[GANONG] BOUNDARIES OF NEW BRUNSWICK 443 
(3). OTHER BOUNDARIES. 
In addition to the county and parish lines, there are certain other 
boundaries in New Brunswick needing mention as follows:— 
(a) Land Grants.—As we have seen, these contain potential parish 
end even courty boundaries. From the present point of view, these 
fall into four categories, (1) the grants of lots made for settlement to 
individuals, whether individually or in associations or groups. These 
are shown fully on the plans in the Crown Land Office at Fredericton, 
where they are kept in the best of order and made freely accessible to 
every inquirer. Lists of some of the more important of those con- 
nected with our earlier history are given in a preceding monograph 
with an illustrative map, and for 1786 they are shown upon the very 
important accompanying Map No. 34. Several maps since then have 
shown the extent of the granted lands as a whole in the province, not- 
ably the fine Baillie and Kendall map of 1832, the Timber Lands Map 
of 1875 (for a part of the province), and the Loggie Map of 1884. (2) 
Certain large blocks of land have been laid out for sale to Land Com- 
panies. The best example of these is the great tract granted in York 
to the New Brunswick and Nova Scotia Land Company in 1835, and 
shown upon most modern maps, such as Wilkinson’s and Loggie’s. (3) 
Blocks have been laid out at various times for settlement by immi- 
grants. Of these a number were surveyed in 1856 and are represented 
upon an excellent little map of 1857, probably made to accompany 
Perley’s “Handbook of Information for Emigrants to New Bruns- 
wick,” and they are shown also upon Wilkinson’s map. Some of them, 
Balmoral and Clarendon, became later the centers of parishes. Still 
later, tracts have been laid out in various parts of the province, all of 
which are very clearly shown upon a map by Loggie in the pamphlet 
“Information for Intending Settlers,’ (Fredericton, 1879). The 
names of these tracts with their interpretation may be found in the 
Monograph on Place-nomenclature, page 208. While as a rule these 
settlement-tracts have been laid out within the bounds of counties 
and parishes, this has by no means always been the case, since their 
location has been determined by quality of the land, etc. Of an an- 
alogous character was the grant of Inglewood Manor to Moses Perley 
in 1837, the somewhat irregular bounds of which are represented upon 
a map issued by the Inglewood Fish and Game Association, but upon 
no other printed map known to me. (4) Great grants including nearly 
all wild lands in the counties of Victoria and Madawaska have been 
made to the New Brunswick Railway Company ; the boundaries of 
these grants are shown on the Timber Lands Map of 1875. In all 
