This article is about the geographic parish, former local service district, and rural census subdivision. For the community, see Harcourt, New Brunswick.
For governance purposes it is divided between the village of Five Rivers in along part of the eastern boundary,[5] the village of and Grand Lake along Route 116 on the western boundary,[6] with the Kent rural district comprising the remainder.[7] Five Rivers and the rural district are members of the Kent Regional Service Commission and Grand Lake belongs to the Capital Region RSC.
Harcourt was erected from unassigned territory south of the Richibucto River in 1827,[11] comprising a much shallower parish than today.
In 1845 Kent County annexed all of Northumberland County behind it. The wording of existing legislation implicitly adds the annexed area to Harcourt.[12]
In 1850 the northern boundary was explicitly set, removing territory north of the North Forks of the Richibucto River.[13]
on the north by a line running due east and west from the mouth of Jimmy Graham Fork on the Richibucto River;
on the east by a line running north 22º west, based on the magnet of 1867,[b] from a point on the Westmorland County line twenty miles (32.2 kilometres) west of the northern tip of Shediac Island, running southerly from the north line of the parish to the northern line of Saint-Paul Parish, then southwesterly along the prolongation of a line running southwesterly 68º from the mouth of the Rivière Chockpish-nord to the Canadian National Railway line running alongside Route 126, then southerly to the Westmorland County line;
^Although the provincial regulation[8] named only Harcourt Parish, zoning maps released by the Kent RSC showed that Huskisson Parish was part of the Harcourt Parish LSD, reflecting the historic inclusion of Huskisson Parish for statistical purposes.
^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.
^"46 Vic. c. 66 An Act to alter the Parish Line between the Parishes of Saint Marys and Harcourt, in the County of Kent.". Acts of the General Assembly of Her Majesty's Province of New Brunswick. Passed in the Month of May 1883. Fredericton: Government of New Brunswick. 1883. p. 182. Available as a free ebook from Google Books.
^ abcd"No. 96". Provincial Archives of New Brunswick. Department of Natural Resources and Energy Development. Retrieved 11 June 2021. Remainder of parish on maps 97–99 and 107–109 at same site.
^ abcd"281"(PDF). Transportation and Infrastructure. Government of New Brunswick. Retrieved 11 June 2021. Remainder of parish on mapbooks 282–284, 296–300, and 314–317 at same site.