Although often shortened in non-official sources to St. Andrews, the town's legal name is spelt Saint Andrews,[3] and appears as such on the town's website;[4]St. Andrews by-the-Sea is a brand used for tourism purposes by the local Chamber of Commerce.
On 1 January 2023, Saint Andrews annexed the local service district of Bayside and Chamcook.[5] Revised census information has not yet been released.
History
The site of the town was named Qunnnoskwamk'ook, meaning long gravel bar in the Malecite-Passamaquoddy language. The present name was given by a French missionary who landed at the site on Saint Andrew's Day.[6] At the eastern end the town is a midden, a pile of shells and other refuse that accumulated over 2,000 years due to year-round activity of the Passamaquoddy. Today it is a provincial heritage site.[7]
The site was settled in 1783 by PenobscotLoyalists.[8]
The town's street grid was designed by Charles Morris and was laid out at that time and persists today.[2] Except for the shoreline Water Street, the names of streets have royal or colonial associations: (Parr Street, Carleton Street and Montague Street are all named after governors. These streets cross thirteen named after the children of King George III.).[9] Also typical of British colonial settlement of the time are the town's defensive sites, public spaces, and delineation.[2]
Between 1820 and 1860, the port of Saint Andrews welcomed Irish immigrants. They were first quarantined at Hospital Island, in Passamaquoddy Bay. At the 1851 census, more than 50% of the town's population had been born in Ireland.[11]
The Pendlebury Lighthouse, also known as the St. Andrews North Point Lighthouse, was built in 1833 at the tip of the peninsula.[12] Deactivated in 1938, it has since been restored and registered as a Canadian historic place.
In the late 1800s and early 1900s, St. Andrews became a seaside resort for people from Montreal and Boston who were seeking to escape the summer heat.[9] The town's first seaside hotel, the Argyll, opened in 1881.[13] It was followed in 1889 by The Algonquin, a resort on a hill overlooking the town, which became Canada's first seaside resort.[14] The Argyll burned down in 1892 and was never rebuilt while the Algonquin burned in 1914 and was rebuilt one year later. The lifestyle of wealthy summer visitors is commemorated at the Ross Memorial Museum.[15]
The town was designated a national historic site in 1998.
Historical population of Saint Andrews, New Brunswick
Year
1901
1911
1921
1931
1941
1951
1961
1981
1986
1991
1996
2001
2006
2011
2016
Population
1064
987
1065
1207
1167
1458
1531
1760
1612
1652
1752
1869
1798
1889
1786
Geography
Saint Andrews is at the southern tip of a peninsula, extending into Passamaquoddy Bay. The waterfront faces Saint Andrews Harbour and the Western Channel, which is formed by Navy Island. The harbour is at the mouth of the St. Croix River.
The town is directly opposite the community of Robbinston, Maine, two kilometres to the west across the river mouth, and 53 km by road.
In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, Saint Andrews had a population of 2,048 living in 921 of its 1,096 total private dwellings, a change of 14.7% from its 2016 population of 1,786. With a land area of 8.35 km2 (3.22 sq mi), it had a population density of 245.3/km2 (635.2/sq mi) in 2021.[1]
The only way into or out of Saint Andrews by land is via Route 127, which runs directly through the town. It meets Route 1 on either end of the town.
Media
A local community channel, CHCO-TV, serves the Saint Andrews and Charlotte County area. The station launched in 1993 on cable television, and began broadcasting over the air in 2006.