Prior to municipal amalgamation in 1995, Chatham was an incorporated town in Northumberland County along the south bank of the Miramichi River opposite Douglastown. Since amalgamation it has been sometimes referred to as Miramichi East, a name that many long time residents find offensive.
In colonial times the surrounding lands were heavily forested, the stands of eastern white pine being especially valued for ships' masts. The River teemed with fish, atlantic salmon the most prized. Abundant game roamed the forests, and berries were a valuable food supplement.
Scottish people arriving here found the area strangely familiar. The rocks in the Miramichi are similar to those of Scotland, being a part of the same formation before continental drift separated them. Seabirds and fish are often the same or similar. The atlantic salmon, the herring gull and the common tern were found in both areas. The Scots had the technology and know how to lumber, fish, farm and build ships in such an area. The Irish were somewhat less adapted, their forests long having been cut down, and fishing not being so well developed there. But they could pick up skills from their neighbours. The skills of the urban English were not so well adapted to this area and English farmers were accustomed to a gentler climate, so not many settled here.
At Chatham, the river banks are low, but not subject to flooding, being very suited to wharves. A deep channel comes very close to the shore, enabling the largest ships in colonial times to come up to the wharves. Away from the shore the land gradually rises several hundred feet. Rainfall is quite adequate. The soil, while sandy and a bit acid, supports potatoes, root crops and apple trees.
All these circumstances made Chatham an ideal location for a lumbering and fishing centre.
In 1800 Francis Peabody settled in the location that became Chatham. The Miramichi River is nearly a mile wide here. Its channel comes very close to the shore at this spot, so it was a natural place to build wharves. Logs from the large watershed of the river could easily be floated to this point. It made sense to saw lumber here. The best salmon fisheries were nearby.
Other settlers followed, but growth was relatively slow throughout the early part of the 19th century. The first newspaper published in the North Shore of New Brunswick was the Mercury, founded in Chatham in 1825. By 1834 the first bank opened. A stage coach left each Monday for Fredericton. The settlement attracted a group of aggressive entrepreneurs, Scottish and English, such as Joseph Cunard, William Muirhead, Jabez Bunting Snowball, and later, W.S. Loggie. Gradually, the community became a centre for sawing lumber, shipbuiding, and exporting fish and forest products to the British Isles and, later on, to the United States.
In its early days, Chatham resembled the Calgary of today far more than the contemporary quiet towns of The Maritimes. It was bustling, energetic, growing and confident. It is interesting that both Chatham and Calgary attracted an ambitious and able young Maritime lawyer called Richard Bedford Bennett, later to be prime minister of Canada. He was involved in politics in both places.
By 1851, Chatham had 505 employed persons distributed among the following occupations: 170 labourers, 74 servants, 60 shipwrights, 25 joiners, 20 cordwainers, 19 farmers, 16 clerks, 13 blacksmiths, 12 merchants, 10 tailors, 9 storekeepers, 7 sawyers, 7 teachers, 5 blockmakers, 4 sailmakers, 4 riggers, 4 stage drivers, 4 butchers,4 printers, 3 clergymen, 1 sparmaker, 1 gunsmith, 1 surgeon and 1 constable.
A police force was started in 1858, telephones came to the town in 1880, with street lighting in 1888.
In 1881, somewhat past the prime of sailing ships, the port of Chatham recorded the following annual traffic:
In 1881, the value of bank deposits was $133,118.
Chatham was incorporated as a town in 1896. A large wooden hotel, The Adams House operated from 1884 to the 1950s. The four storey, brick Touraine Hotel was opened in 1908. It was destroyed by fire just after World War II.
It was on a branch line of the Canadian National Railways.
The town was a service and shopping centre for the surrounding lands, especially the areas further down the bay. Students boarded at the Catholic girls and boys schools and the Catholic college in Town. During the period, 1880 to 1960, the Catholic Church was a major employer in Chatham, being especially important after the mills began to close.
A ferry boat crossed the Miramichi River at Chatham except for winter freeze up until the opening of the Centennial Bridge in 1967.
A Catholic religious order, the Religious Hospitaliers of St. Joseph, long had a significant presence in the town, operating a large elementary/secondary school (St. Michael's Academy), a hospital and a nursing home. The nuns are still present (2005) but in sadly diminished numbers, with plans to leave soon.
The Basilian Fathers operated a small liberal arts college, which was later taken over by the Diocese. It evolved into St. Thomas University, now located in Fredericton.
The depression of 1919 hit the town, resulting in a major employer, the Snowball sawmill, closing permanently. Young men and women moved to New England to seek work where many had relatives.
World War Two saw the opening of RCAF Station Chatham, providing an economic stimulus for the town until its closure in 1996. During the 1960s and 1970s, the base, renamed CFB Chatham in 1968, was an important staging ground for CF-101 Voodoo fighter interceptors which were under command of NORAD to interdict Soviet nuclear bombers that would challenge Canadian airspace in Atlantic Canada.
The post war baby boom of the 1950s enabled the town to reach a peak population of 8,600 in 1961. The loss of St. Thomas University in 1964, which moved to Fredericton, and the closure of CFB Chatham in 1996 have contributed to a slow decline.
The provincial government imposed an amalgamation of all incorporated municipalities in the lower Miramichi River valley in 1996, creating the city of Miramichi.
In 1998, the federal government opened the Canadian Firearms Centre in Chatham, an office dedicated to implementing the Canadian Firearms Act, which is intended to hold the records of all registered firearms in the country. The office employs several hundred civil servants and has helped to offset employment losses created by the base closure.
Martin Cranney (1795-1870), a native of Ireland, arrived in Chatham in 1815. He was one of the first Irish Catholics to achieve a prominent place in public life, serving in a number of public offices including as representative of Northumberland County in the 14th New Brunswick Legislative Assembly.
Joseph Cunard (1799-1865) of Halifax, brother of Samuel, founder of the famous steamship line, settled in Chatham as a young man and became a prosperous businessman, with a large sawmill, ships and a merchantile business, centered in Chatham, but with interests across the Province. His era was from the 1820s to the late 1840s, when he was bankrupted and left Town. He died in England.
John Mercer Johnson (1819-1868) was born in Liverpool, England but moved to Chatham at the age of two. He started practicing law in town in 1840 and in 1850 was elected to the House of Assembly of the Province. A Liberal, he was variously Solicitor General, Postmaster-General, Speaker of the House and Attorney General of New Brunswick. He is a Father of Confederation and was a Member of Parliament of the new Dominion of Canada from 1867 to his death in 1868.
Jabez Bunting Snowball was a prominent entrepreneur and Lieutenant-Governor of New Brunswick.
W.S. Loggie was a Member of Parliament and a preeminent Chatham merchant of his era (1880-1925).
Richard Bedford Bennett, prime minister of Canada during the early 1930s once operated a law practice here and was an alderman of the town. Max Aitken, later Lord Beaverbrook, was his office boy.
Another Prime Minister, Brian Mulroney attended high school here in the late 1950s at the boarding school attached to St. Thomas University.
Frank McKenna, sometime premier of New Brunswick and later Canadian Ambassador in Washington, was the member of the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick for Chatham from the early 1980s until his resignation as premier. Originally from the south of the Province, he moved to Chatham in the early 1970s to open a law practice.
Raymond Fraser, novelist, poet, biographer. His books include "The Black Horse Tavern", "Rum River", "The Fighting Fisherman: the Life of Yvon Durelle", "The Bannonbridge Musicians" and "In a Cloud of Dust and Smoke".