Dieppe, New Brunswick: Difference between revisions
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'''CCNB - Dieppe''' |
'''CCNB - Dieppe''' |
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* '''Le Collège communautaire du Nouveau-Brunswick-Campus de Dieppe''' is a [[francophone]] post-secondary institution, which provides training in diverse educational discipline. [[New Brunswick Community College|CCNB - Dieppe]] opened to the public in 1987. Its english-language counterpart [[New Brunswick Community College|NBCC Moncton campus]], situated on Mountain Road in Moncton, is the largest of the NBCC system. |
* '''Le Collège communautaire du Nouveau-Brunswick-Campus de Dieppe''' is a [[francophone]] post-secondary higher education institution, which provides training in diverse educational discipline. [[New Brunswick Community College|CCNB - Dieppe]] opened to the public in 1987. Its english-language counterpart [[New Brunswick Community College|NBCC Moncton campus]], situated on Mountain Road in Moncton, is the largest of the NBCC system. The province has two autonomous English and French community college corporations established under the 2010 New Brunswick Community Colleges Act.<ref>http://www.gnb.ca/legis/bill/FILE/56/4/Bill-30-e.htm</ref> |
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The areas degree granting universities are located in [[Moncton]] and nearby [[Sackville, New Brunswick|Sackville]]. |
The areas degree granting universities are located in [[Moncton]] and nearby [[Sackville, New Brunswick|Sackville]]. |
Revision as of 21:44, 25 January 2012
Dieppe | |
---|---|
Motto(s): | |
Country | Canada |
Province | New Brunswick |
County | Westmorland |
Parish | Moncton |
City | January 1, 2003 |
Town | January 1, 1952 |
Founded | 1730 |
Government | |
• Type | Dieppe City Council |
• Mayor | Jean LeBlanc |
• MPs | Robert Goguen |
Area | |
• Ville / City | 49.85 km2 (19.25 sq mi) |
• Urban | 98.388 km2 (37.988 sq mi) |
• Metro | 117.309 km2 (45.293 sq mi) |
Highest elevation | 45 m (148 ft) |
Lowest elevation | 5 m (16 ft) |
Population | |
• Ville / City | 18,565(CSDs) |
• Density | 299.9/km2 (776.7/sq mi) |
• Urban | 97,065 (Urban Area) |
• Metro | 126,425 (CMA) |
Time zone | UTC-4 (AST) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC-3 (ADT) |
Postal code(s) | |
Area code | 506 |
NTS Map | 021I02 |
GNBC Code | DADHJ |
Website | www.dieppe.ca |
Dieppe is a Canadian city in Westmorland County, New Brunswick. It is the fourth largest city in the province of New Brunswick with a history and identity that goes back to the eighteenth century. Dieppe was first incorporated as a town in 1952 and designated as a city in 2003.
It is the fastest growing city in Atlantic Canada with a population growth rate of 24.2% from 2001 to 2006.[3] In 2006 the city proper had a population of 18,565 (CSd).[4] It is one of 14 census subdivisions (CSd) in the Standard Geographical Classification (SGC) 2006 map of the Moncton Census Metropolitan Area (CMA) encompassing adjacent suburban areas in Westmorland and Albert counties.[5] The 2010 CMA projected population is estimated to be 137,300.[6][7]
Dieppe is a bilingual city where both French and English services can be sought harmoniously. Linguistically it is predominantly french mostly of Acadian roots. It is made up of Francophones (75%) and Anglophones (25%). Its bilingual bylaw with regard to the language of signage is a first for the province of New Brunswick.[8] It is the second-largest majority-francophone city in North America outside Quebec and Haiti, behind Clarence-Rockland, Ontario, which has a population exceeding 20,000 and is 68% francophone - as opposed to Dieppe's 18,565 (2006 Statistic Canada)[9] In 1994 it was one of the co-host communities of the first Congrès Mondial Acadien (Acadian World Congress) which was held in Moncton.
The city is racially homogenous with a high majority originating from western Europe. Recent migration is mostly inter-provincial within its rural regions or elsewhere in the Maritimes. Like its neighbouring city - Moncton - it remains a challenge to attract visible minority. Its economy is centred on transportation, services and logistics industries.
