Path Of The 2024 Total Solar Eclipse, Part 6
New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, Newfoundland and Labrador
Sources: All maps from NationalEclipse.com, eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov, Google, INEGI, NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center. Also: eclipse2024.org.
New Brunswick
A — Adamsville, Ammon (Hebrew meaning: an ancient nation east of the Jordan; Ammonites were closely related to the Israelites, however, they were hated by the Jews; some archeologists have found evidence of child sacrifice near Amman, Jordan), Armond (meaning: soldier), Arthurette (Celtic, meaning: bear, or “follower of Thor”), Ashland, Astle (Old Norse, derived from the name Ásketill, meaning “god” plus “cauldron”), Avon (Celtic name of a river in England; Old Testament Hebrew meaning: “to bend, twist, distort” God's Word to degrees of perversity, depravity, wickedness worthy of punishment).
B — Back Lots, Bannon, Bar-de-Cocagne (named after Cockaigne, a mythical paradise in medieval French literature; meaning: land of plenty), Barachois (meaning: a shallow lagoon), Barnaby (meaning: “son of consolation”), Barony (the domain, rank, or dignity of a baron), Bartholomew, Bartibog (named for Bartholomew La Bogue, a Micmac chief who was called Balt Bogue by the Indians), Bartibog Bridge, Bartibog Station, Bastarache (Basque French name for someone who lives in a house by a boundary, on the edge of a settlement, or the corner of a street), Bath, Bathurst Mines, Beaconsfield (name of a market town and civil parish in Buckinghamshire, England), Beaufort (meaning: “beautiful fort”), Beaver Dam, Benoit (French name for males, female derivative is Benoîte; from the Latin word benedictus, which means "blessed"), Beveridge (name of a US Senator from Indiana, who was a leader in the Progressive Era; in the UK, the 1942 Beveridge Report drafted by Liberal economist William Beveridge proposed widespread post-war reforms to the welfare state including rewards for everyone who sacrificed), Big Hole, Big Hole Brook, Biggar Ridge (Biggar is the name of a town and parish in Scotland), Black River, Blackies Landing, Blackville, Blissfield, Blowdown, Bourgeois, Brewers Mills, Bruce, Brunswick Mines, Burnt Church, Burntland Brook, Burton, Bushville.
C — Cains Point, Canaan, Canaan Forks, Canaan Road, Canterbury, Canton, Cantor, Cape Breton, Cardigan, Carlisle, Castaway, Centerville, Centreville, Centreville, Charleston, Chatham, Chatham Head, Chiasson (French surname: derivative of chiasse, meaning: colic, diarrhea, chronic dysentery), Clairville, Clarkville, Clearview, Clearwater, Coal Creek, Cocagne (meaning: festival, celebration, mythical land, a mythical land), Cocagne Cove, Cocagne-Nord, Cocagne-Sud, Collette (French, meaning: victory of the people, derived from the Greek name Nicolette), Collette-Village, Cottrell (a technical term of status in the feudal system; a serf or bond tenant who held a cottage by service), County Line, Covered Bridge, Cross Roads, Currie, Currie Road, Currieburg, Côte-d'Or (meaning: “gold coast” or “gold region”; also, a reference to the Gold Coast of West Africa, currently Ghana).
D — Daulnay, Dead Creek, Dennis, Derby, Derby Junction, Desherbiers (Charles Des Herbiers; Commandant Desherbiers was a French official sent to re-establish control over Louisbourg, which had been taken by the English in 1745), Devon, Divide, Douglas, Drummond, Durham.
E — East Brighton, East Centreville, East Galloway, East Newbridge, Eel Ground, Emerson, English Settlement, Enterprise, Esdraelon (Greek derivation of the Hebrew “Yizreʿel,” meaning: “God will sow”; also, refers to a lowland to the north of the West Bank in Israel), Évangéline (Greek, meaning: “good news”), Everett (German, meaning: brave and strong as a boar), Exmoor (name of a grazing ground for Exmoor ponies, sheep, and red deer in SW England).
F — Fairisle, Flat Landing, Florenceville-Bristol, Fontaine, Fosterville, Four Falls, Four Roads, Fredericksburg.
