For governance purposes most of the parish is part of the town of Beaurivage, with a small area on the south part of the village of Five Rivers,[5] both of which members of the Kent Regional Service Commission.[6]
The parish may take its name from the Roman Catholic ecclesiastical parish of Saint-Charles-Borromée.
History
Saint-Charles was erected in 1909 from parts of Richibucto and Saint-Louis Parishes.[8] The new parish included settlements along the Saint-Charles River, which formed the boundary between Richibucto and Saint-Louis.
on the west and north by a line beginning where the Canadian National Railway crosses the northern line of Weldford Parish, which runs due west from the northernmost corner of the Richibucto 15Indian reserve, and running northeasterly to the rear line of a grant on the Kouchibouguacis River, then generally easterly along the rear of grants along the river to the rear line of grants along the Saint-Charles River, near Route 134, and the prolongation of the rear line of the Saint-Charles River grants northeasterly to Saint-Louis Bay, then out through the gully near Terre-Noire Point and Kouchibouguac Bay to Northumberland Strait;
on the east by Northumberland Strait;
on the southeast by a line through Richibucto Harbour and up Northwest Branch to the mouth of Thomas Brook, then northwesterly to the northern line of a grant on the northern line of the town of Richibucto, then southwesterly along the grant to its westernmost corner, about midway between Route 11 and Route 134, and from there southwest to the northern line of Weldford Parish, near Aldouane Station Cross Road;
on the south by the northern line of Weldford Parish.
Communities
Communities at least partly within the parish;[9][10][11]italics indicate a name no longer in official use
^The Territorial Division Act[2] divides the province into 152 parishes, the cities of Saint John and Fredericton, and one town of Grand Falls. The Interpretation Act[3] clarifies that parishes include any local government within their borders.
^"8 Edward 7 c. 21 An Act to amend the Act respecting the division of the Province into Counties, Towns and Parishes, so far as relates to the County of Kent.". Acts of the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick Passed in the Month of May 1908. Fredericton: Government of New Brunswick. 1908. pp. 49–52.
^ abcd"No. 80". Provincial Archives of New Brunswick. Department of Natural Resources and Energy Development. Retrieved 11 June 2021. Remainder of parish on maps 88–90 at same site.
^ abcd"236"(PDF). Transportation and Infrastructure. Government of New Brunswick. Retrieved 11 June 2021. Remainder of parish on mapbooks 237, 238, and 251–253 at same site.