
The old Ganong chocolate factory is now functioning as the Chocolate Museum.

The new Ganong chocolate factory.
'St. Stephen' (2001 pop.: 4,667) is a
Canadian town in
Charlotte County,
New Brunswick.
The town is situated on the east bank of the
St. Croix River at .
The river and surrounding area was first explored by the
French explorer,
Samuel de Champlain when he and his men spent a winter there in
1604. Officially incorporated as a town in
1871, five years later St. Stephen's business district was almost totally destroyed by fire when eighty buildings and 13 wharves burned. The population of St. Stephen has declined 5.9% since 1996.
The St. Croix River marks a section of the
international boundary between the
United States and
Canada, forming a natural border between the towns on either side of the river bank.
Calais, Maine (pop. 3,447) is connected to St. Stephen by a bridge, which is the eleventh most important link between the world's two largest
trading partners.
Residents of St. Stephen and Calais regard their community as one place, cooperating in their fire departments and other community projects. As evidence of the longtime friendship between the towns, during the
War of 1812, the
British military provided St. Stephen with a large supply of
gunpowder for protection against the enemy Americans in Calais, but the town elders gave the gunpowder to Calais for its
Fourth of July celebrations.
Historically a lumber and ship building economy until the early part of the 1900s, by the end of
World War II the town's main employers were the
Ganong Bros. Limited chocolate company (established
1873, Canada's oldest candy company), and the second largest textile mill in Canada built in
1882 on the river where it operated with its own hydro-electric generating station. In 1957, the textile mill closed but the confectionery maker remains a key employer.
A hotbed of
baseball interest, in 1934 the
Boston Braves of
baseball's
National League played an exhibition game in St. Stephen against the local "
Kiwanis" team. The enthusiastic fans in attendance numbered more than half the town's population. In 1939, the local baseball team won its ninth consecutive New Brunswick senior championship, topping off a decade of dominance in the sport at both the provincial and
Maritime levels.
The town is also the home of Canada's smallest University called
St. Stephen's University.
Media
St. Stephen, being a small town, has only two media organizations: a radio station and weekly newspaper. Radio station
CHTD-FM, known as "The Tide", plays country music and offers regular news updates. Founded in 1865, the
Saint Croix Courier is the town's weekly newspaper, it also publishes another newspaper, the ''Courier Weekend''. It should be noted that the ''Courier'' is one of the few papers in New Brunswick that is not owned by the
Irving family. Radio stations located in
Calais, Maine can also be heard, including
WCRQ,
WQDY and
WMED.
People from St. Stephen
★
Sandra Barr - N.B. Hall of Fame athlete
★
Henry Burr, radio pioneer and early recording star
★
Rowland Frazee, chairman of the Royal Bank of Canada
★
Arthur Ganong, businessman, politician
★
Gilbert Ganong, businessman, statesman
★
William Francis Ganong, botanist, historian and cartographer
★
Don Sweeney, former NHL hockey player with the Boston Bruins and Dallas Stars
★
Samuel Heywood, prominent early settler of
Berkeley, California
★
John Ralston, actor
External links
★
Town of St. Stephen Website
★
St. Stephen's University
★
Charlotte County Guide
★
Ganong Nature Park
★
[1]
Further reading
★ Joshua M. Smith, ''Borderland Smuggling: Patriots, Loyalists, and Illicit Trade in the Northeast, 1783-1820'', University Press of Florida, 2006.
★ I. C. Knowlton, ''Annals of Calais, Maine and St. Stephen, New Brunswick'', 1875 (
Online)