G — Galloway (a region in southwest Scotland and a breed of cattle), Giants Glen, Goan (term for a resident of the Indian state of Goa), Good Corner, Graham Corner, Grainfield, Grand Falls, Grand Falls Station, Grangeville, Granite Hill, Grant Settlement, Gray Rapids, Green Hill, Green Mountain, Green Road, Greenfield, Greenhill, Gregan (a rare Gaelic surname, of uncertain origin, found in some medieval records; perhaps derived from “riodhgach” meaning impulsive, furious; variations include: Greggan, Gregon, and Gregine), Gregg Settlement, Guimond-Village (French: derived from a personal name with ancient Germanic elements: ”wīg,” meaning “battle combat,” and “mund,” meaning “protection”).
H — Hacheyville (Hackey, from Old French: an occupational name for someone who made or used axes or battleaxes), Haché Road (Haché is French, meaning: axe), Halcomb, Hale, Halls Corner, Harcourt, Hardwicke, Harley Road, Harris Brook Settlement, Hartford, Hartland, Harvey, Harvey (York), Harvey Station, Hawkins Corner, Hawkshaw, Heath Steel Mines, Hemphill Corner, Highbank, Highlands, Howard, Hunters Corner, Hunters Home, Hébert (meaning: Army; also the name of a French journalist and leader during the French Revolution).
I — Indian Falls Depot, Indian Mountain, Indian Village, Inman, Irish Settlement, Irishtown, Island View.
J — Jackson Falls, Jacksontown, Jacksonville, Jericho, Johnson Settlement, Johnville, Jones Crossing, Jones Forks.
K — Kenneth, Kent Junction, Kilfoil (meaning: a devotee of Saint Paul; derived from Gaelic name Powell), Killarney Road, Killoween, Kilmarnock, Kincardine, Kings Mines, Kingsclear, Kingsley, Kirkland, Kirkwood.
L — Lake Edward, Lake George, Lampedo (Greek, meaning: “burning torch”; reference to Artemis, a goddess of fertility and hunting, and Amazon queen of a mythic race of warrior women), Landry (French, meaning: ruler), Lansdowne (the “Lansdowne” portrait of George Washington painted in 1796 shows Washington extending his arm while addressing Congress; the portrait also displays symbols from Roman government), Le Goulet (meaning: narrow passageway or bottleneck; the Treaty of Le Goulet was signed by Kings John of England and Philip II of France in May 1200), Leech, Limestone, Lincoln, Lindsay, Little Bartibog, Losier Settlement, Lower Brighton, Lower Derby, Lower Durham, Lower Durham, Lower Newcastle, Lower Northampton, Lower Perth, Lower Prince William, Lower Royalton, Lower Windsor, Lower Woodstock.
M — Macadam, MacDougall, Magnetic Hill, Mainstream, Maliseet (refers to a member of the Native Canadian people of New Brunswick and their language), Marne (name of a tributary of the Seine in France), Matthews, Maxwellm, Medford, Middle Landing, Miramichi (Native American word meaning “place of happy retreat”), Monument, Mount Hope, Mount Pleasant.
N — New Avon, New Canaan, New Denmark, New England Settlement, New Jersey, New Maryland, New Scotland, New Zion, Newbridge, Newburg, Newburg Junction, Newcastle, Newcastle Bridge, Newcastle Centre, Newcastle Creek, Newmarket, Normandie, North Cains, North Devon, Northampton, Notre-Dame.
O — O'Donnells, O'Neil, Oakland, Oakville, Oxbow (a wooden frame used to control large animals that are pulling a plow or a carriage; also used to describe a lake or river that curves in the shape of the letter U).
P — Pacific Junction, Pangburn (Anglo-Saxon, derived from “Pangbourne”), Pembroke (Celtic), Penniac (meaning: fork in the river), Phillipstown, Piccadilly, Plymouth, Price Settlement, Priceville, Prince William, Prince William Station, Princess Park.
R — Rowena (Old High German, Welsh, Old English, meaning: white-haired, fair-haired), Roy (meaning “royal”), Royal Road, Royalton, Russell, Russelltown, Russellville.
S — Saint Anthony, Saint Margarets (Saint Margaret of Scotland was Patron Saint of Mothers; known as Margaret of Wessex, was a 12th century queen of Scotland and a renowned religious figure), Saint Thomas, Saint-Antoine, Saint-Charles, Saint-Cyrille, Saint-Damien, Saint-David, Saint-Fabien, Saint-Grégoire, Saint-Ignace, Saint-Irénée, Saint-Isidore, Saint-Jean-Baptiste, Saint-Joseph, Saint-Maurice, Saint-Norbert, Saint-Olivier, Saint-Paul, Saint-Philippe, Saint-Wilfred, Salem, Scale, Scotch Settlement, Scotchtown, Saumarez (name of Vice-Admiral who fought in the American Revolutionary War), Sheffield, Six Roads, Slope Road, Smithfield, Smiths Corner, Smiths Crossing, South Devon, South Portage, South Ridge, South River, Southampton, Southampton Junction, Springfield, Stanley, Strong Corner, Stymiest Road, Summit (Victoria), Sunny Corner, Swan Creek.
