Puneet Varma (Editor)

Shediac

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Country
  
Canada

Parish
  
Shédiac Parish

Incorporated
  
1903

Mayor
  
Jacques LeBlanc

Province
  
New Brunswick

County
  
Westmorland County

Founded
  
18th century

Population
  
6,664 (2016)

Local time
  
Friday 10:20 PM

Shediac wwwglobosapiensnetdatagallerycapictures468

Elevation
  
Sea Level to 33 m (0 to 108.3 ft)

Weather
  
-4°C, Wind N at 8 km/h, 86% Humidity

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Shediac is a Canadian town in Westmorland County, New Brunswick. The town is known as the "Lobster Capital of the World" and hosts an annual festival every July which promotes its ties to lobster fishing. At the western entrance to the town is a 90-tonne sculpture called (perhaps inaccurately) The World's Largest Lobster.

Contents

Map of Shediac, NB, Canada

Geography

Shediac is situated primarily on Route 133 around Shediac Bay, a sub-basin of the Northumberland Strait.

The town is located southwest and adjacent to the community of Pointe-du-Chêne which features Parlee Beach Provincial Park as well as the Pointe-du-Chêne wharf which was once the eastern terminus of the European and North American Railway as well as a stopover after 1939 for Pan-Am's trans-Atlantic "clipper" air service that featured large seaplanes. Imperial Airways flying boat service to Foynes, Ireland also used the facilities.

History

Hundreds of years ago, the Mi'kmaq encampment of "Es-ed-ei-ik" was one of the major camps in southeast New Brunswick. The Mi'kmaq word "Es-ed-ei-ik" which means "running far in" (in reference to the tide, which has a long range over the shallow, sandy beaches) eventually transformed into Gédaique.

Acadians first arrived at Shediac in 1749 as a result of the Acadian Exodus from peninsular Nova Scotia. During the French and Indian War, French officer Charles Deschamps de Boishebert made his headquarters at both Shediac and Cocagne, New Brunswick. In the autumn of 1755, Boishebert established himself on the south shore of Cocagne Bay, a place known as Boishebert's Camp. The following year, Boishebert moved to Miramichi, New Brunswick, specifically to Beaubears Island. After the war, Acadians returned to the region in 1767.

Today many Francophone residents use the spelling Shédiac; however, the town's name upon its incorporation did not feature an accented "e", and correspondingly the official geographic name for the community is Shediac.

Shediac Bay Yacht Club

Shediac Bay Yacht Club is on the Register of 'Canada's Historic Places' for being the location of a local wharf for nearly a century. The previous Shediac Bay Yacht Club House was designed by Roméo Savoie.

Notable people

  • Georges-Antoine Belcourt (1803–1874), missionary
  • Edna May Williston Best (1880–1923), feminist
  • Emile Duprée (1936 - ), former professional wrestler and promoter
  • René Duprée (1983 - ), current professional wrestler, former WWE wrestler, son of Émile Dupree
  • Muriel McQueen Fergusson (1899-1987), Canadian senator
  • Gord Gallant (1950 - ), professional hockey player
  • Placide Gaudet (1850–1930), journalist, historian
  • Daniel Lionel Hanington (1835–1909), former Premier of New Brunswick
  • Rosa Laricchiuta (1974 - ), professional singer
  • Joseph E. Leblanc (born 1916), politician
  • Samuel Lee (1756–1805), judge, politician
  • E. R. McDonald (1876–1952), politician
  • Anna Malenfant (1905–1988), singer, educator and composer
  • Olivier-Maximin Melanson (1854–1926) Acadian businessman and politician
  • A. P. Paterson (1870–1957), politician.
  • Scott Pellerin (b. 1970), former professional hockey player
  • Pascal Poirier (1852–1933), writer, lawyer, senator
  • Jean George Robichaud (1883–1969), politician
  • Ferdinand Joseph Robidoux (1875–1962), lawyer, politician
  • Wes Sheridan, Canadian politician.
  • Albert James Smith (1822–1883), former Premier of New Brunswick
  • Ernest A. Smith (1864 – ?), Canadian politician.
  • Elsie Wayne (1932-2016), politician
  • John Clarence Webster (1862–1950), physician, historian
  • References

    Shediac Wikipedia