https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-sault-star/146188625/
Blaine Higgs 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
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first flight in canada 1
intelligencer 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Date | 1932 |
---|---|
Resigning leader | Wendell P. Jones |
Won by | Allison Dysart |
Ballots | 1 |
Candidates | 2 |
The New Brunswick Liberal Association held a leadership election on October 5, 1932, in Fredericton, New Brunswick, to elect a new leader for the party. The position was left vacant following former leader ....... Wendell P. Jones .....
https://newspapers.lib.unb.ca/serials/57/issues/14428/pages/109326
https://newspapers.lib.unb.ca/serials/57/issues/14401/pages/109112
https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-gazette/149605647/
The leadership election for the party took place on October 5, 1932. [1]
https://newspapers.lib.unb.ca/serials/57/issues/14304/pages/108338
https://newspapers.lib.unb.ca/serials/79/issues/19149/pages/143449
https://newspapers.lib.unb.ca/serials/57/issues/14373/pages/108890
Date | 1971 |
---|---|
Won by | Robert J. Higgins |
Ballots | 2 |
Candidates | 5 |
Rankin Wheary | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | October 7, 1918 | (aged 22)
Rankin Wheary (December 10, 1895 – October 7, 1918) was a Black Canadian man who served in World War I under the Canadian infantry.
Rankin Wheary was born in Woodstock, New Brunswick on December 10, 1895, to parents Wellington Wheary and Jessie McLaren. Wheary initially attended Woodstock's College School before leaving in 1912 following the death of his father a year prior. [1] On January 12, 1916, Wheary was enlisted at the Sussex Military Camp. [1] [2]
/ 1
Michelle Wedge | |
---|---|
Born | Michelle Lise Wedge December 1, 1967 |
Disappeared | July 2, 1975 (aged 7) Moncton, New Brunswick |
Status | Missing for 48 years, 11 months and 17 days |
Michelle Lise Wedge (born December 1, 1967) is a Canadian missing person who disappeared at the age of seven in Moncton, New Brunswick, on March 10, 2005.
Michelle Lise Wedge was born on December 1, 1967. [1]
source dump: 1 2 3 4 5 6 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24
Category:Missing Canadian children
Enclave | |
---|---|
Series | Fallout |
Most recent appearance | Fallout (2024) |
Location | United States |
The Enclave is a fictional _____ from the post-apocalyptic Fallout franchise.
source dump: 4 6 7 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56
Enclave views humans of the wasteland, whether they had been morphed into ghouls from the effects of radiation or not, as "impure" [1] * "use wastelanders as conscripted soldiers or slaves." [1] * "the Enclave thinks these humans should be killed off to make way for a clean America." [1] * vaults [1]
*government officials [2] *"The Enclave even directed Vault-Tec to orchestrate the experiments that became such a prevalent part of the franchise." [2] *Enclave was destroyed in the events of Fallout 3 [2]
*"what remained of the US government following the Great War of 2077" [3] *"They then show up once more in Fallout 3, with the same modus operandi for the East Coast." [3] *"They wielded powerful technology that afforded them technological supremacy over other warring factions, but it wasn't enough for them to survive." [3] *"At the end of Fallout 3 and its Broken Steel DLC, the Enclave were wiped out on the East Coast" [3]
*Appears in Fallout 76 as a faction [4] *"It provides members with access to three Nuclear Sites and various other perks." [4] *"pre-Great War military junta" [4] *"Before the Great War, the faction was operated by military generals and the president of the United States, functioning as a pseudo-government." [4]
