Dorchester, New Brunswick

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Template:About Template:Use Canadian English Template:Infobox settlement Dorchester is a community in Westmorland County, New Brunswick, Canada. The community became part of the new town of Tantramar in the 2023 New Brunswick local governance reform.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Originally incorporated as a townTemplate:Refn in 1911, it was converted to a village in 1966.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> By 1825 it had been named for Guy Carleton, 1st Baron Dorchester, an 18th-century Governor-General of the old Province of Quebec, but prior to that was called Botsford.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

It is located on the eastern side of the mouth of the lush Memramcook River valley near the river's discharge point into Shepody Bay. Dorchester is an English-speaking community but it is adjacent to French-speaking Acadian areas farther up the Memramcook River valley.

History

Template:See also The shire town of the county, Dorchester has several fine historic homes and civic buildings most of which were built by local lawyer and Master Builder, John Francis Teed. During the 19th century, Dorchester and neighbouring Dorchester Island were important shipbuilding centres. Numerous master mariners also lived in Dorchester and vicinity during the Golden Age of Sail. Prior to rail service, it was a centre for the stagecoach, as well as a busy ship port. The community was transformed with the construction in 1872 of the Intercolonial Railway between Halifax and Rivière-du-Loup. In 1911, the village founded the Dorchester Light and Fire Company which is now known as the Dorchester Volunteer Fire Department. In 1965, the village courthouse was destroyed by arson. Many in the community came to the town square to watch the building burn. The only thing left of the courthouse was the safe. It is now used in the village hall where the courthouse once stood. The courthouse was never rebuilt, and much of the economy behind it left the community.

Dorchester was home to Edward Barron Chandler, a father of confederation and his family who built their home, Chandler House, commonly referred to as Rocklynn which is now a nationally recognized historic property.

Premier Louis Robichaud's government during the 1960s created an industrial park and deepwater loading pier at nearby Dorchester Cape as part of a regional economic development program. Envisioned to be used by the petro-chemical industry, the government constructed a new road and railway spur along with an electrical substation and the pier as well as a building that was envisioned to be used as a fertilizer plant. The industrial park had no tenants and the pier sitting in the Memramcook River was quickly silted in by mud from the tides of the Bay of Fundy. Today all that remains are the roads and the railbed as well as some broken street lights, a deteriorating sea wall and the empty shell of the abandoned fertilizer plant.Template:Citation needed

In 1998, the Dorchester Jail was also closed. It is currently a fitness gym and a bed and breakfast.

On 1 January 2023, Dorchester amalgamated with the town of Sackville and parts of three local service districts to form the new town of Tantramar.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="GovRefMapRSC7">Template:Cite web</ref> The community's name remains in official use.<ref>Template:Cite press release</ref>

Demographics

In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, Dorchester had a population of Template:Val living in Template:Val of its Template:Val total private dwellings, a change of Template:Percentage from its 2016 population of Template:Val. With a land area of Template:Convert, it had a population density of Template:Pop density in 2021.<ref name=census2021 />

Template:Col-begin Template:Col-2 Population trend <ref>Statistics Canada: 1996, 2001, 2006 census</ref><ref name="cp2011a"/><ref name="census2016">Template:Cite web</ref>

Census Population Change (%)
2021 906 Template:Loss 17.3%
2016 1,096 Template:Loss 6.1%
2011 1,167 Template:Gain 4.3%
2006 1,119 Template:Gain 17.3%
2001 954 Template:Loss 19.1%
1996 1,179 Template:Gain 39.0%
1991 848 Template:Loss 41.3%
1986 1,198 Template:Gain 8.8%
1981 1,101 N/A

Template:Col-2 Income (2015)<ref name="census2016"/>

Income type By CAD
Median Total income per capita $28,501
Median Household Income $49,280
Median Family Income $59,392

Template:Col-2 Mother tongue (2016) <ref name="census2016"/>

Language Population Pct (%)
English 390 90.7%
French 35 8.1%
Other languages 5 1.2%
English and French 0 0%

Template:Col-end

Economy

The village's main employer today is the Correctional Service of Canada, which operates a prison complex now comprising the medium-security (once maximum-security) Dorchester Penitentiary, and the minimum-security Westmorland Institution.

Many residents commute to work in the nearby towns of Sackville and Amherst or the cities of Moncton and Dieppe.

A recent influx of residents is creating a new demand for Dorchester.

Tourism is centred on the historic and natural features of the area. One of Dorchester's most historic buildings houses the Keillor House Museum. The annual shorebird migration to the mud flats of nearby Johnson's Mills is celebrated by an oversize model of a semi-palmated sandpiper situated in the village square.

Transportation

Although situated on the CN Rail main line between Halifax and Montreal, Dorchester no longer has a passenger station, with travellers having to entrain/detrain in Sackville or Moncton. The nearest airport is the Greater Moncton International Airport, a 40 km drive in Dieppe.

Notable people

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See also

Trivia

  • Dorchester appears fictionalized in Douglas How's humorous book Blow Up the Trumpet in the New Moon (1993).
  • The song Dorchester by Matt Minglewood is about the Dorchester Penitentiary.
  • Dorchester is home to what may be the world's largest sculpture of a sandpiper, Shep.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
  • The Bell Inn Restaurant is one of New Brunswick's oldest surviving stone buildings, built sometime between 1811 and 1821.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> It is also in the book of Where To Eat In Canada.
  • The Dorchester Jail was the location of the last double hanging in New Brunswick, in September 1936

References

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Further reading

  • One Village, One War, 1914-1945: A Thinking About the Literature of Stone, by Douglas Howe, Hantsport: Lancelot Press (1995). The story of Dorchester residents who served Canada in World Wars I and II.
  • Dorchester Island and Related Areas, by Reginald B. Bowser, 1986.

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