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Pendleton Island

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pendleton Island
Native name:
Um-kub-ahumk'
A Bar, Nearly Covered[1]
Map
Geography
LocationBay of Fundy
ArchipelagoDeer Island Archipelago
Area120 ha (300 acres)[2][3]
Highest elevation77 m (253 ft)[4]
Administration
Canada
ProvinceNew Brunswick
CountyCharlotte
ParishWest Isles Parish

Pendleton Island (formerly called Doyle's Island[5]) is an undeveloped island in the West Isles Parish of Charlotte County, New Brunswick, Canada, where the Bay of Fundy enters Passamaquoddy Bay.[6][7][8]

Doyle's Passage (alternately called Boyle's Passage) initially referred to the narrow northern passage between the island and Macs Island which was then termed Letete Island, but the term later came to refer to the narrow passage between Pendleton's Island and Deer Island, with the northern passage renamed L'etete Passage.[4] Two overhead power cables over the passage have clearances of 15 and 21 metres.[4] The passage between Pendleton and Deer island is shallow and marked with rocks, making it difficult to cross.[9]

Geography

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The island has a mixture of spruce, birch, mountain ash and red maple, balsam fir and tamarack trees.[10]

The island has a 500' cliff that historically drew thrillseekers to attempt to climb.[5] The island contains a lagoon, and its chief bay has a steep gravel barrier beach.[11]

The northern side of the island is silurian rock.[12]

History

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It was named for three Loyalist brothers Stephen, Thomas and Gideon Pendleton who settled the island.[13][1][14] A 1796 deed shows Thomas Pendleton purchased "Hardwood Island" from Thomas Doyle for £150, which is presumed to reference Pendleton's Island rather than the currently-named Hardwood Island a few kilometres away.[15]

The island was described by Thomas Baillie in 1832 as "a narrow island...between which and Deer Island there is a narrow passage for boats...this island is settled, its soil good, the situation unobjectionable and its aspect favourable to agriculture.". [16]

There is a geodetic triangulation station on a high bare hill on the northwestern part of the island.[17]

In November 1893, Luther Lambert of Lord's Cove married Millie Pendleton at the home of her father, Ward Pendleton, on the island.[18]

From at least 1910-1916, Calvin Pendleton and his wife Theresa Holland lived on the family including with their daughter Arlene.[19]

In 1938, Raymond Greenlaw was hired to work on the power lines from McMaster Island to Pendleton Island to Deer Island, and he spent the next four decades largely operating as Deer Island's only representative of NB Power.[20] He recounted the time a power line had gone down on Pendleton Island falling on three grazing cows "cooking them on the spot".[20]

The Pendleton family continued living on the island, across two homesteads raising crops and cattle until approximately 1935 when ownership was split between nearly 150 descendents of the deceased Ward Pendleton.[21] The Nature Conservancy of Canada located 114 of the descendants who agreed to sign over their share of the island, as did Dr. Herb Mitton, leading to its establishment as a nature sanctuary and one of the Conservancy's largest properties.[22][21]

A 1985 study confirmed the presence of an unnamed shipwreck in the northern cove of the island.[23]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b A monograph of the place-nomenclature of the province of New Brunswick, https://www.canadiana.ca/view/oocihm.12511/96
  2. ^ "The Great Fundy Coastal Cleanup – Conservation Volunteers". Archived from the original on September 26, 2021.
  3. ^ "Cobscook Bibliography". Cobscook Bay Resource Center.
  4. ^ a b c "Information archivée dans le Web" (PDF).
  5. ^ a b Thompson and Martin, s:The Smiling Isle of Passamaquoddy, 1908
  6. ^ Thomas, M. L. H., J. A. Stevens, et al. (1990). Shallow marine, littoral and terrestrial associations of Pendleton Island, New Brunswick, Publ. Sci. NAT. New Brunswick Museum (No. 9), New Brunswick Museum, Saint John, New Brunswick, (Canada).
  7. ^ McAslan, Alison. "A Floristic Survey of Pendleton Island, New Brunswick"
  8. ^ Clayden, S.R., "Pendleton Island flora.", 1991
  9. ^ Sailing Directions for Nova Scotia, 1952, US Navy Hydrographic Office
  10. ^ "Where we work". Nature Conservancy Canada. Retrieved April 16, 2025.
  11. ^ Tides of Change Across the Gulf - Chapter 7, https://www.gulfofmaine.org/council/publications/GOMSummitAppendix2.pdf
  12. ^ Bailey, LW. "The Geological Features of the St Croix River and Pasasmaquoddy Bay", 1915, https://cdnsciencepub.com/doi/10.1139/f14-026
  13. ^ https://ia601305.us.archive.org/33/items/brianpendletonhi01pend/brianpendletonhi01pend.pdf
  14. ^ The exodus of the loyalists from Penobscot and the loyalist settlements at Passamaquoddy
  15. ^ Pendleton, Everett Hall (April 10, 1956). "Early New England Pendletons; with some account of the three groups who took the name Pembleton, and notices of other Pendletons of later origin in the United States". [South Orange? N.J.] – via Internet Archive.
  16. ^ https://ia801305.us.archive.org/33/items/cihm_21383/cihm_21383.pdf
  17. ^ "Triangulation in Maine", U.S. Government Printing Office, 1918
  18. ^ The Christian : [Vol. 11, no. 1 (Nov. 1893)], https://www.canadiana.ca/view/oocihm.8_06151_121/8
  19. ^ The Beacon : Vol. XXVII, No. 52 (June 24, 1916)
  20. ^ a b The Quoddy Tides 11 Dec 1970, :Dateline: Deer Island", Stirling Lambert
  21. ^ a b Phillips, Regis. "Volunteers wanted to beautify Pendleton Island".
  22. ^ "Family donates New Brunswick island shoreline to charity". CBC News New Brunswick. June 30, 2006. Retrieved April 16, 2025.
  23. ^ Parks Canada, "West Isles Feasibility Study....a National Marine Park in the West Isles", December 1985. Figure 12.