*"The closest thing to a continuation of the United States government after the fall of the nuclear bomb." [5] *"one of the most villainous groups in the Fallout franchise." [5] *"military might, stockpiles of weapons, xenophobic views, and signature prototype power armor." [5] *"Known to have had chapters inhabiting both the East coast and West coast." [5] *"the Enclave were thought to have been long gone by the time of Amazon's Fallout series, at least in the west." [5] *"However, one of the earliest moments in the series proves that isn't the case, as the scientist Dr. Wilzig defects from the organization early on." *"While the organization doesn't get much time on-screen, it's clear that the Enclave have some sort of hidden base still very much active somewhere within walking distance of the L.A. ruins." *The Fallout series' own Dogmeat (CX404). "Part of an Enclave breeding program, CX404 was saved by Dr. Wilzig despite not meeting the weight quota for healthy candidates in the program." [5] "Later, he's called Dogmeat by The Ghoul." [5]
*"That revelation, along with the corporation’s many other atrocities, turned it (Vault-Tec) into the franchise’s greatest villain." "But what does that mean for the organization that previously held that title, The Enclave?" [6] *"The evil agency has been the primary antagonist of multiple Fallout video games, and The Enclave’s own past actions seem to make it a natural foe of Vault-Tec. Each group wants to rule the world in its own image. But if they are enemies, how did the evil masterminds at Vault-Tec let The Enclave get ahold of its cold fusion technology on Fallout?" [6] *"Of all the factions featured in Fallout‘s first season, The Enclave was the least explored. But video game fans know all about the anti-communist, paramilitary organization." [6] *"Their heinous actions for more than two hundred years are why everyone on the Prime Video series had such animosity towards the authoritarian, genocidal entity." [6] *"origins date back to before The Great War." [6] *"Began as a powerful deep state within the U.S. government." [6] *"Members included some of the highest-ranking military, political, and corporate officials. (It even included Presidents)" [6] *"Because of its beginning, The Enclave views itself as the direct and rightful heir to the United States government." [6] *"That has never resulted in The Enclave acting with any kind of governmental rules, standards, or accountability." [6] *"anti-democratic regime" [6] *"kills anyone it deems a threat to either itself or its ideology" [6] *"does whatever it deems necessary to achieve its ends however it likes" [6] *"includes killing 'inferior' humans, ghouls, and mutants alike" [6] *"wants to build and rule over a world of 'true' humans." [6] *"to accomplish its goal, it has enslaved people, performed horrible experiments, committed war crimes, and tried to wipe out entire populations and races." [6] *"groups who compete with one another for resources have long been united in their hatred for the Enclave." *"Until the truth about Vault-Tec came out in the series, the Enclave was the wasteland's unquestioned most evil group. But now that we know Vault-Tec's true purpose there are all new questions about how the two vile groups might be connected." [6] *"spent years not only not only preparing to survive a nuclear war but also to rule after it commenced" [6] *"spied on the experiments Vault-Tec ran on its Vaults prior to the great war" [6] *"then monitored life in the Vaults for centuries" [6] *"how Siggi Wilzig knew everything about Lucy MacLean's life" [6] *"had the ability to manipulate vault behavior after the war" [6] *"its members knew the nuclear bombs were coming" [6]
The Enclave first appeared in Fallout 2, [3]
*"They first appear as antagonists in Fallout 2, as they do not take kindly to those who have survived in America outside of their own installations and the vaults, as they believe them to be impure." [3] *"This is a sharp contrast to their apparent downfall in the region after the destruction of their oil rig base at the end of Fallout 2. Fallout 3 was the last time the Enclave were seen as an active threat, albeit on the East Coast." [5] *"The primary villians of Fallout 2 and Fallout 3 especially." [5] *"Given how villified they were in the wasteland, they were met with stiff resistance anywhere they were found, including in Fallout 2 - where they had a base of operations on the West Coast." [3]
The Enclave was set to have a significant antagonist role in the
Black Isle Studios release of
Van Buren, which later cancelled.