Type | 1991 | 1996 | 2001 | 2006 | 2011 | NB Rank |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
City (CSd) | 10,650 | 12,497 | 14,951 | 18,565 | 00,000 | 4 |
Moncton (CMA) | 107,436 | 113,495 | 118,678 | 126,424 | 000,000 | 1 |
Federal and Provincial representatives
The city of Dieppe proper consist two of New Brunswick's provincial and Federal electoral districts.
Provincial electoral districts
Members of the 57th Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick(2010)[10]
- Memramcook-Lakeville-Dieppe - Bernard LeBlanc
- Dieppe Centre-Lewisville - Roger Melanson
Federal electoral districts
Members of 41st Parliament of Canada(2011).[11] A small portions of the south east section of Dieppe is in the Beauséjour riding.
- Moncton—Riverview—Dieppe - Robert Goguen
- Beauséjour - Dominic LeBlanc
Geography
Dieppe is located on the Peticodiac river east of the adjacent city of Moncton. It forms the southeastern part of the Greater Moncton Area, which also includes the city of Moncton, the town of Riverview, Moncton Parish, Memramcook, Coverdale, and Salisbury.
Toponomy
In the 10th century in France (Gaul) and mentioned in the Merovingian and Carolingian documents, the etymology of Dieppe is from Old English deop > deep, or Old Norse djupr, same meaning. The same adjective can be recognized in other place-names like Dieppedalle (f. e. Saint-Vaast-Dieppedalle) and Dipdal in Normandy, which is the same as Deepdale in Great-Britain.[12]
History
Acadians from the Petitcoudiac and Shepody (french Chipoudy) regions were the first pioneers to settled in the area and founded Sylvabreau in 1730, followed by the Melanson family at Ruisseau-des-Renards (Fox Creek) in 1746 and the LeBlanc and Boudreau families at Chartersville in 1776.
It is to be noted that preceding the arrival of Acadian settlers, the southern fief of the province was inhabited by the Algonquin people. The first humans to set foot and cultivate the region were the indigenous Mi’kmaqs, respectively.
Sylvabreau/Battle of the Petitcodiac
The Battle of the Petitcodiac was fought on Sept 2, 1755 during the British expulsion of the Acadians, after the capture of Fort Beauséjour. The Massachusetts-British force was soundly defeated by Boishébert, Acadian militia, and First Nations. At the mouth of the Nacadie Creek (Hall's) settlements such as Terre-Rouge (The Bend), Sylvabreau and the surrounding hamlets were destroyed. The families of Jean Darois, his brother-in-law Sylvain Breau and his nephew Trahan lived in Sylvabreau during this period in history.[13][14] Even after these raids, Acadians returned to these villages and the numbers grew as the deportation from peninsula Nova Scotia continued, followed by the deportation of present-day Prince Edward Island and Cape Breton. Victory for the British belligerent occurred three years later (1758) during the Petitcodiac River Campaign (la bataille du Cran) which had the same operation to deport the Acadians that either lived along the Petitcodiac River or had taken refuge there from earlier deportation operations.[15][16] Subsequently, the Acadians resettled the hamlets in present day Dieppe.
From Municipal/Town/City designation
Dieppe was known as Upper Village after the Expulsion and was settled by the Surette, Maillet, and Thibodeau families, while Chartersville was called Leblanc's Village and also included members of the Boudreau's clan. Prior to 1800, Pierre Bourgeois had established himself on the (Ruisseau des Renards) Fox Creek salt marsh. Agriculture, forestry and some fishing sustained these Acadian families up until the mid-1800s, when shipbuilding and railways created employment opportunities for Acadians around the Moncton area. After a bridge was completed in 1867 at the mouth of Hall's Creek (Nacadie during the french settlement at Le Coude), a road was constructed that link Westmorland Road (Main Street) to the Dieppe area. This road went through farmland that had belong to the Leger family and intersected the old road (Acadie Avenue) that had taken travellers up and around Hall's Creek to get to Moncton. By 1900, the little area around the intersection became known as Léger's Corner, and with the increasing traffic from the bridge, merchants became attracted to the corner and soon set up shops and services around the intersection. Prior to the First World War, a small residential development was erected, and the community continue to grow until the Second World War. Then a population explosion occurred. Léger's Corner received the largest influx of military personnel in southeastern New Brunswick. Ten thousand airmen (due to the airport) and their support staff arrived overnight in 1940, and soon temporary warehouses and housing were erected.
