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TransCanadaHighway.com New Brunswick Trans-Canada Highway
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New Brunswick Trans-Canada Highway
Here is the route of the Trans-Canada Highway from east to west:
In New Brunswick, the Trans-Canada Highway (known here as the #2 Highway) runs 523 km though the province and passes through several cities and two-dozen towns, moving travellers from Nova Scotia (and PEI) to eastern Quebec. The highway starts at Sackville, on the Nova Scotia border and then passes through Moncton. It then turns southwest before hitting Sussex and detouring northwest around the province's biggest city, Saint John. Saint John is the location of the famous reversing falls at the mouth of the Saint John River. It then runs up the length of the Saint John River, and crosses the river at Fredericton, the provincial capital.
Kings Landing Historic Settlement (a few minutes north of Fredericton at Exit 259), is a living history museum of early rural life in New Brunswick, showing the pioneer life of the Loyalists, who were refugees from the American Revolution. The area north of Fredericton is known as "the Rhine of North America," and in Hartland, the river is crossed by the longest covered bridge in the world (covered bridges were invented in new Brunswick to prevent snow build-up on bridges). The highway leaves the province just north of Edmunston in the northest corner of the province
To travel the Trans- Canada route to Prince Edward Island, take Highway 16 at the Nova Scotia/New Brunswick border, and drive 36 miles to the new Confederation Bridge, opened in 1997 (you pay a toll when you leave PEI).
Our Pick of Useful Links:
- Large Roadside Attractions
- Trans-Canada Trail
- Desteo brochures mailed to you
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