[1]
The Enclave appears in Fallout 3 (quoted: "as the main antagonist" & "fighting against the Brotherhood of Steel for control of the former capital. [1])
the Enclave logo features the letter " E" with multiple stars around it. The first use of this logo appeared in Fallout 3. [1]
ability to mind control Deathclaws [1]
The Enclave is featured in Fallout 4 from its "next-gen" update released following the release of the television series. One part of the update released was "Echoes of the Past," a new, Enclave-focused side quest. [1]
Category:Fallout (franchise) Category:United States in fiction Category:Fictional companies Category:Fictional elements introduced in 1997
Preston Lord | |
---|---|
Born | September 23, 2007 |
Died | October 30, 2023 | (aged 16)
Preston Lord (September 23, [1] 2007 – October 30, 2023) was a 16-year-old American student and athlete at Combs High School in Arizona [2] who was attacked during a Halloween party in Queen Creek on October 28, 2023, later dying in the hospital two days later. [3]
During the evening of October 28, 2023, Lord was at a Halloween party in Queen Creek, [4] [5] where he was assaulted by a group of teenagers. Police were called at the scene at 9:49 p.m., [6] and upon arrival Lord was found on the street, unconscious and severely beaten. [7] He was transported to Phoenix Children's Hospital, where he died on October 30, 2023, two days following the attack. [8] [9]
a 1 2 3 4
DEFAULTSORT:Lord, Preston Category:Bullying in the United States Category:2023 murders in the United States Category:Murdered American students Category:Child murder in the United States Category:Deaths by beating in the United States Category:October 2023 crimes in the United States
Camp B70 was a Canadian internment camp located along Route 10 in Ripples, New Brunswick. It was first known as POW Camp B.
Operation Overstep
[1] was the codename given to a
sting operation conducted by the
Royal Canadian Mounted Police done in order to catch members of the
Medellín Cartel smuggling
cocaine into the
Canadian province of
New Brunswick to distribute throughout
Canada and the
United States. In April 1989, the small plane used to smuggle 500 kilograms (1,100 lb) of cocaine, worth an estimated CA$250 million,
crash-landed at the
Weyman Airpark between
Burtts Corner and Keswick. At the time, it was considered to be the largest cocaine seizure in Canadian history.
During the 1980s, the United States began strengthening its surveillance operations on drug trafficking in the Caribbean and American Southeast, prompting South American smugglers to adopt new tactics for smuggling drugs into the United States, including flying them into the Canadian province of New Brunswick. At the time, Canada lacked the detection and intervention capabilities that the United States had, and New Brunswick in particular became a sought-after destination for drug traffickers due to being largely rural with several airstrips that were either rarely used or abandoned. [2]
In the late 1980s, the Medellín Cartel, led by Colombian drug lord Pablo Escobar, took interest in New Brunswick as a North American smuggling route. [3] According to informant Douglas Jaworski [4] [5] and corroborated by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) during later court proceedings, Escobar put into motion his cartel's plans to establish a cocaine "distribution base" for North America in the province. [4] [6] After smuggling cocaine through flights to New Brunswick, traffickers would then use land transport to move it into the United States. [2]
In early 1988, Douglas Jaworski, [7] a young Canadian pilot who worked for the Medellín Cartel by supplying them airplanes, performed money laundering for them, [8] while additionally routinely smuggling cocaine himself through flights, [7] was assigned in Medellín by Alejandro Diego Vasquez Caycedo, [9] one of the cartel's senior managers, to help in the purchasing of a Aero Commander 695 by brokering the transaction. Jaworski fulfilled the task, and was further tasked by Caycedo to search Eastern Canada for an adequate airstrip that could be used by the cartel to fly to and distribute from. [7]
Instead of following through with Caycedo's assignment, [7] Jaworski went to the Toronto Pearson International Airport around the afternoon of December 16, 1988, where he approached Bert Gillies, a Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) constable. After talking to Gillies about "high-level dope dealers from South America," Gillies called over Keith Milner, his supervising corporal, who Jaworski nervously explained "that he could help the Mounties nab key members of the Medellín cocaine cartel." [10] Milner, out of interest and desperation for Jaworski to further contact him regarding the situation, provided Jaworski with his personal phone number. Before leaving, Jaworski followed Milner through extra details about what he knew as a worker in the drug trafficking industry. [11]
