St. Stephen, New Brunswick

For the former provincial electoral district, see St. Stephen-Milltown (electoral district).
St. Stephen
Town
Motto: Canada's Chocolate Town
St. Stephen

Location within New Brunswick.

Coordinates: 45°12′N 67°17′W / 45.200°N 67.283°WCoordinates: 45°12′N 67°17′W / 45.200°N 67.283°W
Country  Canada
Province  New Brunswick
County Charlotte
Parish Saint Stephen
Founded 1604
Town 1871
Government
  Type Town Council
  Mayor John Quartermain
  Deputy Mayor John Ames
Area[1]
  Total 13.45 km2 (5.19 sq mi)
Population (2011)[1]
  Total 4,817
  Density 358.0/km2 (927/sq mi)
  Pop 2006-2011 Increase 0.8%
  Dwellings 2,256
Time zone AST (UTC-4)
  Summer (DST) ADT (UTC-3)
Postal code(s) E3L
Area code(s) 506
Highways
Route 1
Route 3
Route 170

Route 725
Route 740
NTS Map 021G03
GNBC Code DAZBZ
Website www.town.ststephen.nb.ca

This article is about the town, you may also want Saint Stephen Parish

St. Stephen (2011 population: 4,817) is a Canadian town in Charlotte County, New Brunswick, situated on the east bank of the St. Croix River around the intersection of New Brunswick Route 170 and the southern terminus of New Brunswick Route 3. The St. Croix River marks a section of the international boundary between the United States and Canada, forming a natural border between Calais, Maine and St. Stephen. U.S. Route 1 parallels the St. Croix river for a few miles, and is accessed from St. Stephen by three cross-border bridges.

History

The Passamaquoddy people were the first to make their home along the St. Croix River. They dispersed and hunted inland in the winter; in the summer, they gathered more closely together on the coast and islands, and primarily harvested seafood, including porpoise.[2] In 1604, French explorer Samuel de Champlain and his men spent a winter here. The Passamaquoddy were moved off their original lands repeatedly by European settlers since that time.

Raid on St. Stephen (1704)

During Queen Anne's War, in response to the French Raid on Deerfield, New Englander Major Benjamin Church raided the Acadian villages of Castine, Maine (then known as Penobscot). From the Raid on Castine, Maine, Church learned that Michel Chartier, who was granted the land of present-day St. Stephen, was building a fort at Passamaquoddy Bay. Church and his men arrived at the Passamaquoddy Bay on board the Province Galley, Gosport and Fearly and several other vessels.[3] Church travelled up the St. Croix River to St. Stephen and, on June 7, 1704, took Chartier by surprise and his family fled into the woods.[4] On June 13, Church reported they were destroying the crops of the Acadians and the Acadians and Natives fired upon Church’s troops and a three hour exchange ensued. Church killed and imprisoned Acadians and Natives, with the total number being 35. One of Church’s men was wounded. They pillaged and plundered the community.[5]

After the Raid on St. Stephen, Church moved on to raid other Acadian villages in the Raid on Grand Pré, the Raid on Piziquid, and the Raid on Chignecto.[6]

Controversy over building of railway to Houlton, Maine (1873−1875)

At the time of Confederation, there was a proposal to build a railway connecting St. Stephen to Houlton, Maine, along the St. Croix River. In 1870, the Legislature of New Brunswick passed an Act, authorising the County of Charlotte to issue debentures to pay a bonus of $15,000 to the Houlton Branch Railway Company, to encourage it to build the railway. The debenture could only be issued if authorised by a public meeting of the ratepayers of St. Stephen, who would assume the obligation of paying for the interest and principal of the debenture. A majority of the ratepayers of St. Stephen duly passed the necessary vote and the County issued the debenture. Some residents of St. Stephen who opposed the measure challenged the tax assessment in the Supreme Court of New Brunswick, arguing that the provincial Legislature lacked the constitutional authority to authorise a tax to support the building of an international railway, as that would intrude on the exclusive legislative authority of the Parliament of Canada.

In 1873, the Supreme Court of New Brunswick ruled that the provincial taxation statute was unconstitutional, because it intruded on federal jurisdiction over inter-jurisdictional railways.[7] The supporters of the railway measure appealed the case to the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council, at that time the court of last resort for Canada within the British Empire. The Judicial Committee, in the case of Dow v. Black, allowed the appeal and held that the taxation statute was within provincial authority.[8]

St. Stephen Incorporated

Officially incorporated as a town in 1871, five years later St. Stephen's business district was almost destroyed by fire when eighty buildings and 13 wharves burned.

