Pennfield (Bay of Fundy)
1. Pennfield Your Host(s): Canada Post, - Leave a Public Review
In 1784 some 190 Quaker Loyalists from Pennsylvania founded a community they called Bellevue on the Fundy Coast. The place now is called Beaver Harbour.
2. Pocologan Your Host(s): Canada Post, - Leave a Public Review
The harbour likely was named first since it is derived from the Passamaquoddy descriptive Pekalugan, 'enclosed harbour.'
3. Seeleys Cove Your Host(s): Canada Post, - Leave a Public Review
The community and nearby Seeleys Head and Seeleys Basin are named for Loyalist Justus Seeley who served in the Kings American Dragoons. The Seeley family moved here from Connecticut in 1783.
4. Utopia Your Host(s): Canada Post, - Leave a Public Review
The community was known as Spinneys Corner and Riordans Corner before it took its present name from nearby Lake Utopia in 1902.
  5. Crow Harbour Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  6. Justasons Corner Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  7. Little Tomoowa Lake Protected Natural Area Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  8. Pennfield Corner Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  9. Pennfield Ridge Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  10. Pennfield Station Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  11. Utopia Centre Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  12. Utopia Wildlife Refuge Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  13. Woodland Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
14. Beaver Harbour (Beaver Harbour, 7km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
In 1784 some 190 Quaker Loyalists from Pennsylvania founded a community they called Bellevue on the Fundy Coast.
15. Blacks Harbour / The Wolves (Blacks Harbour, 10km) Your Host(s): Municipal Administration, Phone: (506) 456-4870 FAX: (506) 456-4872 - Leave a Public Review
The place is well known for its sardine and herring cannery and appears as Blacks Harbour on an 1847 map, but the origin of the name has not been recorded.
16. Deadmans Harbour (Blacks Harbour, 10km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
Deadman's Point: A tradition is that many bodies were buried here in the 1700s. On Thomas Wright's 1772 plan of this coastline, the place is called Etang Point, 'Pond Point.'
17. Tunaville (Blacks Harbour, 10km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
The place is well known for the Connors Bros. Tuna cannery. Tunaville is on the west side of the harbour and so named for the cannery.
  18. Wallace Cove (Blacks Harbour, 10km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  19. Bethel (St. George, 11km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
20. Bonny River (St. George, 11km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
When the post office opened in 1889 the place was called Bonney River Station. In 1951 the name was changed to Bonny River.
  21. Breadalbane (St. George, 11km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  22. Caithness (St. George, 11km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  23. Canal (St. George, 11km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
24. Digdeguash (St. George, 11km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
The name is derived from the Passamaquoddy word Dik-te quesk, the meaning ofwhich is not known. The name is pronounced di-gi-dee-wash. In 1871 the population was 150.
  25. Johnson Settlement (St. George, 11km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
26. Kerrs Ridge (St. George, 11km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
Called Carrs Ridge and Bocabec Ridge before being named for Irish emigrant John Kerr who settled here in 1817.
  27. Lee Settlement (St. George, 11km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
28. Letang (St. George, 11km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
. The name is from the French I 'étang, meaning 'the pond.'
  29. Saint George (St. George, 11km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  30. Saint Patrick (St. George, 11km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
31. Second Falls (St. George, 11km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
The community of Second Falls is located at Stone Rips, the next obstruction upriver from First Falls at St. George, originally called Upper Falls. The post office opened here in 1863 as Second Falls.
32. St. George (St. George, 11km) Your Host(s): Municipal Administration, Phone: (506) 755-4320 - Leave a Public Review
The place was surveyed in 1786 and called Magaguadavic after the river whose name derived from the Passamaquoddy Mageecaatawik, 'river of big eels.'
  33. Upper Letang (St. George, 11km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
34. Chance Harbour (Lepreau, 16km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
The place was settled by Loyalists in 1784 and first known as Harbour by Chance, referring to the navigational hazards marking the harbour entrance.
35. Dipper Harbour East (Lepreau, 16km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
On a 1755 map the place appears as Carriage Harbour and on a 1772 map as Duck Cove.
  36. Dipper Harbour West (Lepreau, 16km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  37. Gooseberry Cove (Lepreau, 16km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  38. Gooseberry Cove Protected Natural Area (Lepreau, 16km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
  39. Haggertys Cove (Lepreau, 16km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
40. HMS Plumper (Lepreau, 16km) Your Host(s): Canada Post - Leave a Public Review
The cove is named after HMS Plumper, a brig of war wrecked on Plumper Rock Dec 5, 1812, with 50 persons drowned and $70,000 of gold and silver coins aboard, most of which was later recovered.