The island of
Newfoundland, which is the tenth largest in the world, is about 1640
miles distant from Ireland, and of all the American coast is the nearest
point to the Old World. Its relative position m the northern hemisphere
may well be indicated by saying that the most northern point at Belle
Isle Strait is in the same latitude as that of Edinburgh., whilst St.
John's, near the southern extremity, lies in the same latitude as that
of Paris. Strategically it forms the key to British North America. St.
John's lies about half-way between Liverpool and New York, so that it
offers a haven of refuge for needy craft plying between England and the
American metropolis. The adjacent part of the coast is also the
landing-place for most of the Transatlantic cables : it was at St
John's, too, that the first wireless ocean signals were received. From
the sentimental point of view Newfoundland is the oldest of the English
colonies, for our brave fishermen were familiar with its banks at a time
when Virginia and New England were gi\ en over to solitude and the
Redskin. Commercially it is the centre of the most bountiful fishing
industry in the world, and the great potential wealth of its mines is
now beyond question. On all these grounds the story of the colony is one
with which every citizen of Greater Britain should be familiar. The
historians of the island have been capable and in the mam judicious, and
to lthe works of Reeves, Bonnycastle, Pedley, Hatton, Harvey, and above
all Chief Justice Prowse, and more recently to J. D. Rogers,1 every
writer on Newfoundland must owe much. Of such elaborate work a writer in
the present series may say with Virgil's shepherd, "Non invideo, miror
magis"; for such a one is committed only to a sketch, made lighter by
their labours, of the chief stages in the story of Newfoundland.
To understand that
story a short account must be given at the outset of the situation and
character of the island. But for the north-eastern side of the country,
which is indented by deep and wide inlets, its shape might be roughly
described as that of an equilateral triangle Its area is nearly 43,000
square miles, so that it is larger than Scotland and considerably
greater than Ireland, the area of which is 31.760 square miles. Compared
to some of the smaller states of Europe, it is found to be twice as
large as Denmark., and three times as large as Holland. There is only a
small difference between its greatest length, which from Cape Ray, the.
south-west point, to Cape Norman, the northern point, is 317 miles, and
its greatest breadth, from west to east, 316 miles from Cape Spear to
Cape Anguille. Its dependency, Labrador, an undefined strip of man time
territory, extends from Cape Chidley, where the Hudson's Straits begin m
the north, to Blanc Sablon in the south, and includes the most easterly
point of the mainland. The boundaries between Quebec and Labrador have
been a matter of keen dispute. The inhabitants are for the most part
Eskimos, engaged in fishing and hunting There are no towns, but there
arc a few Moravian mission stations.
The ruggedness of the
coast of Newfoundland, and the occasional inclemency of the climate in
winter, led to unfavourable reports, against which at least one early
traveller raised his voice in protest. Captain Hayes, who accompanied
Gilbert to Newfoundland m 1583, wrote on his return:
"The common opinion
that is had of internperation and extreme cold that should be in this
country, as of some part it may be verified, namely the north, where I
grant it is more colde than in countries of Europe, which are under the
same elevation; even so it cannot stand with reason, and nature of the
clime, that the south parts should be so intemperate as the bruit has
gone."
Notwithstanding the
chill seas in which it lies, Newfoundland is not in fact a cold country.
The Arctic current lowers the temperature of the east coast, but the
Gulf Stream, whilst producing fogs, moderates the cold. The thermometer
seldom or never sinks below zero in winter, and in summer extreme heat
is unknown. Nor is its northerly detachment without compensation, for at
times the Aurora borealis illumines the sky with a brilliancy unknown
further south. A misconception appears to prevail that the island is in
summer wrapped in fog, and its shores in winter engirt by ice. In the
interior the climate is very much like that of Canada, but is not so
severe, as that of western Canada or even of Ontario and Quebcc. The sky
is bright and the weather clear, and the salubrity is shown by the
healthy appearance of the population.
The natural advantages
of the country are very great, though for centuries many of them were
strangely overlooked. Whitbourne, it is true, wrote with quaint
enthusiasm, in the early sixteenth century: "I am loth to weary thee
(good reader) in acquainting thee thus to those famous, faire, and
profitable rivers, and likewise to those delightful large and
inestimable woods, and also with those fruitful and enticing hill and
delightful vallies." In fact, in the interior the valleys are almost as
numerous as Whitbourne's adjectives, and their fertility promises a
great future for agriculture when the railway has done its work.
The rivers, though
"famous, faire, and profitable," are not overpoweringly majestic. The
largest are the Exploits River, 200 miles long and navigable for some 30
miles, and the Gander, 100 miles long, which--owing to the contour of
the island—flows to the eastern bays. The deficiency, however, if it
amounts to one, is little felt, for Newfoundland excels other lands in
the splendour of its bays, -which not uncommonly pierce the land as far
as sixty miles. The length of the coast-line has been calculated at
about 6000 miles—one. of the longest of ail countries of the world
relatively to the area. Another noteworthy physical feature is the great
number of lakes and ponds ; more than a third of the area is occupied by
water. The largest lake is Grand Lake, 56 miles long, 5 broad, with an
area of nearly 200 square miles. The longest mountain range in the
island is about the same length as the longest river, 200 miles; and the
highest peaks do not very greatly exceed 2000 feet.
