Caldwell

  • 3 miles northeast of Grand Falls.
  • Probably named for Sir John Caldwell who had a lumber mill at Grand Falls and built a house there in 1830.

Calders Head

  • Extends into Passamaquoddy Bay.
  • Named for Walter G. Calder of Fairhaven, Deer Island, in the early 1800s.

Caithness

  • 1 mile southwest of St. George.
  • Settled in 1822 by immigrants from Caithness, northern tip of mainland Scotland.
  • From Old Norse, Katanes.

Breadalbane

  • Community 2 miles west of St. George. Settled circa 1822.
  • Named for a place in Perthshire, Scotland.
  • From Scottish Gaelic Bràghad Albainn, ‘the upper part of Alba’.
  • ‘Alba’ is the Gaelic name for Scotland.

Breadalbane

  • 1 mile west of Blackville.
  • Tract of 10,000 acres laid out in 1856, 10 miles west of Blackville, but never settled.
  • Granted under the Free Grants Act 1879 as Breadalbane East and Breadalbane West.

Bon Accord

  • Beginning in 1873, more than 700 people from northeast of Scotland settled here and in Kintore and Kincardine.

Blair Athol

  • 7 miles southeast of Campbellton.
  • Post Office circa 1885-1955.
  • Named for Blair Atholl, Scotland.

Blackville

  • South-west of Newcastle.
  • Post office from 1842. Incorporated 1966.
  • Named for the Parish in which it is located, which was named for William Black, born in Aberdeen, Scotland, colonial administrator of NB in 1829-31 during the absence of Lt. Gov. Douglas.
  • Formerly known as The Forks.

Blackland

  • Established in 1885 by Isle of Arran settlers.

Black River Bridge

  • 10 miles east of Chatham. Post Office from 1860.
  • Settled in 1790 by immigrants from Scotland.