Named for a Scottish shoemaker on the Saint John River in the 1800s who fished there.
https://www.nbscots.com/uploads/2018/08/logo_204x240.png00NBSCAhttps://www.nbscots.com/uploads/2018/08/logo_204x240.pngNBSCA2022-09-06 16:21:532022-09-06 16:21:53Tweedie Lake
Named by Jacobina Drummond Campbell, wife of Dugald Campbell, for River Tay in Scotland.
https://www.nbscots.com/uploads/2018/08/logo_204x240.png00NBSCAhttps://www.nbscots.com/uploads/2018/08/logo_204x240.pngNBSCA2022-09-06 16:21:532022-09-06 16:21:53Tay River
https://www.nbscots.com/uploads/2018/08/logo_204x240.png00NBSCAhttps://www.nbscots.com/uploads/2018/08/logo_204x240.pngNBSCA2022-09-06 16:21:532022-09-06 16:21:53Tay Creek
14 miles south-west of Tracadie on the north shore of Miramichi Bay.
Post office from 1931.
Named for the river of the same name which runs through the settlement on its way into Miramichi Bay.
Among the early settlers (after the Acadians were driven from nearby Burnt Church) were many Highland Scots, including MacKenzies, MacLeods, and MacDonalds.