Hampstead Parish, New Brunswick

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Hampstead
Location within Queens County, New Brunswick.
Location within Queens County, New Brunswick.
Coordinates: 45°50′N 64°35′W / 45.84°N 64.59°W / 45.84; -64.59
Country Canada
Province New Brunswick
CountyQueens County
Erected1786
Area
  Land212.39 km2 (82.00 sq mi)
Population
 (2021)[1]
  Total
288
  Density1.4/km2 (3.6/sq mi)
  Change 2016-2021
Increase 4.0%
  Dwellings
167
Time zoneUTC-4 (AST)
  Summer (DST)UTC-3 (ADT)

Hampstead is a geographic parish in Queens County, New Brunswick, Canada.[2]

Prior to the 2023 governance reform, for governance purposes it was divided between CFB Gagetown and the local service district of Hampstead,[3] which was a member of Capital Region Service Commission (RSC11).[4] The Saint John River islands are not part of the local service district.

The parish was probably named for Hempstead, New York,[5] source of some of the Loyalist settlers of the parish.

History

Hampstead was erected in 1786 as one of the county's original parishes.[6]

In 1838 the rear of the parish was included in the newly erected Petersville Parish.[7]

In 1895 the eastern half of Long Island was transferred to Wickham Parish.[8]

New Brunswick's last surviving African Canadian community, Elm Hill, was established here in 1806.

Boundaries

Hampstead Parish is bounded[2][9][10][11]

  • on the east by the Saint John River;
  • on the southeast by the Kings County line;
  • on the southwest and northwest within CFB Gagetown by a line at the end of Olinville Road and running[a] along Yorkshire Road to the northwestern line of a grant to John Short, east of the junction with the road to Vincent, then northeasterly and northwesterly along grants belonging to Sylvanus Haviland, James Corbett, and Henry Appleby to the Lawfield Road, then northeasterly along Lawfield Road to the southernmost corner of a grant to Thomas T. Hewlett at the corner of Kerr Road, meeting a line running south 52º west,[b] from the southwestern corner of a grant to Nathaniel Jarvis, then following the line out of CFB Gagetown;
  • on the north by the southern line of the Jarvis grant, part of which forms the southern boundary of the village of Gagetown;
  • including Spoon Island, Upper Musquash Island, and the western half of Long Island.

Communities

Communities at least partly within the parish;[9][10][11] bold indicates an incorporated municipality; italics indicate a community expropriated for CFB Gagetown

  • Central Hampstead
  • Dunns Corner
  • Elm Hill
  • Hamilton Mountain
  • Hampstead
  • Hibernia
  • Inchby
  • Lower Gagetown
  • McAlpines
  • New Jerusalem
  • Pleasant Villa
  • Quarries
  • Queenstown
  • Summer Hill

Bodies of water

Bodies of water[c] at least partly in the parish:[9][10][11]

  • Little River
  • Saint John River
    • Lawson Passage
  • Palmer Creek
  • Fanning Lake
  • Rabbit Lake
  • Long Island Lake
  • Otnabog Lake

Islands

Islands in the parish:[9][10][11]

  • Long Island
  • Spoon Island
  • Upper Musquash Island

Other notable places

Parks, historic sites, and other noteworthy places in the parish.[9][10][11]

Demographics

Access Routes

Highways and numbered routes that run through the parish, including external routes that start or finish at the parish limits:[18]

See also

Notes

References

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