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Tuesday, January 7, 2025

Riverside Presbyterian Church move - Kings Landing, Prince William, New Brunswick



Kings Landing Site Map here:  2024-Map-File-Online.pdf



Photographed December 2024 at Kings Landing, New Brunswick, Canada after an early afternoon supper on a warm sunny day at their Christmastime event at the "Kings Head Inn" 
-- Saint Mark Anglican Church building is one of 70 historic buildings on 300 acres at the site on Saint John River, New Brunswick [ celebrating 50 years 1974-2024 ] 




"Heritage Value

Kings Landing Historical Settlement is designated a Provincial Historic Site for its preservation of the history of the settlers along the Saint John River.

Kings Landing Historical Settlement was created as part of the Mactaquac Hydroelectric Dam project which was undertaken as a federal-provincial project which began in 1965. Because the dam would flood the mid St. John River Valley from Mactaquac to Upper Woodstock, potentially destroying settlements begun by Loyalist refugees, their descendants, and 19th century immigrants, the historically and architecturally significant buildings from these early settlements were moved to what is now Kings Landing. Kings Landing Historical Settlement is a living history museum consisting of 37 historic buildings, 34 of which have been restored and 3 of which have been rehabilitated, as well as 28 reconstructed buildings, which are all set in a settlement pattern on a 53 hectare site along the St. John River. Two more buildings which would have been destroyed by construction in Fredericton were subsequently moved to Kings Landing. The architectural history of rural central New Brunswick from 1790s to the early 1920s is well documented and preserved. The settlement portrays the evolution of rural life in the St. John River Valley from the Loyalists, the Scottish and Irish immigrants and the late Victorians.

Kings Landing Historical Settlement also has value as a historic interpretation centre. The buildings, as well as the collection of furniture, decorative arts and pre-industrial technology, represent a way of life for the early settlers in a rural community. The re-enactment of the relationship between homes and the land in an agrarian society, the relationship between farm buildings and farm houses and the social spiritual life of the communities are interpretations of what was probably rural life from the 1790s to the early 1920.

Source: Department of Wellness, Culture and Sport, Heritage Branch, Site File:Vol.I-18500-D,2"






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