Saint John, second most populous city in New Brunswick, Canada, situated on the Bay of Fundy at the mouth of the St. John River.
The site, visited by the French explorer Samuel de Champlain in 1604 and fortified by Charles La Tour (1631–35), was occupied by the British in 1758 and refortified as Fort Frederick. The latter was destroyed by American revolutionaries in 1775 but was replaced by Fort Howe (1777–78), whose blockhouse has since been reconstructed. The settlement developed after 1783, when loyalists established Parr Town and Carleton around the harbour. In 1785 the two communities amalgamated as Saint John (after the river) to become Canada’s first incorporated city. Benedict Arnold, the American Revolutionary traitor, lived there (1787–91). During the War of 1812, Martello Tower was built on Lancaster Heights for harbour defense; it is now a national historic site.
The year-round ice-free harbour fostered shipping, shipbuilding, and fishing, but economic growth was checked by a disastrous fire (1877) and a declining lumber trade. Saint John recovered, absorbed the city of Portland in 1889 and the city and parish of Lancaster and part of Simonds parish in 1966, and became the province’s commercial, manufacturing, and transportation centre, with shipping facilities and one of the world’s longest (1,050 feet [320 metres]) dry docks. Saint John’s primacy, however, is being challenged by Moncton. Industries include lumbering, oil refining, pulp and paper milling, shipbuilding, and construction.
The New Brunswick Museum displays colonial relics and has a notable collection of ship models. The Saint John Campus of the University of New Brunswick opened in 1964. A local phenomenon is the “reversing falls” at the river’s mouth, where strong tidal fluctuations of nearly 30 feet (9 metres) reverse the river flow for several miles upstream twice daily. Pop. (2006) 68,043; metro. area, 122,389; (2011) 70,063; metro. area, 129,057; (2016) 67,575; metro. area, 126,202.