T — Targettville, Temple, The Bluff, The Gorge, The Lots, The Range, The Ridge, The Willows, Three Brooks, Tripp Settlement, Tugtown, Turner Settlement, Two Brooks.
U, V — Union Corner, Union Settlement, Upper Blackville, Upper California, Upper Derby, Upper Durham, Upper Kent, Upper Northampton, Upper Queensbury, Upper Royalton, Upper Southampton, Upper Woodstock. Valley, Victoria, Victoria Corner.
W, Y, Z — Wakefield, Ward Settlement, Watson Settlement, Weaver, Welch, West Branch, West Galloway, White Rapids, Whites Settlement, Whitney, Williamsburg, Williamstown, Windsor, Wine River, Winston, Woodstock, Woodstock Road. Youngs Crossing. Zealand, Zionville.
Prince Edward Island
A — Abrams Village, Alaska, Alma, Arlington, Anglo Tignish (Tignish is Gaelic, meaning: home place), Arlington, Ascension.
B — Bayside, Bayview, Black Banks, Brockton, Brooklyn, Burlington, Burton.
C — Carleton, Cavendish, Central Kildare, Christopher Cross, Clinton, Coleman, Conway, Cross River.
F & G — Fortune Cove, Freeland, French River. Glengarry, Grahams Road, Green Gables.
H & I — Haliburton, Hamilton, Harmony, Harper, Hebron, Hope River. Indian River, Inverness, Irishtown.
J, K, L — Judes Point. Kelvin, Kensington. Leoville, Low Point, Lower Hamilton.
M — MacDougall, Margate (name of a town in Kent, UK), Maximeville, Mayfield (meaning: meeting place; the warrior's field), Mont-Carmel, Montrose, Mount Pleasant, Mount Royal.
N — Nail Pond, New London, Norboro (meaning: northern fort), Norway.
P — Park Corner, Peterville, Piusville, Portage, Profits Corner.
R — Richmond, Rosebank, Rosehill, Roseville, Roxbury.
S — Saint Anthony, Saint Chrysostome (an Early Church Father who served as archbishop of Constantinople; known for his denunciation of abuse of authority by both ecclesiastical and political leaders; born c.347 A.D., died 407 A.D.), Saint Edward, Saint Eleanors (Saint Eleanor is synonymous with Saint Helen or Saint Helena; consort of Emperor Constantius Chlorus and mother of Emperor Constantine the Great; born c.246 A.D., died 330 A.D.; famed for her piety; patron saint of archaeologists), Saint Felix (there are 4 saints named Saint Felix: Saint Felix of Nola, died 255 A.D.; Saint Felix IV, died 530 A.D.; Saint Felix of Burgundy, died 647 or 648 A.D.; Saint Felix of Valois, a hermit, born c.1127, died 1212 A.D.), Saint Lawrence (born 225, died 258 A.D.; one of the most venerated saints of the Roman Catholic Church; one of seven deacons who were martyred in the persecution of Christians ordered by the Roman Emperor Valerian), Saint Nicholas (Saint Nicholas of Myra, born 270, died 343 A.D.; aka. Nicholas of Bari and Nicholas the Wonderworker; patron saint of sailors, merchants, archers, repentant thieves, children, brewers, pawnbrokers, toymakers, unmarried people, and students; the original Santa Claus), Saint Peter and Saint Paul (yes, that is the actual name of the town), Saint Roch (c.1295–1327; born with a red birthmark on his chest in the shape of a cross; he was a Catholic confessor and patron saint of dogs, falsely accused people, the sick, and bachelors), Saint Gilbert (Saint Gilbert of Sempringham, born c.1083 and died 1189 A.D.), St-Hubert (born c.656 and died c.728 A.D.; patron of huntsmen and healer of hydrophobia, now called as rabies), St-Nicholas, St-Raphaël (an archangel venerated in Judaism, Christianity, Lutheran Churches, Catholic Churches, and Islam; one of the seven Archangels who stand before the throne of the Lord; his name appears only in the Book of Tobit / Tobias), St-Timothée, St. Anthony (Saint Anthony of Padua was a Portuguese priest and friar; born 1195 in Portugal, and died 1231 A.D., in Italy), St. Edward (born c.1003 and died 1066 A.D.; he was an Anglo-Saxon English king and saint, known as Edward the Confessor; he was the son of Æthelred the Unready and Emma of Normandy).
