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Moncton and grew
As the Moncton area grew in population, the riding shrank.

Moncton and during
The Eatons catalogue division, CNR's locomotive shops facility and CFB Moncton were all closed during this time throwing thousands of citizens out of work.
Perhaps the greatest case of cost overruns was caused by political interference during construction of the section of new line between the NSR trackage at Truro and the E & NA trackage near Moncton.
On July 30, 2011, U2 performed the first verse of the song during the last show on the 360 ° Tour, in Moncton, New Brunswick.
Their philanthropy has long been rumoured in many projects, but the first time it was publicly acknowledged was during the early years of the Université de Moncton, an institution that K. C.
They became more prominent during the late 1800s following construction of the European and North American Railway through the area, which allowed for easier travel between Saint John and Moncton.
Interior shot of the Moncton Coliseum during a sold out Moncton Wildcats President's Cup ( QMJHL ) | President's Cup game against the Saint John Sea Dogs in 2010.

Moncton and early
Moncton was placed on the Trans-Canada Highway network in the early 1960s after Route 2 was built along the northern perimeter of the city.
* In early 1999, CBC English-and French-network technicians in all locations outside Quebec and Moncton, members of the Communications, Energy and Paperworkers Union of Canada, went on strike.
Lord was born in Roberval, Quebec and raised in a bilingual household in Moncton, New Brunswick where he would spend the rest of his early life.
The first trial locations opened in early 2004 in Truro, Nova Scotia and Moncton, New Brunswick but the chain has since expanded into Ontario.
Although CBC's Fredericton and Moncton studios had produced programming for CHSJ since as early as the 1970s, New Brunswick remained the last province without a CBC owned-and-operated television station ( O & O ) until 1994, when CBC bought CHSJ-TV, recalled it as CBAT-TV, and relocated its studios to Fredericton.
Leonard Jones, the mayor of Moncton, New Brunswick, was an aggressive opponent of bilingualism in the late 1960s and early 1970s.
During this time, Fredericton saw its first passenger trains since the early 1960s when Rail Diesel Cars were instituted from Halifax via Moncton and Saint John to replace the Atlantics connections.
: In early 1970 the New Brunswick Telephone Company, Limited ( N. B. Tel ) learned that plans had been approved by the City of Moncton for the construction of the Place L ' Assomption development, a new high-rise business complex in the heart of the city.
In June 2010, Lewiston businessman Paul Spellman became minority owner of the team, and in early August, 2010, former Moncton Wildcats General Manager Bill Schurman was named as the team's Sports Management Consultant.
Winners store in Moncton with early 2000s logo.

Moncton and 20th
Transportation and distribution became increasingly important to the Moncton economy throughout the middle part of the 20th century.

Moncton and century
In 1871, the Intercolonial Railway of Canada chose Moncton to be its headquarters, and Moncton remained a railroad town for well over a century until the closure of the Canadian National Railway ( CNR ) locomotive shops in the late 1980s.
The Intercolonial Railway of Canada | Intercolonial Railway depot in Moncton was central to the city's economic recovery in the late 19th century.

Moncton and after
Steveston ( part of Metro Vancouver ) has a major street named after the city of Moncton.
Todd retired for good a few weeks after the Petes returned from Moncton.
Eventually with the rise in tourism after the Second World War, along with local highway construction which saw a “ Mountain Road ” bypass built further west from Magnetic Hill, the roughly 1 kilometre segment of gravel road became one of Moncton ’ s prime tourist attractions ( along with the tidal bore on the Petitcodiac River ).
His broadcast media career began in the summer after his graduation at CKDH in Amherst, Nova Scotia, followed by work at CKCW in Moncton, New Brunswick and at CHNS in nearby Halifax, Nova Scotia.
Fredericton Airport is the second busiest airport in New Brunswick in terms of passenger levels, after the Greater Moncton International Airport.
Fredericton and Moncton were also work destinations from the 1950s onwards, with Halifax becoming more important after 1965.
It began in Toronto, Ontario, as a collective on 16 January 1985 with its first Board of Directors: Shaunt Basmajian, James Deahl, Wayne Ray, Beverley Daurio, Chris Faiers, & Ted Plantos, and after 20 years has reformed its aims and objectives and is headquartered in Moncton, New Brunswick.
Pierre Dagenais began his junior career after being drafted by the Moncton Alpines of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League ( QMJHL ) when he was 17 years old.