Economy of the 20th century

The new Ganong chocolate factory.

Historically a lumber and ship building economy until the early part of the 1900s, by the end of World War II the town's main employers were the Ganong Bros. Limited chocolate company (established 1873, Canada's oldest candy company), and the second largest textile mill in Canada built in 1882 on the river where it operated with its own hydro-electric generating station, the Milltown Dam. Electricity generated by the Milltown Dam is also exported to the United States, connected to a 69,000 volt transmission circuit owned by the Eastern Maine Electric Cooperative, an electric utility serving Calais. In 1957, the textile mill closed but the confectionery maker remains a key employer.

Amalgamation

In the 1970s, the municipalities of St. Stephen and Milltown joined together to become what is now simply known as St. Stephen. For a short time, the town was called St. Stephen-Milltown, but the new name not having caught on, reverted to simply the Town of St. Stephen.

Chocolate Festival

Every August since 1985, the town plays host to the week-long Chocolate Fest, celebrating their rich and delicious heritage. That spotlight on the wonder of chocolate resulted in the opening of The Chocolate Museum in 1999 and its expansion in 2009. In 2000, St. Stephen was given the title of "Canada's Chocolate Town."

Demographics

Population

Historical Census Data - St. Stephen, New Brunswick[11]
YearPop.±%
19012,840    
19112,836−0.1%
19213,452+21.7%
19313,437−0.4%
19413,306−3.8%
YearPop.±%
19513,769+14.0%
19613,380−10.3%
19815,138+52.0%
19865,032−2.1%
1991 4,931−2.0%
YearPop.±%
1996 4,961+0.6%
2001 4,667−5.9%
2006 4,780+2.4%
2011 4,817+0.8%

Language

Canada Census Mother Tongue - St. Stephen, New Brunswick[11]
Census Total
English
French
English & French
Other
Year Responses Count Trend Pop % Count Trend Pop % Count Trend Pop % Count Trend Pop %
2011
4,710
4,510 Increase 0.2% 95.75% 100 Decrease 4.8% 2.12% 10 Increase n/a% 0.21% 90 Increase 20.0% 1.91%
2006
4,680
4,500 Increase 2.3% 96.15% 105 Decrease 16.0% 2.24% 0 Steady 0.0% 0.00% 75 Increase 275.0% 1.60%
2001
4,545
4,400 Decrease 5.6% 96.81% 125 Decrease 7.4% 2.75% 0 Decrease 100.0% 0.00% 20 Decrease 55.5% 0.44%
1996
4,855
4,660 n/a 95.98% 135 n/a 2.78% 15 n/a 0.31% 45 n/a 0.93%

Climate

The climate is temperate but greatly affected by the size of the Bay of Fundy. The bay is a cool body of water which acts as an air conditioner in the summer and diverts major snow storms in the winter. The bay never freezes. The average summer temperature is 22 °C with the average winter temperature being -3.9 °C.

International border

New Brunswick visitor information centre in St. Stephen's former Canadian Pacific Railway station.

The St. Croix River marks a section of the international boundary between the United States and Canada, forming a natural border between the towns on either side of the river bank. The government dock, which is more like a very small pier, is subject to a 22 foot tide, and the marine trade is minute for this reason.[12] Calais is connected to St. Stephen by the Ferry Point International Bridge and the Milltown International Bridge.

Until it was discontinued, passenger rail service was once housed in St. Stephen at the Canadian Pacific Railway station. The building now contains a New Brunswick visitor and tourist information centre. Woodland Rail operates a spur line between its pulp and paper plant in Baileyville, Maine and St. Stephen, where the New Brunswick Southern Railway takes Woodland freight to Saint John for wider distribution.

A lawsuit, Winner v. S.M.T. (Eastern) Limited, which ended in 1954, pitted the American owner of an intercity bus company against a Canadian company, for the right to pick up and drop off passengers on the route from Saint John to Bangor, Maine. The right of the American party was upheld. Acadian Lines bus service was discontinued due to low ticket sales in 2011.[13][14]

Residents of St. Stephen and Calais often regard their community as one place, cooperating in their fire departments and other community projects.[15] As evidence of the longtime friendship between the towns, during the War of 1812, the British military provided St. Stephen with a large supply of gunpowder for protection against the enemy Americans in Calais, but the town elders gave the gunpowder to Calais for its Fourth of July celebrations.[16]

For much of their history, both towns' fire departments have responded in tandem to any fire call on either side of the border.[17]

Construction began in 2008 on a third bridge connecting the two communities. The International Avenue Bridge was officially opened in January 2010.