When Léger's Corner became incorporated as a municipal village in 1946, the community was renamed Dieppe, after a port in France on the English Channel, to honour the 913 Canadian servicemen who took part in the Dieppe Raid, the bloody landing by Allied soldiers, on August 19, 1942, during the Second World War. Then, part of Lakeburn was annexed in 1946 and Dieppe-East in 1948. A referendum (262 for, 232 against)[17] marginally favoured the village to incorporate as the Town of Dieppe in 1952. And growth continued unabated throughout the 1950s and 1960s as Dieppe annexed the villages of Saint-Anselme and Chartersville and the local service districts of Fox Creek-Dover in 1973. It became New Brunswick's eight incorporated city on January 1, 2003. Dieppe's street maps prior to 1960 shows Champlain Street below Acadie Avenue as Main Street and above the intersection as Airport Road.(ref: McCully's New Brunswick Historic Aerial Photographs 1931-1939 - Dan Soucoup/ Richard Thorne McCully, 2005)[18]
Thus, its geographic area is a direct union of Acadian parishes and villages such as: French Village(Léger's Corner), Fox Creek/Dover (1746), Chartersville (1776), Lakeburn (Le Brûlis-du-Lac) and Saint-Anselme (1820).[19]
Downtown/Uptown
The city, indeed, urban sprawl envisage a "downtown" the heart of the city and an "uptown" the Dieppe Boulevard Sector.
Centre-Ville
The downtown area is full of opportunities, there is space for both work and play. Located near the City Hall are businesses, professionals, banking institutions, office buildings, restaurants, a public square, a cultural centre and a farmers market full of local products. The Dieppe Public Library, which is part of the New Brunswick Public Library System, has very modern facilities in the municipal building. Champlain Place and its numerous strip plazas on Paul and Champlain Streets, complements the dynamism of a great place to live, work and play.[20]
- Champlain Place (Place Champlain) The largest single building shopping centre in Atlantic Canada by floor space (also the largest single-story mall east of Montreal). The Mall, as it is referred to, opened in 1974 and has over 150 stores and services with five anchor tenants. A major interior and exterior renovation of the mall was completed in November 2008.[21]
- Crystal Palace Complex (Palais Crystal) The Complex includes Crystal Palace indoor amusement park with attractions such as a roller coaster and wave swinger. In addition to the Complex, a Ramada Hotel, McGinnis Landing Restaurant, a Crystal Palace Convention Centre, a state-of-the-art 8 auditorium Empire Theatres multiplex, Chapters Bookstores with a Starbucks coffee are some of the features. The complex, opened in 1990, is adjacent to Champlain Place and it is owned and operated by Cadillac Fairview.[22][23]
Dieppe Boulevard sector
Located in the northeast area of Dieppe is a trendy, fast-growing commercial, business and residential region. This strategic north-south connector stretches from Route 15 through the Dieppe Industrial Park, the Uptown area, the Fox Creek Golf community and several residential areas before culminating at Melanson Road. It is less than a kilometre away from Greater Moncton International Airport. Residential development in the Dieppe Boulevard sector is also very noticeable, which reflects the exceptional growth of the entire city. Citizens enjoy the benefit of infrastructures that contributes favourably to their quality of life. They have privileged access to the facilities at the Fox Creek Golf Club, the Dieppe Aquatic and Sports Centre, restaurants, food stores, hotels, professional services, retail stores, wholesale stores, fitness centres, and many others.[20]
Modern Edifices
Place 1604, Dieppe City Hall Complex. Place 1604, a modern centre city complex, is at the heart of the City of Dieppe's downtown area where citizens can go to eat, shop, do business, obtain government services and participate in the cultural and artistic scene. Place 1604 is a bustling area any time of the year. The Dieppe Farmers' Market is nearby, so is the Dieppe Public Library, an art gallery, an auditorium and a number of businesses. During the summer months, live entertainment is offered in the open area of Place 1604.[24]
200 Champlain Street
- A three storey building situated beside the Dieppe City Hall. It hosts a bank, a restaurant, a government services outlet, a café and other professional offices.[24][25]
- Completed in 2006, it forms part of the new Dieppe Downtown Development Plan and surrounds the vibrant public gathering space. The building features a library, council chamber, and underground parking.[26]
Dieppe Arts and Culture Centre/ Le centre des arts et de la culture de Dieppe(Former city Hall)
- Has a variety of activities all under the same roof: a dance studio, a music school, an art gallery, an auditorium, studios for visual artists and the studios of radio station CFBO FM.[20][27]
- A colorful vibrant market pavilion to accommodate farmers, crafts people and provides a gathering place for Dieppe Citizens.[28]
Dieppe Industrial Park
First established in the 1970s, the Dieppe Industrial Park has enjoyed an influx of companies specializing in land and air transportation, light manufacturing, communications and distribution all drawn to a powerful bilingual workforce over the last 30 plus years. Today, the park encompasses approximately 1,100 acres with over 200 businesses in three distinct zones: industrial, business and technology, as well as light industrial, aerospace, transportation and distribution. Offering fully serviced lots, reasonable utility costs and low property taxes, fibre optic telecommunications networking, and an able workforce, the Industrial Park also offers a superior transportation network with its geographical location being a distinct advantage.
