New Carlisle, Quebec
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New Carlisle (Template:IPA) is a town in the Gaspésie–Îles-de-la-Madeleine region of Quebec, Canada. It best known as the boyhood home of René Lévesque although he was born in Campbellton, New Brunswick. Its population is approximately 1,336, approximately two thirds of whom are anglophone and the remainder francophone. New Carlisle is located on the Baie des Chaleurs.
New Carlisle is the seat of Bonaventure Regional County Municipality, the judicial district of Bonaventure,<ref>Territorial Division Act. Revised Statutes of Quebec D-11.</ref> and the regional base for the Ministry of Transports Quebec, which has an operations centre on the outskirts of town. New Carlisle has a post office, primary and high schools, five different churches, and many other services. New Carlisle was served by passenger rail on the Montreal–Gaspé train until August 2013 when Canada's national passenger system VIA Rail suspended the route owing to poor track and bridge conditions.<ref>Template:Cite press release</ref> Replacement buses served the route until September 2013. Repair of the rail line began in 2020 and the Government of Quebec announced in 2023 that service would be restored in 2026 after the completion of a multi-year $872 million project to completely rehabilitate the Gaspé railway.<ref name="27Jun2023">Template:Cite press release</ref>
History
Originally a Mi'kmaq site called Antagoetjoitog, meaning "at the Black's", the site of the town was selected in 1784 by the Lieutenant-Governor of the jurisdictional District of Gaspe, Nicholas Cox. The town as is thought to have been named after Cox's home town, possibly Carlisle, England. Soon after the name was changed from "Carlisle" to "New Carlisle". The original settlers of 1784 were discharged soldiers of British Army regiments and Loyalists claimants. In 1842, the geographic Cox Township was proclaimed.<ref>Template:Toponymie</ref> It was also known as Petit-Paspébiac in the 19th century.<ref name="toponymie"/>
The area was first incorporated as the Township Municipality of Cox in 1845, dissolved in 1847, but reestablished again in 1855. On February 1, 1877, the Township Municipality of Cox was dissolved and divided into the Municipalities of New Carlisle and Paspébiac.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
The town was the scene of the capture of the German spy Werner von Janowski, who was dropped from a nearby U-boat in November 1942.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Geography
Climate
Demographics
Population
Template:Historical populations
Language
Mother tongue (2021):<ref name=SCref21/>
- English as first language: 56.6%
- French as first language: 39.1%
- English and French as first language: 3.9%
- Other as first language: 0.4%
Notable people
- René Lévesque
- Théodore Robitaille, senator who was elected as a member from Bonaventure County and commissioned the Words and music for O Canada in 1885