Every year, the town co-hosts a weeklong International Festival with the neighbouring town of Calais, Maine.

Economy

The Ganong Company continues to be the town's most significant employer. Other employers with factories are located along Progress Avenue, and include flakeboard and resin manufacture, a machine shop, a bottler and a marine environmental remediation business.[18] The town has a wide variety of small businesses, a list of which can be found in the local business directory.[19]

St. Stephen, being a small town, has only two media organizations: a radio station and weekly newspaper. Radio station CHTD-FM, known as "The Tide", plays country music and offers regular news updates. Founded in 1865, the Saint Croix Courier is the town's weekly newspaper, and also publishes a weekend edition, the Courier Weekend. The Courier is one of the few papers in New Brunswick that is not owned by the Irving family.

St. Stephen has a number of primary and one secondary school, a public library, several churches, two museums, two community swimming pools, an enclosed hockey arena, a number of retirement homes, and a 44-bed hospital.[20] Federal government services are confined to Canada Post and the Customs and Border Agency. St. Andrews, some 30km distant, is the county seat, and thus is the location for the courthouse and gaol for the region.

Education

Education in St. Stephen includes 4 public schools and 2 private schools:

The town is also home to St. Stephen's University, a small private Christian university.

Sports

A hotbed of baseball interest, in 1934 the Boston Braves of baseball's National League played an exhibition game in St. Stephen against the local "Kiwanis" team. The enthusiastic fans in attendance numbered more than half the town's population. In 1939, the local baseball team won its ninth consecutive New Brunswick senior championship, topping off a decade of dominance in the sport at both the provincial and Maritime levels.

A building which housed the former Parsons Printing business suffered fire damage in May 2010. This building housed the first basketball court in Canada.[21]

Notable people

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 2011 Statistics Canada Census Profile: St. Stephen, New Brunswick
  2. http://www.nps.gov/acad/historyculture/ethnography.htm.
  3. The History of the Great Indian War, p. 262 Church's Book
  4. Griffith, E. From Migrant to Acadian. McGill-Queen’s University Press. 2005. P. 207
  5. THE Boston News-Letter No. 10, June 19–26, 1704, p. 2 as recorded in "An historical digest of the provincial press; being a collation of all items of personal and historic reference relating to American affairs printed in the newspapers of the provincial period beginning with the appearance of The present state of the New-English affairs, 1689, Publick occurrences, 1690, and the first issue of the Boston news-letter, 1704, and ending with the close of the revolution, 1783" p. 94 (See Boston News Letter)
  6. Benjamin Church, Thomas Church, Samuel Gardner Drake. The history of King Philip's war ; also of expeditions against the French and Indians in its Eastern parts of New England, in the years 1689, 1692, i696 AND 1704. With some account of the divine providence towards Col. Benjamin Church. pp. 262−270
  7. e Queen v. Dow (1873), 14 N.B.R. 300 (N.B. S.C.).
  8. Dow v. Black (1875), L.R. 6 P.C. 272, [1875] UKPC 17 (P.C.)
  9. "2006 Community Profiles". Canada 2006 Census. Statistics Canada. March 30, 2011. Retrieved 2014-04-20.
  10. "2001 Community Profiles". Canada 2001 Census. Statistics Canada. February 17, 2012. Retrieved 2014-04-20.
  11. 11.0 11.1 Statistics Canada: 1996, 2001, 2006, 2011 census
  12. marinas.com: "St Stephen Town Landing", consulted Oct 2014
  13. Gowan, Derwin (17 March 2010). Login required. Telegraph Journal. Retrieved 20 August 2011
  14. "Maine to Canada bus service to end". 16 February 2011. Retrieved 21 August 2011.
  15. "Town working on paving way to its future". The Telegraph-Journal, December 31, 2009.
  16. "PM opens new crossing". Saint Croix Courier, January 12, 2010.
  17. "After 35 Years the Favour Is Returned; Calais Firemen Borrow Canadian Truck". Bangor Daily News, October 23, 1970.
  18. Town of St. Stephen: Business Park
  19. Town of St. Stephen Business Directory
  20. Town of St Stephen: "Moving to St Stephen"
  21. http://telegraphjournal.canadaeast.com/rss/article/1067561 Parsons Printing Building Fire, Canada's First Basketball Court
  22. Acheson, T. W. "M'Coll, Duncan". Dictionary of Canadian Biography, Vol. 6. University of Toronto/Université Laval. Retrieved 3/5/2014. Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)

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