Greater Moncton International Airport
From its humble beginnings at a Lakeburn field in the 1920s to a modern new terminal building near the Dieppe Blvd., The Greater Moncton International Airport was officially opened in 2002 by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II. Its state-of-the-art facility is proximity 6 km to downtown Dieppe; and 10 km to Moncton. Also, NAV CANADA provides Air traffic control, flight information services and weather briefings.[29] GMIA has the distinction of being the home of the Moncton Flight College, the largest private flight school in Canada. MFC has trained over 16,000 pilots from around the world since 1929.[30]
Education
Provincial public school systems
The area is served by two public school districts.
- School District 01 is Francophone and administers five schools in Dieppe: École Sainte-Thérèse, Amirault, Anna-Malenfant, Carrefour de l'Acadie middle school and the Secondary school, École Mathieu-Martin. Opened in 1972, Mathieu Martin honors who is considered to be the first child born of french parents in LaHave(La Hève)[31] Acadie circa 1633.[32] A second French Secondary school in Moncton, École L'Odyssée, opened in 2005 alongside an adjoining middle school, École Le Mascaret, whereas the oldest public educational facilities in Dieppe are: École Amirault(1969) and École Sainte-Thérèse (1954) with new facilities and improvements added in 2011.[33]
- School District 02 is Anglophone and administers Lou MacNarin School, a combined elementary-middle school (k-8) with an early/late immersion curriculum. Lou MacNarin School opened in the 1990s on the former École Sacré-Coeur School on Gauvin Rd., which at one time catered to both linguisitic communities. Four Anglophone public high schools are located in the Greater Moncton area: Moncton High School, Harrison Trimble High School, Bernice MacNaughton High School and Riverview High School.
Higher Educational Institutions
CCNB - Dieppe
- Le Collège communautaire du Nouveau-Brunswick-Campus de Dieppe is a francophone post-secondary higher education institution, which provides training in diverse educational discipline. CCNB - Dieppe opened to the public in 1987. Its english-language counterpart NBCC Moncton campus, situated on Mountain Road in Moncton, is the largest of the NBCC system. The province has two autonomous English and French community college corporations established under the 2010 New Brunswick Community Colleges Act.[34]
The areas degree granting universities are located in Moncton and nearby Sackville.
- Université de Moncton (Publicly funded provincial comprehensive university)
- Crandall University (formerly Atlantic Baptist University), Private Christian undergraduate liberal arts university.
- University of New Brunswick (Publicly funded provincial comprehensive university), the Fredericton university has one small UNB satellite health sciences campus located at the Moncton Hospital.
- Mount Allison University (Publicly funded undergraduate liberal arts university), the Sackville university provides first year and extension university courses in Moncton and has developed a formal affiliation with the Moncton Flight College to allow for a bachelors degree in aviation.
Parks/Recreation
Dieppe adheres to its Parks and open spaces. Its design enhances the quality of life of its residents by being active as well as how they feel about their local area. As of 2011, the community boasts some thirty parks and green spaces: one city park, fifteen district parks, seven neighbourhood parks, five green islands and a linear park with 20 kilometres of trails. [35]
The Dieppe Kite International( in french, L’International du cerf-volant) is the most renowned kite festival in North America.[36] The best kite flyers in the world, from several countries, come to Dover Park in Dieppe, to fly multi-colored kites of all shapes and sizes. It is an annual event comprising three types of activities: kite flying, community activities and cultural activities. The first Dieppe Kite International took place in 2001 with the objective to offer an event that was original and of international calibre.