more details including Milner forwarding to Inspector Doug Ewing etc. pg. 24-25: [12]
Jaworski had no criminal record, [13] after contacting Milner back Jaworski had became increasingly nervous: [14] Further informant work, page 80+ [15]
In total, Jaworski received CA$200,000 from the RCMP to act as an informant, with additional terms that he would be exempted from U.S. charges for tax evasion and money laundering by the Internal Revenue Service. [16] [17] [18]
text dump: Caycedo instructed Jaworski to 'find an airstrip east of Montreal', Jaworski surveyed nine airstrips by helicopter with RCMP officers. The two best choices were a facility in Troutbrook or the Wayman Field, which the RCMP preferred due to being in closer proximity to RCMP operations in Fredericton. [19] Jaworski had to convince Caycedo to purchase the Wayman field, using a fabricated sales advertisement, and telling Caycedo that "New Brunswick's airports were closer to Colombia than anywhere else in Canada." [20] Caycedo contacted Pablo Escobar: [21] Additional attempts to convince Caycedo to choose New Brunswick over an airfield in Albany: [21] "Jaworski and Pinguino surveyed tiny Wayman Field from the air. Wayman Field was a small private airstrip that belonged to a retired couple who were out of the country, but who had enthusiastically agreed to cooperate with the Mounties. The airstrip was near auto routes heading soutth, but also out of the way, making it a prime spot for Caycedo's operations." [22] Flying to New Brunswick, Jaworski being nervous for his family's safety: [23]
Initially, the flight to New Brunswick was to take place on March 13, 1989. The flight was cancelled at the time when smugglers were arrested in Sorel, Quebec. [24]
On April 3, 1989, [25] the plane crash-landed at the Weyman Airpark. [26] [27]
(expand on this later)
Operation Overstep was part of "Project Amigo", a task force established by police in Ontario. [28]
In June 2010, Fernando Augusto Mendoza Jaramillo, one of the Colombian pilots involved in the smuggling bust, was murdered when a group of armed men waited for him to arrive at his farm in Cumaral, a municipality located in Colombia's Meta Department. [29]
The operation was later adapted into a theatrical play Cocaile Plane!, which was presented in early March 2015. [30]
Category:Law enforcement operations in Canada Category:Drug raids Category:Medellín Cartel Category:1989 in New Brunswick Category:Crime in New Brunswick Category:1989 crimes
Doug Black | |
---|---|
Born | John Douglas Black June 21, 1883 |
Died | May 29, 1931 | (aged 47)
John Douglas Black (1884–1930) was a Canadian sportswriter and travel promoter. He was the first New Brunswick Travel Bureau director. [1] He is credited for being a major influence on Tourism in New Brunswick.
John Douglas Black was born on June 21, 1884, in Fredericton, New Brunswick. [2] [3] in Fredericton, New Brunswick. [4]
Throughout the 1920s, Black promoted New Brunswick as an adequate hunting place to Major League Baseball players. [5] His efforts to promote New Brunswick were noticed by the government, and in 1927 he became the New Brunswick Travel Bureau's first director upon its creation. [6] [7] In 1931, he further promoted hunting and fishing in New Brunswick by bringing with him to the White House a container with Atlantic salmon and venison. [5]
Black died on May 29, 1931, at the age of 47. He was buried at Forest Hill Cemetery in Fredericton two days later. [2] [8] [9]
[10] [11] [12] [13] [14] [15] [16] [17]
Type | Satellite campus |
---|---|
Established | 1964 |
Parent institution | University of New Brunswick |
Address | 100 Tucker Park Road , , , Canada |
Website |
unb |
University of New Brunswick Saint John (UNBSJ or UNB Saint John) is a satellite campus of the University of New Brunswick (UNB) in Saint John, New Brunswick. One of the two campuses of UNB, UNBSJ is the smaller campus and opened in 1964.
UNB's presence in Saint John dates back to 1923 when the Saint John Law School, established in 1892, became part of UNB. In 1953, the law school moved to the Starr Residence, known today as Beaverbrook House, which is still operated by UNBSJ. Eventually, after nearly forty years of remaining in Saint John, it relocated to the main campus in Fredericton.
