138 ROYAL SOCIEIY OF CANADA 



Hartt's Mills, — S. Small mill village at falls of the Oromocto, formed 

 before 1800 by expansion of Loyalist settlements lower on the Oromocto. 

 A block house was erected here in 1785 and another in 1813. (Hist. 

 Sites, 347). 



Harvey, — A. Parish est. 1838; included originally a part of the Acadian 

 settlement of Shepody; but its modern settlement begins with some 

 tenants of the original grantees (Burbridge and Best, 1763-65) along 

 the lower Shepody river, who were joined later by settlers from older 

 parts of Westmorland and a few others. Later, especially after 1790, 

 many native settlers from Nova Scotia took up lands all along the 

 coast and on Germantown Lake, as noted under the special settlements. 

 (Loc. inf.; C. L. R.). 



Harvey, — Y. Important English and Scotch immigrant settlement, formed in 

 1837 by some 30 families (joined by others later) from the border coun- 

 try between England and Scotland, especially Tweedbank and Wooler. 

 Established on the Fredericton-St. Andrews highway road, it has, after 

 some early hardships, prospered down to the present, and it is now 

 one of the best inland settlements of New Brunswick. It has expanded 

 to Tweedside, Wooler, Little Settlement, Goss Settlement, and Harvey 

 or York Mills. (There are numerous references to the foundation and 

 progress of this settlement; Johnston, N. A., II, 169, 172, and Report 

 93, giving names of all heads of families; Ward, 46, 92; Brown, Prize 

 Essay, 12). 



Havelock, — K. Parish est. 1858; first settled about 1810 at Butternut Ridge 

 by expansion from New Canaan; settled about the same time on 

 Smith's Creel; and later on upper StitdhoJm's Millstream by expansion of 

 Loyalist settlers and their descendants up those streams, with some 

 later immigrant settlements, noted under their respective names. (Loc. 

 inf.). 



Haynesville, — Y. N.B. and N.S. Land Company settlement, formed about 

 1850 by native settlers from the Keswick and neighbouring settlements. 

 (Loc. inf.) 



Hayesville, — N. Formed about 1829 by Irish immigrants and native settlers. 

 (Loc. inf.). 



Hazelton, — N. Modern settlement, established before 1879 under the Free 

 Grants Act, and sparingly settled by expansion from neighbouring set- 

 tlements. (Adams, 20). 



Headline, — Q. Irish (Protestant) immigrant settlement, formed in 1829. 

 Originally called Cootes (Coates) Hill. (Johnston, Report, 84; S. P. G. 

 Report, 1836; Trueman, Chignecto Isthmus, 199). 



Heatonville, — Q. Early estate in Cambridge granted J. S. Heaton in 1774, but 

 later settled by New Englanders and Loyalists. (Hist. Sites, 334). 



Hellerup, — V. Temporary name for New Denmark. 



Henderson Settlement, — Q. Irish immigrant farming settlement, formed 

 about 1820 by families from the north of Ireland. (Ward, 23; loc. inf.). 



Hibernia, — J. Irish immigrant settlement, formed about 1830 on the lower 

 Quaco road. (Loc. inf.). 



