Wakefield is a dispersed Canadian rural community located in Wakefield Parish, Carleton County, New Brunswick.[1]
Located approximately 9 km southeast of Hartland,[2] Wakefield sits along Route 103 by the Saint John River. The nearby Hartland is home to the Hartland Bridge, the world's longest covered bridge.
History
editAccording to local residents in the early 20th century, the old village of Wakefield was located at what later became Victoria Corner.[3] It had a large store run by James R. Tupper and a hotel run by John Moran.[3]
In 1984, a famous bridge at Wakefield burned down in a fire.[4] By 1988, it had been rebuilt as a covered bridge, and re-opened to pedestrians only.[4]
In popular culture
editWakefield is one of the settings in the novel Maclean by Allan Donaldson, which tells the story of a First World War veteran who was gassed at Ypres.[5]
See also
editNeighbouring communities
editReferences
edit- ^ "Wakefield".
- ^ Government of Canada, Natural Resources Canada. "Place names - Search Results". geonames.nrcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 30 March 2024.
- ^ a b Ketchum, T. C. L. (1922). A short history of Carleton county, New Brunswick. Woodstock, New Brunswick: Sentinel. p. 63.
- ^ a b Ferguson, Will (May 24, 1998). "A Kiss in the Dark: The Vanishing Beauty of Covered Bridges". Ottawa Citizen. Retrieved 2024-03-31 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ Grace, Sherrill (2014). Landscapes of war and memory: The two World Wars in Canadian literature and the arts, 1977-2007. University of Alberta Press. p. 117. ISBN 9781772120004.
Further reading
edit- Ketchum, T.C.L. (1922). A Short History of Carleton County New Brunswick. Sentinel Publishing Company. p. 62. Retrieved 2024-03-31.