Starting in 1951, UNB offered summer extension courses in Saint John High School and St. Vincent's Convent, which proved to be successful. This highlighted the existing demand for higher education in Saint John, which had been recognized by the city's Board of Trade as early as 1947. In 1959, there was a growing interest in establishing a college in Saint John, and a group called "Saint John College Development Incorporated" began advocating for a postsecondary institution in the city. However, the proposal faced skepticism due to UNB's financial challenges and the perceived surplus of degree-granting institutions in New Brunswick.
During this discussion, the City of Saint John provided the site of a former 229-acre farm on Sandy Point Road. The location was deemed advantageous due to its views, services, and its position in a rapidly developing area of the city. In September 1964, Beaverbrook House reopened as a satellite campus of UNB, enrolling 100 students. Over time, UNB Saint John expanded its operations to various locations, including the Old Provincial Building, the New Brunswick Technology Institute, the Presbyterian Church Hall, the YMCA building, as well as various high schools. Faculty recruitment posed a challenge, with many commuting from Fredericton or hired from high schools.
Simultaneously, plans for a new campus on the Tucker Park site progressed, with UNB's consulting architects, Larson and Larson, tasked with preparing a concept plan. The initial construction cost was $1,350,000, [1] which was part of a $10 million fundraising campaign led by UNB. In the same year, G. Forbes Elliot took the role as UNB Saint John's first principal. In 1965, the City of Saint John transferred ownership of 87 acres of land for the new campus. [2] Construction on the Tucker Park campus began in 1966, and the site officially opened in 1969, featuring Hazen Hall, Ganong Hall, and the Ward Chipman Library.
The campus expanded over the next two decades, constructing the G. Forbes Elliot Athletics Centre in 1975, the Canada Games Stadium in 1985, and the Thomas J. Condon Student Centre in 1986. Despite these developments, UNBSJ was considered a commuter campus until 1993, following the construction of the Sir James Dunn Residence. Additional buildings were constructed over subsequent years, such as the K.C. Irving Hall, [1] the Modern Languages Centre (now home to Dalhousie Medicine New Brunswick), [3] the Dr. Colin B. Mackay Residence, [4] and the Hans W. Klohn Commons. [5]
Category:Education in Saint John, New Brunswick Category:1964 establishments in New Brunswick Category:Educational institutions established in 1964
[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14] [15] [16]
St. Luke's Anglican Church | |
---|---|
St. Luke's Anglican Church National Historic Site of Canada | |
Location | Quispamsis, New Brunswick, Canada |
Built | 1833 |
Current use | Active church |
Architectural style(s) | Federal Architecture |
Website |
stlukesgp |
Designated | 2009 |
St. Luke's Anglican Church is a historic Canadian Anglican church in Quispamsis, New Brunswick. [17]
Big Ass Lake | |
---|---|
Location | Halifax Regional Municipality, Nova Scotia |
Coordinates | 44°55′32″N 62°55′58″W / 44.92556°N 62.93278°W |
Part of | Ship Harbour River watershed |
Basin countries | Canada |
Surface elevation | 246 m (807 ft) |
Big Ass Lake is a lake in Nova Scotia, Canada. [1] It is located northeast from Lake Charlotte in the Halifax Regional Municipality. [2] It is part of the Ship Harbour River watershed. [3]
On June 12, 2020, Rodney Levi, a 48-year-old Indigenous Canadian man of the Metepenagiag Miꞌkmaq Nation, was shot and killed by an RCMP officer. In 2021, his death was ruled a homicide by the jury. [1]
Kenzo Tenma | |
---|---|
Monster character | |
First appearance | Monster chapter 1: Herr Dr. Tenma (1995) |
Created by | Naoki Urasawa |
Voiced by | Japanese Hidenobu Kiuchi English Liam O'Brien |
In-universe information | |
Title | Dr. |
Occupation | Neurosurgeon |
Nationality | Japanese |
