol of the achievements and resilience of Acadians, embodies the final phase of the Acadian renaissance; recounts their history in decorative elements and is built combining styles of Art Deco, Gothic Revival and Romanesque
Oxbow[47]1000 BCE (c.) (community established)1982Metepenagiag Mi'kmaq Nation
46°56′19.6″N 65°48′40.18″W / 46.938778°N 65.8111611°W / 46.938778; -65.8111611 (Oxbow)
A site where stratified archaeological resources are buried in the silts and gravels of the Little Southwest Miramichi River bank; a unique cultural record of a 3000-year Mi’kmaq community
Partridge Island Quarantine Station[48]1830 (established)1974Saint John
45°14′21.2″N 66°3′11.8″W / 45.239222°N 66.053278°W / 45.239222; -66.053278 (Partridge Island Quarantine Station)
One of two major quarantine stations in Canada in the 19th century, established to protect the citizenry from contagious diseases carried by passengers and crews of in-coming ships
Prince William Streetscape[49]1877 (construction after Great Fire)1981Saint John
45°16′16.95″N 66°3′42.59″W / 45.2713750°N 66.0618306°W / 45.2713750; -66.0618306 (Prince William Streetscape)
A concentration of architecturally notable late 19th-century public and commercial buildings within a two-block area
Rothesay Railway Station (European and North American)[50]1860 (completed)1976Rothesay
45°23′21.8″N 65°59′57.07″W / 45.389389°N 65.9991861°W / 45.389389; -65.9991861 (Rothesay Railway Station (European and North American))
A railway station with stationmaster's quarters on the second storey; commemorates the development of railways in the Maritimes and is a good surviving example of a number two standard station designed by the European and North American Railway
Saint John City Market[51]1876 (completed)1986Saint John
45°16′26.11″N 66°3′35.69″W / 45.2739194°N 66.0599139°W / 45.2739194; -66.0599139 (Saint John City Market)
A rare and notable surviving example of a 19th-century market building, illustrates the development of 19th-century market buildings in Canada; survived the Great Fire of 1877 due to its solid, fire-resistant design
Saint John County Court House[52]1829 (completed)1974Saint John
45°16′25.35″N 66°3′24.65″W / 45.2737083°N 66.0568472°W / 45.2737083; -66.0568472 (Saint John County Court House)
A neoclassical court house typical of early-19th-century, British public buildings in Canada; representative of the judicial system in the province
Seal Cove Smoked Herring Stands[53]1870 (established)1995Grand Manan Island
44°39′6.76″N 66°50′20.66″W / 44.6518778°N 66.8390722°W / 44.6518778; -66.8390722 (Seal Cove Smoked Herring Stands)
54 wooden buildings surrounding a cove bounded by breakwaters; a cultural landscape once typical of the Maritimes, but increasingly rare today, and evocative of the Atlantic herring fishery
St. Andrews Blockhouse [54]1813 (completed)1962St Andrews
45°4′37.51″N 67°3′42.81″W / 45.0770861°N 67.0618917°W / 45.0770861; -67.0618917 (St. Andrews Blockhouse)
One of the few surviving Canadian examples of a War of 1812 blockhouse; built by the citizens of St. Andrews to protect the town from American raiders
St. Andrews Historic District[55]1783 (town founded)1962St Andrews
45°4′23.37″N 67°2′50.56″W / 45.0731583°N 67.0473778°W / 45.0731583; -67.0473778 (St. Andrews Historic District)
A grid of sixty blocks comprising the original part of the present town; a fine example of a town in Canada that still reflects an 18th-century British colonial town plan
St. Anne's Chapel of Ease[56]1847 (completed)1989Fredericton
45°57′40.01″N 66°38′54.36″W / 45.9611139°N 66.6484333°W / 45.9611139; -66.6484333 (St. Anne's Chapel of Ease)
A small Gothic Revival stone church reflective of the influence of the principles of the Cambridge Camden Society in Canada
