Allardville Parish, New Brunswick
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Allardville is a
civil parish In England, a civil parish is a type of administrative parish used for local government. It is a territorial designation which is the lowest tier of local government below districts and counties, or their combined form, the unitary authorit ...
in Gloucester County,
New Brunswick New Brunswick (french: Nouveau-Brunswick, , locally ) is one of the thirteen provinces and territories of Canada. It is one of the three Maritime provinces and one of the four Atlantic provinces. It is the only province with both English and ...
,
Canada Canada is a country in North America. Its ten provinces and three territories extend from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean and northward into the Arctic Ocean, covering over , making it the world's second-largest country by to ...
, situated south and southeast of Bathurst. The heavily francophone parish was divided (before 2023) into two local service districts for governance purposes, both of which are members of the Chaleur Regional Service Commission (CRSC).


Origin of name

The parish was named in honour of Monsignor Jean-Joseph-Auguste Allard, who brought new settlers from the East Bathurst area in 1932.


History

Allardville was erected in 1947 from parts of Bathurst, Saint-Isidore, and Saumarez Parishes. This was the last new parish to be erected in New Brunswick.


Boundaries

Allardville Parish is bounded: Remainder of parish on maps 29, 41, 42, 51, and 52 at same site. Remainder of parish on mapbooks 092–094, 111–114, 133–135, 155, and 156 at same site. * on the west by the
Canadian National Railway The Canadian National Railway Company (french: Compagnie des chemins de fer nationaux du Canada) is a Canadian Class I freight railway headquartered in Montreal, Quebec, which serves Canada and the Midwestern and Southern United States. CN i ...
line; * on the north by the southern line of two land grants south of Goodwin Mill Road, prolonged southwesterly to the CNR line and northeasterly to the Tracadie Game Management Area, then taking a right-angle turn to the rear line Tier 1 of the Allardville East Settlement, which runs along the north side of Route 160, before turning northeasterly and following the rear of Tier 1 and its prolongation to about midway between Redpine Brook and Lac St. Coeur; * on the east by a line southerly from midway between Redpine Brook and Lac St. Coeur along the prolongation of grant lines until it strikes the rear of Range 5 of the Saint Isidore Settlement, which runs along the north side of a different section of Route 160, then along Range 5 to midway between Butte-d'Or Road and the dogleg of Route 160 connecting the sections in Tier 1 and Range 5, then southerly at a right angle along grant lines at the end of Saint Isidore Settlement and their prolongation to the prolongation of the rear line of Range 9 of the Saint Isidore Settlement, which runs along the south side of Rang 9 Road; * on the south by the prolongation of the rear line of Range 9 southwesterly past the Little South Branch Big Tracadie River to the line between Blocks 3 and 4 of Range 9 of timberland, then at a right angle southerly to the Northumberland County line, then westerly along the county line to the CNR line.


Governance

The parish's two LSDs sat side-by-side, with the boundary running northwesterly along grant lines about 8.1 kilometres easterly of the junction of Route 134 and Route 160 and prolongated northwesterly and southeasterly to the parish line. Both LSDs assess for street lighting and community & recreation services in addition to basic LSD services. Saint-Sauveur (established 1985) is the eastern LSD, taking its name from its westernmost community. The population in 2016 was 673. Allardville (established 1999) is the western LSD. This LSD actually extends north to included part of Bathurst Parish; census data does not profile the extended area. Allardville was formed by merging three previous entities: *''The parish of Allardville'' (established 1969) originally included the entire parish and allowed residents to assess for fire protection. *''Allardville Centre'' (established 1970) comprised about 650 hectares north and south of the junction of Route 134 and Route 160; it added street lighting to the area. *''Allardville Nord'' (established 1991) was an area with enhanced services that straddled the Allardville-Bathurst parish line, which added street lighting to the area.


Governance reform

Governance reforms planned for 2023 would move Saint-Sauveur to the Acadian Peninsula Regional Service Commission, where it would form a local government entity with the villages of
Paquetville Paquetville is an unincorporated community in Gloucester County, New Brunswick, Gloucester County, New Brunswick, Canada. It held village status prior to 2023. It is on the Acadian Peninsula at the intersection of New Brunswick Route 340, Route ...
and Saint-Isidore and the LSDs of the parish of Paquetville and the parish of Saint-Isidore. Allardville would remain part of the Chaleur RSC and be included in its rural district. These reforms are scheduled to take effect in 2023.


Communities

Communities at least partly within the parish; (brackets) indicate the LSD; ''italics'' indicate a name not used on modern provincial government maps * Allardville (A) is a community at the junction of Route 134 and Route 160 * Allardville East (A) is located on Route 160, east of Allardville * ''Beaubois'' is now part of Saint-Sauveur * Butte-d'Or (SS) is along Route 363 near the eastern parish line * Daulnay (A) is along Route 134, south of Allardville * Jeanne-Mance (A) is along Route 134 and the southernmost community in the parish * Pokemouche Landing (SS) is along Route 160, near the eastern parish line * ''Rang-St-Sauveur'' is now part of Saint-Sauveur * Saint-Sauveur (SS) is along Route 160 between Allardville East and Butte-d'Or * railway points along the western edge of the parish: Bartibog Station, Bruce Siding, Red Pine, Russell


Bodies of water

Bodies of waterNot including brooks, ponds or coves. at least partly within the parish. *
Bartibog River The Bartibog River (also spelled Bartibogue) is a tributary of the Miramichi River in New Brunswick, Canada. It honours Bartholomew La Bogue, a Micmac chief, "who was called Balt Bogue by the Indians (indigenous) and Bartabogue by the French and E ...
* Bass River * Big Eskedelloc River * Big Tracadie River * Little Bass River * Little Eskedelloc River * Tabusintac River * Bass River Lake * East Branch Lake


Conservation areas

Parks, historic sites, and related entities at least partly within the parish. * Allardville Protected Natural Area * Bass Brook Protected Natural Area * Bass River Protected Natural Area * East Branch Portage River Protected Natural Area * Lord and Foy Brook Protected Natural Area * Pisiguit Brook Protected Natural Area * Red Pine Brook Protected Natural Area * Tabusintac River Protected Natural Area * Tracadie River Game Management Area


Demographics


Population

Revised census figures based on the 2023 local governance reforms have not been released.


Language


See also

*
List of parishes in New Brunswick The Canadian province of New Brunswick is divided by the ''Territorial Division Act'' into 152 parishes, units which had political significance as subdivisions of counties until the Municipalities Act of 1966. Parishes still exist in law and incl ...


Notes


References



{{coord, 47, 28, 48, N, 65, 30, 00, W, name=Allardville Parish, New Brunswick, display=title, region:CA-NB_type:adm3rd_scale:100000 Former local service districts of New Brunswick Parishes of Gloucester County, New Brunswick