Kenzo Tenma ( Japanese: 天馬 賢三, Hepburn: Tenma Kenzō) is the main protagonist of the manga Monster, created by Naoki Urasawa. He is a Japanesse neurosurgeon working at Eisler Memorial Hospital in Düsseldorf, Germany. Little is known of Tenma's childhood apart from his father and brother also being doctors and that his family ties grew weaker when he left Japan for Germany. He is a humanitarian who cares about the lives of others, and his kindness influences those he meets. His surgical skills earn him the position of chief neurosurgeon. He is engaged to Eva Heinemann, daughter of the hospital's Director Heinemann. When a young boy with a bullet wound arrives in 1986, Tenma is about to operate when Chief of Surgery Dr. Oppenheim and Director Heinemann tell him to work on the mayor, who came in later instead. After a crisis of conscience, Tenma saves the life of the young boy who came in first while the mayor dies. At a banquet, Tenma asks for forgiveness from Director Heinemann who forgives him while blacklisting him and appointing Dr. Boyer the new chief neurosurgeon. Eva also ends their engagement. Weeks later, Tenma gets word from the police that Director Heinemann, Dr. Oppenheim and Dr. Boyer have been mysteriously killed. The chairman of the board appoints Tenma Chief of Surgery and Eva tries to reconcile, but Tenma ignores her.
Nine years later, Tenma learns that the doctors' murders were committed by the boy he saved when the now-grown boy, Johan Liebert, commits another right in front of him. [2] Johan is also the mastermind of the serial murders of middle-aged couples throughout Germany. Plagued by guilt, he resolves to find Johan and end the life of this "monster" he feels responsible for creating, while evading Inspector Lunge, who suspects Tenma of the murders. In his quest to kill Johan, Tenma nearly succeeds several times only to have him slip away until their final confrontation in Ruhenheim. When Johan wants Tenma to kill him, he threatens Wim Knaup when the child's drunk father mistakes Johan for a monster and shoots him. After Johan is flown to a hospital in a helicopter, Tenma treats him and is cleared of all charges. He later joins Doctors Without Borders, visits Johan's mother, and visits the comatose Johan in a police hospital.
Tenma is voiced by Hidenobu Kiuchi in the original anime and Liam O'Brien in the English adaptation.
Tenma was created by manga artist Naoki Urasawa.
Tenma is voiced by Hidenobu Kiuchi.
Tenma was voiced by Liam O'Brien in the English dub.
Comic Book Resources states that Tenma's role as a doctor and his value for life makes him an ideal protagonist in a piece of pseudo-detective fiction, as opposed to if he were instead a detective. [3] In another article, they also highlight the importance of Tenma's selflessness as a character trait while also considering it to be one of his largest flaws. [4] Tenma's moral obligation to act with intention to value life equally is also highlighted by The Daily Star. [5]
Category:Fictional neurosurgeons Category:Comics characters introduced in 1995 Category:Male characters in anime and manga Category:Fictional Japanese people in anime and manga Category:Fictional characters from North Rhine-Westphalia
University of New Brunswick Libraries | |
---|---|
Location | New Brunswick, Canada |
Type | Academic library |
Established | |
Branches | 4 |
Collection | |
Size | 1.5 million |
Access and use | |
Circulation | 140,000 |
Other information | |
Director | Lesley Balcom |
Parent organisation | University of New Brunswick |
Website |
lib |
University of New Brunswick Libraries is the library system of the University of New Brunswick in New Brunswick, Canada. [1] It has a collection size containing 1,500,000 volumes, while circulating 140,000 items annually. [2]
It is headquartered at UNB Fredericton's main library building, the Harriet Irving Library, which was opened in 1967. The University of New Brunswick's other libraries, including the Hans W. Klohn Commons in the Saint John Campus, serves as a branch of this library. [3] [4] [5] [6]
The University of New Brunswick's first academic library, the Bonar Law-Bennett Building, opened in 1931. [7] [8]
The University of New Brunswick's Saint John campus opened its first library, the Ward Chipman Library, in 1969. [9] In 2011, the library was replaced by the newly-built Hans W. Klohn Commons. [10] [11] In 2023, the Ward Chipman Library was demolished to make way for an upcoming Health Innovative Centre. [12]
Category:Academic libraries in Canada Category:Archives in Canada Category:University of New Brunswick Category:Libraries in New Brunswick Category:Libraries established in 1931 Category:Library buildings completed in 1931
Company type | Private |
---|---|
Industry | Apparel/Retail |
Genre | Clothing |
Founded | 2013 |
Founder | Alex MacLean |
Headquarters | |
Website |
eastcoastlifestyle |
East Coast Lifestyle is a Canadian lifestyle clothing brand, founded in 2013 by Alex MacLean.
