Bliss Islands


The Bliss Islands are three adjacent islands in the Saint George Parish of Charlotte County, New Brunswick, Canada in the Bay of Fundy. They are named after Samuel Bliss, the original grantee in the 18th century who was also granted title to White Horse Island. They are commonly written as a single island, although technically there is a northeast, central and southwest landmass.
The Bliss Islands have three shell middens, dubbed BgDq4, BgDq5 and BgDq6, as well as a site believe to be Bliss's original home. An arrowhead estimated to date to 600BC has also been recovered in the BgDg6 midden.
Ernest Ingersoll mentions passing the islands, en route to Lubec by steamship from Saint John.
Spencer Fullerton Baird carried out a 19th century archaeological study of the islands.
During the Saxby Gale of 1869, the Rechab ship sank in Bliss Harbour; in 1850 she had been part of a "mysterious" journey to the Turks and Caicos hoping to retrieve pirate treasure.
There is a lighthouse on the west end of the island, on the southern side of the western entrance to Bliss Harbour. As of 1879, Jarvis Clark and his family ran the lighthouse. In 1911, there was one family listed as living on the island.
As of 1923, it had a buoy associated with the island.
In October 1925, Harry Stone's two-masted schooner Cora Gertie, sank with no lives lost, in a gale after being blown into Bliss Harbour and striking Man O War Islet. It had been parked 12 miles off the coast to sell smuggled White Horse whiskey which was salvaged from the sunken wreck. FoProhibition inspectors found ten gallons of alcohol in a bog on Spruce Island where the crew had reached shore.
In the summer of 1986, benthic algae sublittoral research stations were set up across the region including on the Bliss islands.
In 2020, the Nature Trust of New Brunswick converted the island into a conservationist reserve.