[ganong] origins of SETTLEMENTS IN NEW BRUNSWICK 177 



100 acres, cleared and well cultivated, with comfortable buildings, a 

 saw and grist mill at the Piskahegan Bridge, and a good stock of 

 cattle, poultry, etc." 



Tryon Settlement, — C. Irish immigrant settlement, laid out in 1838, and 

 settled apparently in part by immigrants who came out to work on the 

 St. Andrews and Quebec railway. (Loc. inf.). 



Tweeds i de, — Y. An expansion from Harvey. 



Tynemouth Creek, — J. Assigned to disbanded Loyalist soldiers in 1784, but 

 probably settled later by Loyalist expansion of later immigrants. (C. 

 L. R.). 



Union, — C. An extension of St. Stephen; a mill village at Falls in the river. 

 (Perley, Fisheries, 126). 



Union Corner, — Cn. Settled after 1840 by immigrants from Maine. (Loc. 

 inf.) 



Union Settlement, — Q. Native farming settlement, formed about 1S50 by 

 expansion from the vicinity. (Loc. inf.). 



Upham,— K. Parish est. 1S35. First settled along Hammond river by Loj^alist 

 expansion about 1803, and in its remaining parts by the later expansion 

 of their descendants. (Loc. inf.) 



Upper Bay du Vin, — N. Irish immigrant farming settlement, established on 

 the Chatham-Kouchibouguac road, soon after 1830. (Johnston, N. A., 

 I, 111). 



Upper Mills, — C. Included within the grant to the Penobscot Association of 

 Loyalists, but settled later; it became, before 1830, a prosperous mill 

 village at the Falls in the river. (Vroom, Courier, CVI; S. P. G. Report 

 for 1836). 



Victoria Settlement, — S. Native settlement, with some immigrants, laid out 

 1841, and settled chiefly by expansion from neighbouring settlements. 



Villeray, — Q. Former small Acadian village at lower Gagetown, burnt by 

 Monckton in 1758. (Hist. Sites, 271). 



Wakefield, — Cn. Parish est. 1803. Settled first along the St. John, between 

 1790 and 1800, by expansion from Maugerville and the Loyalist settle- 

 ments of the lower St. John, while all of the interior settlements are- 

 an expansion from these and from the same sources. The first of the 

 interior settlements was at Jacksonville. (C. L. R.; loc. inf.; Raymond, 

 Carleton County, 75). 



Walker's Brook, — R. Trading post at the mouth of Walker's Brook, founded 

 about 1766 by Admiral Walker as a branch of that at Alston Point, 

 and destroyed by American privateers in 1776. (Hist. Sites, 330.) 



Ward Settlement, — T. An N.B. and N.S. Land Company settlement, formed 

 about 1840 by English and Irish immigrants. (Loc. inf.). 



Warwick, — N. Native farming settlement, established 1875 under the Free 

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

 tlements. (Adams, 20). 



Sec. II., 1904. 12. 