T, U, V — Toronto. Union Corner, Unionvale, Urbainville. Victoria West.
W — Wellington (a title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom; the first Duke of Wellington was Arthur Wellesley), Wellington Centre, Wellington Station, West Cape (the Cape of Good Hope was a British colony, in the region now called South Africa), West Devon, West Point, Woodstock.
Newfoundland and Labrador
A — Abrahams Cove, Amherst Cove, Aspen.
B — Badger, Barton, Benton, Bishop's Falls, Bishop's Harbour, Bishops Falls South, Black River, Bonavista, Bragg's Island, Britannia, British Harbour, Brookfield, Brooklyn, Brownsdale, Buchans (occupational name from Middle Low German, meaning: “farmer John”; būr means “farmer” plus the personal name “Hans”), Buchans Junction, Burgoyne (a surname introduced to England following the Norman conquest of 1066; also, name of a British general in the American Revolution who captured Fort Ticonderoga but lost the battle of Saratoga in 1777), Burnside, Burnt Islands, Burnt Point, Butchers, Butter Cove, Butts.
C — Cains Island, Catalina, Centreville, Centreville-Wareham-Trinity, Charleston, Charlottetown, Churchills, Clarenville, Clarenville South, Clifton, Cobb, Come By Chance, Crossroads, Cruisers, Cul de Sac West, Culls Harbour.
D — Dark Cove, De Grau (meaning: a rung on a ladder, a matter of degree), Deer Harbour, Deer Island, Dennis Hill, Dover, Down Below.
E & F — East Bay, Eastport, Elliston, English Harbour. Fair Island, Flat Islands, François.
G — Gallants, Gander, George's Brook, Georges Lake, Glenview, Glenwood, Goblin, Goobies (meaning: saliva or spit), Goobies Siding, Goobies Station, Gooseberry Island, Grand Falls-Windsor, Grants, Grey River.
H — Happy Adventure, Harcourt, Hatchet Cove, Heart's Content, Highlands, Hillview, Howards.
I — Indian Bay, Ireland's Eye, Island Cove, Isle aux Morts (literally: Island of the Dead), Isle-Morte (Island of the dead), Ivanhoe.
J & K — Jamestown, Jeffrey’s, Job's Cove, Joyce, Jumpers Brook. Keels, Kings Cove, Knights Cove.
L — Lady Cove, Lake Bond, Lancaster, Lethbridge, Little Catalina, Little Heart's Ease, Locks Cove, Loretto, Lourdes, Low Point, Lower Cove, Lower Island Cove.
M — Mainland, Man of War Cove, Marches Point, Mary March, McCallum, Middle Brook, Milton, Monroe, Mouse Island, Musgravetown.
N — New Bonaventure, New Chelsea, New Country Siding, New Harbour, New Melbourne, Newport, North Bay, North Shore, North West Brook, Northern Bay, Notre Dame Junction.
O — O'Brien, Open Hall, Osmond, Our Harbour.
P & Q — Parsons Harbour, Parsons Point, Patricks Harbour, Peterview, Petites, Piccadilly, Piccaire (meaning: to beat, to bang, to hammer, to thrash, or knock), Point-a-Mal, Popes Harbour, Port Nelson, Port Union, Portland, Princeton, Pushthrough. Queen's Cove.
R — Ramea (a Hindi or Muslim name), Random Heights, Red Cliff, Red Rocks, Rioux (topographic name for someone who lives by a stream), Robinson Bight, Robinsons, Rose Blanche (white rose), Round Harbour.
S — Safe Harbour, Saint Alban's, Saint Jones Within, Saint Jones Without, Saint Teresa, Salvage, Sandringham (Sandringham House is the name of a residence of the Royal family), Serpentine, Swift Current.
T — Templeman, Terra Nova, The Block, The Gravels, Thoroughfare, Tompkins, Trinity, Trinity Bay North, Trinity East.
W — West Point, White Rock, Whites Road, Windsor.