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ST JOHN, the capital of St John county, New Brunswick. Canada, in 45
14' N., and 66 3' W., 481 m. from Montreal by the Canadian Pacific railway.
It is situated at the mouth of the St John river on a rocky peninsula.
With it are incorporated the neighboring towns of Carleton and (since
1889) Portland. The river, which is spanned by two bridges, enters the
harbour through a rocky gorge, which is passable by ships for forty-five
minutes during each ebb and flow of the tide. The harbour level at high
tide is 6 to 12 ft. higher than that of the river, but at low tide about
as much below it, hence the phenomenon of a fall outwards and inwards
at every tide. St John is an important station of the Intercolonial,
Canadian Pacific, and New Brunswick Southern railways, and shares with
Halifax the honor of being the chief winter port of the Dominion, the
harbour being deep, sheltered and free from ice. It is the distributing
centre for a large district, rich in agricultural produce and lumber,
and has larger exports than Halifax, though less imports. It is also
the centre of fisheries which employ nearly 1000 men, and has important
industries, such as saw, grist, cotton and woollen mills, carriage,
box and furniture factories, boiler and engine shops. The beauty of
the scenery makes it a pleasant residential city. St John was visited
in 1604 by the Sieur de Mpnts and his lieutenant Champlain, but it was
not until 1635 that Charles de la Tour (d. 1666) established a trading
post, called Fort St Jean , which existed under French rule until 1758,
when it passed into the hands of Britain. In 1783 a body of United Empire
Loyalists landed at St John and established a city, called Parr Town
until 1785, when it was in-cprporated with Conway (Carleton), under
royal charter, as the city of St John. It soon became and has remained
the largest town in the province, but for military reasons was not chosen
as the capital . Its growth has been checked by several destructive
fires, especially that of Tune 1877, when half of it was swept away,
but it has since been rebuilt in great part of more solid materials.
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