Boiestown, New Brunswick

Boiestown
Boisetown United Church
Boisetown United Church
Boiestown is located in New Brunswick
Boiestown
Boiestown
Location of Boiestown in New Brunswick
Coordinates: 46°27′25″N 66°24′59″W / 46.45694°N 66.41639°W / 46.45694; -66.41639
CountryCanada
ProvinceNew Brunswick
CountyNorthumberland County
Named forThomas Boies, settler
Population
 (1991)
 • Total
349
Time zoneUTC-4 (Atlantic)
 • Summer (DST)UTC-3 (Atlantic)
Area codeArea code 506
Websiteuppermiramichi.ca

Boiestown (1991 population: 349) is a Canadian community in the rural community of Upper Miramichi in Northumberland County, New Brunswick.

It is situated on the Southwest Miramichi River approximately 60 kilometres northeast of Fredericton, near the province's geographic centre on Route 8 and the eastern terminus of Route 625.

History

Founded as a lumbering community in the early 19th century, Boiestown is named after Thomas Boies, a New Hampshire native who owned the area's first lumber mill. Forestry is still the main industry in the area.

Boiestown's post office was established in 1842.[1]

Attractions

Boiestown is home to the Central New Brunswick Woodsmen's Museum. Nearby attractions include Priceville Footbridge, the longest suspension footbridge in New Brunswick, and Nelson Hollow Bridge, the oldest covered bridge in the province.

Boiestown is the setting for Peter Emberley, a well-known traditional ballad and a favourite lumbering song of New Brunswick. The song recounts the story of a young man from Prince Edward Island who was killed in the Miramichi woods when a log rolled on him. The ballad was sung throughout Atlantic Canada and in Ontario lumbercamps. It is immortalised in Edward D. Ives 1959 Folkways Records album Folksongs of Maine, and in the 1962 recording Folksongs of the Miramichi: Lumber and River Songs from the Miramichi Folk Fest, Newcastle, New Brunswick. Bob Dylan's Ballad of Donald White is adapted from the music and words of Peter Emberley.

Notable people

See also

References

  1. ^ Hamilton, William (1978). The Macmillan Book of Canadian Place Names. Toronto: Macmillan. p. 71. ISBN 0-7715-9754-1.