Carnaval d'amitié de Dieppe / Dieppe Friendship Carnival, the annual friendship winter carnival since the 1970s that showcases sleigh rides, skating on the pond, fiddle music, community breakfasts, canteen and much more.[37]
Sports Facilities
- Dieppe Aquatic and Sports Centre - Located at 111 Aquatique Street, Dieppe Aquatic and Sports Centre is a state-of-the-art recreational facility, which has three pools; a 25-meter six-lane pool for laps and various activities; a two-lane recreational pool for swimming and aquafitness sessions; and a second recreational pool with a slope from 0 to 1.4 meters equipped with water games, waterslides, a sitting and water jets area and a pirate’s boat for the little ones. The Centre offers a variety of programs for all age groups.
Community Centres/Arenas
Activities Offered: Clinics, Figure Skating, Open/Pick-up Hockey, Parties, Public Skating, Skate School. It is accessible to the public.
- Arthur-J-LeBlanc Centre (St-Anselme & Olympic Arenas)
The Arthur-J-LeBlanc Centre is a 595-seat multi-purpose arena.
- Aréna Centenaire
Monuments and Historical Places
The city of Dieppe is a participant in the province of New Brunswick's local historic places program, funded by the government of Canada through the historic places initiative. Several monuments, buildings and historical places within its districts are priceless gems to remind residents and visitors alike of history's highlights and the cultivation to sustain the collective memory.[38]
Monuments
Honoré Melanson Village Once known as the community district of Fox Creek, this site was established by Paul Honoré Melanson and his wife Marie-Josephe Breau in 1748. This couple resisted the 1755 Deportation and sought exile in Louisiana in 1764. The site commemorated with a plaque is located at the intersection of Marguerite, Amirault, and Fox Creek streets.(http://www.dieppe.ca/monuments_historic_sites.cfm)
Odyssée This monument, located at Le coude on the Petitcodiac river, tells the tale of Acadian resistance on the banks of the river, after Deportation orders were issued. The famous Joseph Broussard and his friends used Guerrilla warfare tactics to avoid deportation.[39]
Veterans Cenotaph The Veterans’ Monument was erected by the Dieppe Military Veterans Association in 1981. It is located at 333 Acadie Avenue. The veterans wanted a memorial erected in honour of the soldiers who sacrificed their lives on the beaches of Dieppe, France, and elsewhere during all of the wars in which Canada and its allies took part. In 2000, a granite base was installed in honour of the wars of 1914-18, 1939-45 and 1950-53, as well as the contribution of peacekeepers. A base bearing the words “Nous nous souviendrons / Lest we forget” with a poppy on each side was added at the back of the monument.
Prominent Buildings
l'Église Saint-Anselme is a Romanesque Revival Catholic church located at 1014 Amirault Street in the Saint-Anselme sector of Dieppe. Built at the turn of the 20th century, this rectangular cut-stone structure has a gable roof and two square towers on the front façade. Saint-Anselme Church is designated a Local Historic Place for its religious role and for its architecture. It illustrates the Acadians’ respect for religious and spiritual matters. The church replaced one that had been built in 1839. Originally, a chapel built in 1812, located west of the current Chapelle Street, was used for worship until 1839. Construction work on Saint-Anselme Church began in 1898. The blessing of the church took place on October 11, 1904.[40]
l'Église Sainte Thérèse de l'Enfant Jésus is a large stone and concrete structure with a bell tower and Gothic windows. This modern interpretation of Gothic Revival religious architecture is located at the corner of Sainte-Thérèse Street and Acadie Avenue in Dieppe. The church highlights the importance of the Catholic Church in the community life of Leger Corner. In 1930, this parish broke away from the parish of Saint-Anselme and built its first church, made of wood. That building was converted into a community centre in 1950 when this new stone church was opened to the public. Sainte-Thérèse Church is recognized for its architecture. This place of worship was built by contractor Abbey Landry of Memramcook from 1949 to 1950. This building exhibits a modern interpretation of traditional Gothic Revival religious architecture. In its Gothic windows, magnificent stained-glass panels illustrate the life of patron Saint Theresa of the Child Jesus, a Carmelite nun who died at Lisieux, France in 1897, at the age of 24.[41]
Joseph-Doiron House Located at 1150 Amirault Street since 1847, the Joseph-Doiron House was once the meeting and celebration place for the Village of St-Anselme. Its basement also served as a school. Mr. Joseph Doiron was a literate notary who had been educated in Memramcook by Father Louis Brodeur. ref: (http://www.dieppe.ca/monuments_historic_sites.cfm)
Media
See also: Media in Greater Moncton
CFBO - FM. is a French-language community FM radio station in Dieppe. It signed on the air in November, 2008 with an Adult Contemporary format and an effective radiated power of 30,000 watts. It is owned by Radio Beauséjour, a not-for-profit organization and the licensee of CJSE-FM Shediac. CFBO "BO-90.7 FM" studios are located at the art and culture centre in centre-ville.[42](http://www.cfbo.ca/)
L'Étoile Dieppe - Édition Dieppe, provides valuable news and information to the Francophone population of New Brunswick's Dieppe area, L'Étoile - Édition Dieppe is published every Thursday and it is owned by Brunswick News.
