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| === Introduction ===
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| You will need some understanding of the historical events that affected your family and the records about them. Learning about wars, governments, laws, migrations, and religious trends may help you understand political boundaries, family movements, and settlement patterns. Records of these events, such as land and military documents, may mention your family.
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| Your ancestors’ lives will be more interesting if you learn about the history they may have been part of. For example, in a history you might learn about the events that occurred the year your great-grandparents were married.
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| ==History== | | ==History== |
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| At the end of the Great Depression the New Brunswick standard of living was much below the Canadian average.<br> | | At the end of the Great Depression the New Brunswick standard of living was much below the Canadian average.<br> |
| [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Brunswick] | | [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Brunswick] |
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| | ===Acadia=== |
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| | *New Brunswick is a province in eastern Canada. Its capital is '''Fredericton'''. |
| | *The territory was originally part of '''Acadia''', which France lost to Great Britain after the Seven Years War (French and Indian War). |
| | *Following the final defeat of the French in 1755, more than '''5,000 Acadians''' were forced into exile from their lands by the British. Some of them escaped to what was then a remote and relatively uninhabited coastline along the Gulf of St. Lawrence and Baie des Chaleurs, where these Acadian settlements grew and thrived. Today, this region is known as '''the Acadian Peninsula.''' |
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| | ===Nova Scotia=== |
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| | *Before 1763-1784, New Brunswick was part of '''Nova Scotia'''. The territory now New Brunswick, was Sunbury County and the northern portion of Cumberland County in Nova Scotia, and governed from Halifax. |
| | *When New Brunswick was established in 1784 it was divided into eight counties. As the population grew the original counties were divided and new counties set up. |
| | *The '''counties are subdivided into civil parishes.'''<ref name="history" /> |
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| | ===Loyalist Colonization=== |
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| | *In 1783, refugees '''loyal to the Britain (loyalists)''' began to colonize the area. They were relocating after the American Revolution and came from as far south as Georgia and as far north as Massachusetts. |
| | *These refugees were not all of British origin, but included '''German, Dutch and Black Loyalists'''. |
| | *The '''Black Loyalists''' included a number of '''freed slaves''', but there were a small number of loyalists who brought their slaves with them to New Brunswick. |
| | *By 1785, so many refugees had landed and settled at the mouth of the St. John River that the King granted a charter to the new City of Saint John, the '''first incorporated city in Canada.'''<ref name="history" /> |
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| | ===Later Settlers=== |
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| | *In the 1840s, '''Scottish and Irish''' settlers began to settle in Saint John and the Miramichi River region, as a result of the '''Potato Famine'''. |
| | *Later immigration included a few hundred '''Danish''' settlers in the 1870s, whose communities in Victoria County exist today. |
| | *A significant number of '''Jewish immigrants''' came through the Port of Saint John from the 1890s to the beginning of the First World War. A number of these immigrants remained to form Jewish communities in '''Saint John, Moncton and Fredericton'''. |
| | *'''Italian, Greek, Lebanese, Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese, Indian, Pakistani and African Canadian communities''' have been established over the past century in the major cities.<ref name="history"> New Brunswick, History, Government of New Brunswick, https://www2.gnb.ca/content/gnb/en/gateways/about_nb/history.html, accessed 6 November 2020.</ref> |
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| == Timeline == | | == Timeline == |