no ROYAL SOCIETY OF CANADA 



I have, to save repetition, allowed this to be assumed in all oa^es where 

 no other determinant is mentioned. Also for similar reasons I 

 apply the name native settlers to those of English-speaking descent, 

 although the word applies equally well to the Acadians. 



As some interval has elapsed between the printing of the earlier 

 part of this paper and that which follows, I have been able to secure 

 additional information upon some points. Hence this part is more 

 complete and accurate than the preceding, and in case of any discrepancy 

 between them, the following part is to be accepted as most authoritative. 



The sources of information for this list have in part been indicated 

 in the preceding pages, and they will be mentioned in part in the 

 " Source? of Information" in the Appendix. The abbreviations used 

 have the following meanings : — 



C.L.R. Records in the Crown Land Office at Fredericton. 



C.R. Council Records, Memorials for Land, in the Provincial Secretary's 



Office at Fredericton. 

 Est. Established. 



Hist. Sites: The earlier Monograph on Historic Sites. 

 Loc. inf. Local information derived from residents, either by personal inquiry 



or by letter. 



Letters after names are initials of counties: — But J. signifies St. John; 

 Cn., Carleton; Kt., Kent. 



Italics signify always that the word so printed is given in the list in its 

 alphabetical position. 



Abbreviations in names of publications are explained in the Bibliography. 



Aberdeen, — Cn. Parish est. 1863; settled first in 1860 by Scotch immigrants 

 at Glassville, and elsewhere later by their expansion and by American 

 and native settlers, as noted under the names of the settlements. 



Aboushagan, — W. Also Naboujagan, I'Aboujagane, Beaujoggin. Acadian 

 settlement, formed about 1810 by expansion from Memramcook and 

 Fox Creek. (Plessis, 184, 254; loc. inf.). 



Aboushagan River, — W. Former Indian Reserve of 250 acres, now with- 

 drawn. (Perley, Ind. CXIV.). 



Aboushagan Road, — W. Modern native farming village, an expansion from 

 Sackville. (Loc. inf.). 



Acadienne, La Pointe. — N. Former small Acadian refugee village, formed 

 between 1750 and 1755 (under the same circumstances as Boishébert), 

 on the present unsettled Canadian Point. (Hist. Sites, 295.) 



Acadieville, — Kt. Recent Acadian settlement, formed under the Free Grants 

 Act, about 1874, on the line of the I. C. Railway, by expansion from 

 older parts of Kent, and erected into a parish in 1876. (Adams, 22; 

 C. L. R.). 