Urban Transit
Codiac Transpo is the city of Moncton, Dieppe and town of Riverview's public transit system. It is the first transit system in North America to be 100% WIFI. Within Codiac transpo 47 bus fleet, three services Dieppe's main arteries and subdivisions seven days a week; in addition to its numerous fleet of Codiac Buses at the Champlain Place terminal.[43] Services to the inner city has been offered since 1984.
- 20 Champlain
- 21 Amirault
- 24 Express Dieppe
Bridges/old road classifications
Fox Creek Bridge - Inaugurated in 1982, the current bridge replaced the low rise structure which was build in 1924. Some facts regarding the Fox Creek bridge from the June 8, 1982 edition of L'Evangeline newspaper. [44] (The present site of the Fox Creek bridge holds historical facts which dates back to the 1800s. A geographical map of the region made by the English forces shows families with the Amirault surnames living in the area. Later, Acadians build earthen dykes (aboiteau) at Pointe des renards to prevent flooding, which also served as "bridges" for both banks of the river. In 1924, a low rise bridge was constructed that flooded every two to three years.)
Halls Creek Bridge - The first Hall's Creek bridge in Moncton was built in 1867, which link the city with Leger's Corner via the Westmorland Road (Main Street). The current structure at the Wheeler Boulevard intersection opened in 1982.[45][46]
Both bridges are on Route 106, which follows the original provincial Route 2 defined in 1927 running from Quebec to Nova Scotia. Through the late 1950s and 1960s, a number of bypasses and realignments, mostly two-lane, were built to improve Route 2 with federal Trans-Canada Highway funds.[47] The first, built in the 1950s, was around Moncton. The old road became Route 2A, but it was renumbered Route 6 in 1965 and 106 in 1984 during a reclassification of provincial highways.[48] At Moncton, Route 106 runs through Main Street and passes Hall's Creek bridge up to the intersection in centre-ville Dieppe connecting Amirault Street, which leaves the city to the southeast on route to Memramcook.
This route was the Stage Coach road that link south east NB to NS prior to the completion of the new TCH.
Notable residents
Arthur LeBlanc, violinist, composer (b at Village-du-Bois de Saint-Anselme [Dieppe], NB 18 Aug 1906; d at Québec C 19 Mar 1985). A true prodigy, LeBlanc was acclaimed by the age of 5. He attended the École normale de musique in Paris and studied composition with Paul Dukas. Called the "Acadian poet of the violin," he received enthusiastic reviews in North America and Europe. On 6 December 1941, he was playing for the president of the United States at the White House when word came that Pearl Harbor had been attacked. In 1948 he created Concerto No 2, which Darius Milhaud composed for him. Ill health caused him to retire in 1965. The Université de Moncton gave him an honorary doctorate in music in 1982. Author HÉLÈNE PLOUFFE[49]
Sister cities
Climate
Border Communities
- Central Moncton (Old East End)
- Lewisville
- Harrisville
- Memramcook, New Brunswick
- Riverview, New Brunswick (over Petitcodiac River)
- Moncton
See also
- Media in Greater Moncton
- List of communities in New Brunswick
- Codiac Transit
- New Brunswick Route 2
- Greater Moncton
- List of events in Greater Moncton
- blupete.com
- (McCully's New Brunswick Historic Aerial Photographs 1931-1939 - Dan Soucoup/Richard Thorne McCully, 2005)
References
- ^ "Stats Canada Population and Dwelling Count". Statistics Canada.
