Monday, April 8, 2013

Hillsborough New Brunswick



Hillsborough , New Brunswick, an historic village located about 30 kilometers south of Moncton, is the site of the New Brunswick Railway Museum, formerly known as the Salem and Hillsborough Railroad (S and H). A slogan cancellation from Hillsborough drew my attention to the village.

Railroad Museum

The S and H was formed in 1982 by a group of enthusiastic volunteers who secured possession of a section of Canadian National trackage. Regular coach and dinner tourist trains between Hillsborough and Salem were operated from 1982 until 2004.

From 1984 to 1989, the Hillsborough post office's International Peripheral System machine canceller was provided with a slogan publicizing the S and H.

 
 Hillsborough to Niagara Falls, April 27, 1989

HOME OF/CHEMIN
S (and) H RAILROAD
MUSEUM/MUSEE




New Brunswick Railway Museum, Hillsborough





The Battle of Petticodiac 1755

During the Seven Years' War  between the French and the British,  the Acadian settlement of Village-des-Blanchard (now Hillsborough) was attacked by British troops. French forces lead by Captain Charles Deschamps de Boisheber successfully drove off the British in the Battle of Petticodiac.

A  National Historic Sites and Monument plaque marking the Battle of Petticodiac stands in front of the railway museum.

 Charles Deschamps de Boishébert




The plaque reads:
Near this town on 3rd September, 1755, a detachment of Major Frye's troops, sent from Fort Cumberland to destroy Acadian Settlements on the river and compel the people to surrender for deportation, was defeated by a French force under Charles Deschamps de Boishébert.