Tweedie Lake

  • In Dumfries Parish.
  • Named for a Scottish shoemaker on the Saint John River in the 1800s who fished there.

Torryburn

  • In Saint John, 6 miles northeast of city centre. Post Office from 1910.
  • Torryburn House is noted on a plan of 1851. Possibly named for Torryburn on the north side of Firth of Forth, in Scotland.
  • Torryburn Cove and Torryburn Point are adjacent features.

Taymouth

  • 15 miles north of Fredericton at the mouth of the Tay River.
  • Dugald Campbell, a land grantee there, called his estate Taymouth.
  • Post Office Nashwaak 1848-1898; Post Office Middle Nashwaak 1898-1904; Post Office Taymouth from 1904.

Tay River

  • Flows southeast into Nashwaak River.
  • Named by Jacobina Drummond Campbell, wife of Dugald Campbell, for River Tay in Scotland.

Tay Mills

  • 7 miles south of Stanley, on South Tay River.
  • Post Office 1862-1914.

Tay Falls

  • 4 miles south of Stanley on Tay River. Post Office 1905-1914.
  • Formerly called Scotch Glen.

Tay Creek

  • 5 miles southwest of Stanley, at North Tay River.
  • Post Office Tay Settlement 1862-1918.

Tabusintac

  • 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.

Stonehaven

  • 16 miles northeast of Bathurst. Post Office circa 1889-1950.
  • Probably named for Stonehaven, Scotland.

Stanley

  • Settlers from the failed settlement of Scottish Settlement (1835), 6 miles south of Stanley, moved to Stanley after the first winter.