- ^ http://www.citypopulation.de/php/canada-ua-newbrunswick.php
- ^ http://grandissezavecdieppe.ca/index.php/en/grow-with-dieppe
- ^ http://www.greatermoncton.org/site-egm/media/greatermoncton/EGM%20Population%20and%20Labour%20-%20March%2009.pdf
- ^ http://www.statcan.gc.ca/imdb-bmdi/document/3701_D44_T9_V1-eng.htm
- ^ http://www40.statcan.gc.ca/l01/cst01/demo05a-eng.htm
- ^ http://www12.statcan.ca/english/census06/data/popdwell/Table.cfm?T=302&SR=1&S=3&O=D&RPP=25&CMA=0&PR=13
- ^ http://www.officiallanguages.nb.ca/newsroom_view.cfm?news_id=148&page_type=1
- ^ http://www12.statcan.ca/census-recensement/2006/dp-pd/prof/92-591/details/page.cfm?Lang=E&Geo1=CSD&Code1=3502036&Geo2=PR&Code2=35&Data=Count&SearchText=Clarence-Rockland&
- ^ http://www1.gnb.ca/legis/bios1/index-e.asp
- ^ http://www.parl.gc.ca/MembersOfParliament/MainMPsCompleteList.aspx
- ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dieppe,_Seine-Maritime
- ^ http://www.academia.edu/Papers/in/Battle_of_the_Petitcodiac
- ^ http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bataille_de_Petitcoudiac#Attaque_au_Coude
- ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petitcodiac_River_Campaign
- ^ http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bataille_du_Cran
- ^ http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=UY3hNwcQ290C&dat=19820521&printsec=frontpage&hl=fr
- ^ http://books.google.ca/books?id=mFfd8fh_zSQC&pg=PA61&source=gbs_toc_r&cad=4#v=onepage&q&f=false
- ^ http://www.dieppe.ca/history.cfm
- ^ a b c http://grandissezavecdieppe.ca/index.php/en/development-areas/downtown
- ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Champlain_Place
- ^ http://www.crystalpalace.ca/index.cfm
- ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crystal_Palace_Complex_(Dieppe)
- ^ a b http://www.photovision360.ca/galleries/360/360_12/gallery360_02.htm
- ^ http://www.architecture2000.ca/2007/06/place-1604-2/#
- ^ http://www.architecture2000.ca/2010/01/dieppe-city-hall/
- ^ http://centredesartsdieppe.ca/index.cfm
- ^ http://www.architecture2000.ca/2007/05/dieppe-farmers-market-2/
- ^ http://www.cyqm.ca/en/home/aboutus/factsandfigures.aspx
- ^ http://www.mfc.nb.ca/main.html
- ^ http://www.immigrationfrancophonene.ca/nouvelle-ecosse/decouvrez/truro
- ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89cole_Mathieu-Martin
- ^ http://www2.gnb.ca/content/gnb/en/news/news_release.2011.01.0054.html
- ^ http://www.gnb.ca/legis/bill/FILE/56/4/Bill-30-e.htm
- ^ http://www.dieppecommandos.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=63&Itemid=67
- ^ http://www.dieppe.ca/cerfvolant/about_us.cfm
- ^ http://www.dieppe.ca/
- ^ http://www.dieppe.ca/doc/download/Patrimoine1.pdf
- ^ http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Brossard
- ^ http://www.historicplaces.ca/en/rep-reg/place-lieu.aspx?id=9464
- ^ http://www.historicplaces.ca/en/rep-reg/place-lieu.aspx?id=9472&pid=0
- ^ http://www.broadcasting-history.ca/index3.html?url=http%3A//www.broadcasting-history.ca/listings_and_histories/radio/listings.php%3Fpt1%26r44
- ^ http://www.codiactranspo.ca/page3682.aspx
- ^ http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=UY3hNwcQ290C&dat=19820608&printsec=frontpage&hl=fr
- ^ http://www.mccord-museum.qc.ca/en/collection/artifacts/X14048
- ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Tidal_bore.jpg
- ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Brunswick_Route_2
- ^ http://the506.com/roads/NB/106.html
- ^ http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/articles/arthur-leblanc