Little is known of the area before it was settled by disbanded veterans of
De Lancey's Brigade following the
American Revolutionary War. The veterans moved there in late 1783. The 26,000 acres grant was to 110 men. Not all took up the offer, and of those who did, not all stayed. By 1790 only 23 families were present, and by 1804 only 10 of the original men had possession of the land.
a riot took place at the corner of Victoria and Boyne streets near the site of the Orange Hall, built in 1848 and now a vacant lot. It was a conflict between Protestant Irish immigrants of the
Orange Order and Catholic Irish immigrants. Around 250 Orangemen clashed with an equal number of Irish Catholics, leading to 10 deaths and many more injuries. It was a result of years of tensions. Subsequently, only Catholics were brought to trial. According to the 1851, census there were 488 inhabited houses, and nine places of worship. Immigration was important, with the majority coming from Ireland. A peaceful settlement was later made personally by
Arthur Hamilton-Gordon. The first telephone was installed in 1885 by
H.V. Dalling, a homemade telephone whose wires ran between his home and shop. The
Bell Telephone Company later opened a small
telephone exchange in his store. In 1887,
Tappan Adney, visiting Woodstock, learnt birchbark canoe construction from a
Maliseet, preserving and document the building process. The headquarters for the
New Brunswick Railway were here from 1870 until it ceased functioning. The first dam at the mouth of the Meduxnekeag River was built in 1886. In the 1880s Woodstock had two small electric companies related to the Small & Fisher and
Connell Brothers iron foundries. These were superseded by the Woodstock Electric Railway Light and Power Company which in 1906 built a dam and a powerhouse on the Meduxnekeag for distribution of power to the town. The first hydro-electric station in New Brunswick, the Hayden dam and its
power station was destroyed by a
freshet in 1923, which also washed out the bridge that crossed the Meduxnekeag. ==Culture & recreation==