Moncton and provincial
The final years of the McKenna administration saw an agreement signed with a private consortium called Maritime Road Development Corporation ( led by former provincial Liberal leader and former federal Minister of Transport Douglas Young ) to privately finance and build a toll highway to carry the Trans-Canada Highway ( Route 2 ) in a new alignment from a point west of Fredericton to a point on the existing TCH west of Moncton at River Glade.
Following the change of government in 2006 provincial election, Bernard Lord resigned as leader on December 13, 2006 and as the member of Moncton East.
In 1897 he became both mayor of Moncton and a member of the provincial House of Assembly as a Liberal.
It has run with a dedicated office in the provincial capital or Moncton with one full-time staff member ( the executive director ), to a one person part-time position run out of a member school's office space.
Moncton Crescent () is a provincial electoral district for the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick, Canada.
Moncton East () is a provincial electoral district for the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick, Canada.
Moncton West () is a provincial electoral district for the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick, Canada.
Moncton North () is a provincial electoral district for the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick, Canada.

Moncton and helped
He was president or director for a number of businesses in the Moncton area, helped found the Central Trust Company Limited and the Petitcodiac Hydro Development Company and also helped establish Moncton radio station CKCW.

Moncton and city
Moncton () is a Canadian city located in Westmorland County in southeastern New Brunswick.
The city has gained the nickname " Hub City " because of its central location and also because Moncton has historically been the railway and land transportation hub for the Maritimes.
Although the economy of Moncton was traumatized twice — by the collapse of the shipbuilding industry in the 1860s and by the closure of the CNR locomotive shops in the 1980s — the city was able to rebound strongly on both occasions.
The railway boom that emanated from this and the associated employment growth allowed Moncton to achieve city status on April 23, 1890.
The CNR continued to dominate the economy of the city with railway employment in Moncton peaked at nearly six thousand workers in the 1950s before beginning a slow decline.
The city of Moncton accounts for half the county's population and has developed as a major transportation, distribution, commercial and retail centre.
Greater Moncton International Airport () or Moncton / Greater Moncton International Airport is located in the city of Dieppe east northeast of downtown Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada
Part of this land was donated to the city of Moncton by Simon B. LeBlanc of Leger's Corner, a developer, land owner and owner of the LeBlanc general store and post office located on the south corner of the now named streets of Acadie Ave and Champlain St.
Moncton, the province's second largest city and the recreational center of the province.
The first portion of the E & NA built was between the Bay of Fundy port city of Saint John, via " The Bend " ( of the Petitcodiac River, this area is today known as the city of Moncton ) to the Northumberland Strait port town of Shediac.
Founded in 1968 in Shediac, New Brunswick by Bernard Imbeault and two of his friends, its head offices are now located in the nearby city of Moncton.
* Dieppe, New Brunswick, a city in Canada located near Moncton, NB
It is located at the North-Western edge ( In the Magnetic Hill Area ) of the city of Moncton in the Canadian province of New Brunswick.
Also in the Atlantic region of Canada, Moncton, New Brunswick ( a city that is roughly from Halifax, which is slightly longer than the distance between Ottawa and Montreal ), built a 20, 000-seat stadium ( New Moncton Stadium ) to host the IAAF 2010 World Junior Championships in Athletics.
The policy has been even more successful in New-Brunswick, where entire cities became French-speaking, for example: the city of Edmundston, which went from 89 % of French speakers in 1996 to 93. 4 % in 2006, the city of Moncton ( from 30. 4 % in 1996 to 33 % in 2006 ), Dalhousie ( from 42. 5 % to 49. 5 %) and Dieppe ( from 71. 1 % in 1996 to 74. 2 % en 2006 ).
The popularity of Parlee Beach since the 1800s has created a cottaging area for the city of Moncton in communities surrounding Pointe-du-Chêne, ranging from the area of Cocagne and Bouctouche in the north and Barachois, Robichaud and Cap-Pelé in the east.

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