Industry | Maple syrup |
---|---|
Founded | 1869 |
Headquarters | , Canada |
Area served | Globally |
Products | Maple syrup |
Website |
canadianmaplesyrup |
Canadian Syrup Inc., otherwise known as Steeves Maples, is a Canadian maple syrup company based in Elgin, a small village located in Albert County, New Brunswick. The company was established in 1869 and has worldwide distribution.
Steeves Maples began doing business in 1869 in Elgin, New Brunswick, [1] though members of the family have been in the industry there as early as 1825, [2] with festivals being held there annually. [3] John Steeves, the founder, used iron pots he received in exchange for lumber to create maple sugar by boiling the sap from sugar maple trees. Steeves followed business practices once done by the Mi'kmaq, beginning to trade his produce around the area and in nearby Moncton. As his business would be passed down generations, more trees in Elgin would start being tapped. Steeves Maples became the largest maple production company in New Brunswick within its third generation of ownership, [1] continuing to produce maple syrup in their Elgin plant. [4] Their products are commonly sold in Maritime grocery stores, [5] while also becoming distributed worldwide by the 21st century. [1]
In early 2001, maple syrup produced in Quebec was at risk of being boycotted in Vermont due to utilizing banned pesticide products. The alternative producers were those based in New Brunswick, including Steeves Maples, who refrained from using them. [6] In the 2000's, the company participated in a provincial business agreement that saw their trade be expanded into China. [7] In November 2008, the company also participated in an Atlantic Canadian trade mission in Chicago. [8] In 2009, their processing plant, located inside of a barn, was destroyed by fire. [4] At the time, the company employed 15 people at its rural plant, [9] with the fire having to be extinguished by six different firefighting departments. [10]
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will show the template expanded, i.e. fully visible.Hunting is a popular activity in Canada, often out of subsistence or recreation. [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7]
Each province and territory in Canada has their own hunting laws, such as the requirement of a provincial hunting license depending on where you are, protected areas, and the minimum age requirement for hunting.
Hunting is restricted in protected areas of Canada, including national parks of Canada. Migrating birds are also nationally protected in Canada. [8]
In most provinces and territories, the minimum age required for hunting is 12 years old, but in some provinces the age requirement is 16. [8]
{{
cite web}}
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this is useful : https://nble.lib.unb.ca/new-brunswick-literary-encyclopedia
and this for History of Saint John, New Brunswick: https://web.archive.org/web/20011226043838/http://www.city.saint-john.nb.ca/2.cfm?PageID=3-4-40
https://web.archive.org/web/20031106073920/http://www.city.saint-john.nb.ca/2.cfm?PageID=3-4-3
List of universities and colleges in New Brunswick
Institution | Location(s) | Control [note 1] | Type [note 2] | Enrollment | Founded |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Crandall University | Moncton | Private | Private Chartered | 1,104 (winter 2022) [1] | 1949 [2] |
http://www.mphec.ca/media/215535/Table1_Enrolment_2021-2022.pdf
On September 14, 2023, a large fire broke out at the American Iron and Metal (AIM) scrapyard located in the west side of Saint John, causing large, toxic smoke clouds to spread across the city. Following an investigation, the provincial government suspended the companies' license to the scrapyard on December 29, 2023. [3] [4]
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tags on this page, but the references will not show without a {{reflist|group=note}}
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