St. John's Anglican Church / Stone Church[57]1826 (completed)1989Saint John
45°16′34.1″N 66°3′41.67″W / 45.276139°N 66.0615750°W / 45.276139; -66.0615750 (St. John's Anglican Church / Stone Church)
An early Anglican church; one of the earliest examples of this first phase of the Gothic Revival style in Canada, known as Romantic Gothic Revival
St. Luke's Anglican Church[58]1833 (completed)1994Quispamsis
45°26′38.19″N 65°59′17.33″W / 45.4439417°N 65.9881472°W / 45.4439417; -65.9881472 (St. Luke's Anglican Church)
A wooden church that represents one of the best examples of an Anglican church in Canada that reflects the architectural traditions of James Gibbs and Christopher Wren
St. Paul's United Church (Fredericton)[59]1886 (completed)1990Fredericton
45°57′35.5″N 66°38′43.38″W / 45.959861°N 66.6453833°W / 45.959861; -66.6453833 (St. Paul's United Church)
A former Presbyterian, now United, church; it is an excellent example of the High Victorian Gothic Revival style in Canada
St. Stephen Post Office[60]1887 (completed)1983St. Stephen
45°11′33.05″N 67°16′37.67″W / 45.1925139°N 67.2771306°W / 45.1925139; -67.2771306 (St. Stephen Post Office)
A Romanesque Revival building constructed for the local post office, customs offices and internal revenue offices, and having served as the town hall since 1965, it is a fine example of the small urban post offices designed by Thomas Fuller
Tilley House[61]1810 (completed)1965Arcadia
45°46′57.77″N 66°8′36.03″W / 45.7827139°N 66.1433417°W / 45.7827139; -66.1433417 (Tilley House)
A clapboard house that was the birthplace and boyhood home of Sir Samuel Leonard Tilley, a Father of Confederation
Tonge's Island[62]1678 (established as capital)1925Sackville
45°51′11.18″N 64°16′39.97″W / 45.8531056°N 64.2777694°W / 45.8531056; -64.2777694 (Tonge's Island)
A settlement established in 1676 by Michel Leneuf de la Vallière, which served as the capital of Acadia from 1678 to 1684
Trinity Church and Rectory[63]1789 (completed)1977Kingston
45°30′9.45″N 65°58′32.8″W / 45.5026250°N 65.975778°W / 45.5026250; -65.975778 (Trinity Church and Rectory)
The oldest surviving Anglican church in New Brunswick and a rare Maritimes example of a church and rectory surviving as a unit
William Brydone Jack Observatory[64]1851 (completed)1954Fredericton
45°56′53.03″N 66°38′26.53″W / 45.9480639°N 66.6407028°W / 45.9480639; -66.6407028 (William Brydone Jack Observatory)
A wooden, octagonal tower that was the first astronomical observatory in Canada; was equipped with the best instruments of its day, and helped determine the longitude of places in New Brunswick and correct errors in international boundaries
Wolastoq[65] (Saint John River)2011Section of the Saint John River between Edmundston and the Bay of Fundy
45°16′0″N 66°4′0″W / 45.26667°N 66.06667°W / 45.26667; -66.06667 (Wolastoq)
A river that played an important role in 10,000 years of Maliseet history and 400 years of European settlement
York County Court House[66]1858 (completed)1980Fredericton
45°57′39.58″N 66°38′14.82″W / 45.9609944°N 66.6374500°W / 45.9609944; -66.6374500 (York County Court House)
The earliest surviving New Brunswick court house constructed of brick; represents the beginning of a trend towards the widespread use of brick and stone in public buildings in the province; combination of use as a market and court house is unique among surviving Maritime public buildings

Former National Historic Site

NameEstablishedDisbandedResult
Survival of the Acadians National Historic Site1978June 5, 1994Redesignated Monument Lefebvre National Historic Site, and continued as a national park system unit

See also

References