Zionville

  • 17 miles northeast of Fredericton.
  • Post Office circa 1897-1904 and 1912-1916.
  • Probably named by settlers from Scotland and Ireland circa 1860 for the Biblical Mount Zion.

Youngs Brook

  • Flows west into Nashwaak River at Nashwaak Bridge.
  • Named for a member of the disbanded 42nd (Black Watch) Regiment.
  • Formerly called Udenack, McCallum Brook and Upper McBeans Brook.

Wilsons Point

  • At the confluence of Southwest and Northwest Miramichi Rivers.
  • Named for John Wilson (1791-1876), innkeeper, jailer, cryer, and ferryman; b. Stromness, Orkney, Scotland.
  • Formerly called Beaubears Point, an anglicization of Boishébert.
  • During the Deportation of Acadians, Marquis Charles des Champs de Boishébert brought thousands of fleeing Acadians to adjacent Beaubears Island and the surrounding lands.

West Scotch Settlement

  • 13 miles north of Hampton. Post Office circa 1885-1914.
  • Settled circa 1820 by immigrants from Perth, Scotland.

Watty Brook

  • Flows west into McDougall Inlet.
  • Named for Watty MacFarlane, a lumberman.

Upper Loch Lomond

  • 14 miles northeast of Saint John. Post Office 1863-1941.

Upper Kintore

  • 6 miles east of Perth-Andover. Post Office circa 1885-1925.
  • In 1873, more than 700 people from northeast Scotland settled in Bon Accord, Kintore, and Kincardine.

Upper Dundee

  • 9 miles southwest of Dalhousie. Post Office 1913-1947.

Upper Blackville Bridge

  • 8 miles southwest of Blackville. Post Office 1929-1967.

Tweedside

  • 16 miles east of McAdam. Post Office 1860-1914.
  • Named by settlers from Scotland.
  • Formerly called Ensor Settlement where Charles Ensor had a grant in 1834, which he abandoned before 1841.