The cliffs, which form
a brown, bleak and rugged barrier round the coasts of Newfoundland,
varying in height from 300 to 400 feet, must have seemed grim enough to
the first discoverers; in fact, they give little indication of the
charming natural beauties which lie behind them. The island is
exuberantly rich in woodland, and its long penetrating bays, running in
some cases eighty to ninety miles inland, and fringed to the water's
edge, vividly recall the more familiar attractiveness of Norwegian
scenery. Nor has any custom staled its infinite variety, for as a place
of resort it has been singularly free from vogue. This is a little hard
to understand, for the summer climate is by common consent delightful,
and the interior still retains much of the glamour of the imperfectly
explored The cascades of Rocky River, of the Exploits River, and, in
particular, the Grand Falls, might in themselves be considered a.
sufficient excuse for a voyage which barely exceeds a week.
Newfoundland is rich in
mineral promise. Its history in this respect goes back only about sixty
years: in 1857 a copper deposit was discovered at Tilt Cove, a small
fishing village in Notre Dame Bay, where seven years later the Union
Mine was opened. It is now clear that copper ore is to be found in
quantities almost as inexhaustible as the supply of codfish. There are
few better known copper mines in the world than Bett's Cove Mine and
Little Bay Mine ; and there are copper deposits also at Hare Bay and
Tilt Cove. In 1905 -6 the copper ore exported from these mines was
valued at more than 375,000 dollars, in 1910-11 at over 445,000 dollars.
The value of the iron ore produced in the latter period was 3,768,000
dollars. It is claimed that the iron deposits—red hematite ore —are
among the richest in the world. In Newfoundland, as elsewhere, geology
taught capital where to strike, and when the interior is more perfectly
explored it is likely that fresh discoveries will be made. In the
meantime gold, lead, zinc, silver, talc, antimony, and coal have also
been worked at various places.
A more particular
account must be given of the great fish industry, on which Newfoundland
so largely depends, and which forms about 80 per cent, of the total
exports. For centuries a homely variant of Lord Rosebery's Egyptian
epigram would have been substantially true : Newfoundland is the codfish
and the codfish is Newfoundland. Many, indeed, are the uses to which
this versatile fish may be put. Enormous quantities of dried cod are
exported each year for the human larder, a hygienic but disagreeable oil
is extracted from the liver to try the endurance of invalids; while the
refuse of the carcase is in repute as a stimulating manure. The cod
fisheries of Newfoundland are much larger than those of any other
country in the world ; and the average annual export has been equal to
that of Canada and Norway put together. The predominance of the fishing
industry, and its ubiquitous influence in the colony are vividly
emphasised by Mr Rogers in the following passage, though his first
sentence involves an exaggerated restriction so far as modern conditions
are concerned:
"Newfoundlanders are
men of one idea, and that idea is fish, Their lives are devoted to the
sea and its produce, and their language mirrors their lives; thus the
chief streets in their chief towns are named Water Street, guides are
called pilots, and visits cruises. Conversely, land words have sea
meanings, and a 'planter,' which meant in the eighteenth century a
fishing settler as opposed to a fishing visitor, meant in the nineteenth
century—when fishing visitors ceased to come from England—a shipowner or
skipper. Hie very animals catch the infection, and dogs, cows, and bears
eat fish. Fish manures the fields. Fish, too, is the mainspring of the
history of Newfoundland, and split and dried fish, or what was called in
the fifteenth century stock fish, has always been its staple, and in
Newfoundland fish means cod."
The principal home of
the cod is the Grand Newfoundland Bank, an immense submarine island 600
miles in length and 200 in breadth, which in earlier history probably
formed part of North America. Year by year the demand for codfish grows
greater, and the supply—unaffected by centuries of exaction—continues to
satisfy the demand. This happy result is produced by the marvellous
fertility of the cod, for naturalists tell us that the roe of a single
female—accounting, perhaps, for half the whole weight of the fish—
commonly contains as many as five millions of ova. In the year 1912-13
the value of the exported dried codfish alone was 7,987,389 dollars, and
in 1917 the total output of the bank and shore cod fishery was valued at
13,680,000 dollars; and at a time when it was incomparably less, Pitt
had thundered in his best style that he would not surrender the
Newfoundland fisheries though the enemy were masters of the Tower of
London. So the great Bacon, at a time when the wealth of the Incas was
being revealed to the dazzled eyes of the Old World, declared, with an
admirable sense of proportion, that the fishing banks of Newfoundland
were richer far than the mines of Mexico and Peru.
Along the coasts of
Norfolk and Suffolk the codfish is commonly caught with hook and fine,
and the same primitive method is still largely used by colonial
fishermen. More elaborate contrivances are growing in favour, and will
inevitably swell each year's returns. Nor is there cause to apprehend
exhaustion in the supply. The ravages of man are as nothing to the
ravages and exactions of marine nature, and both count for little in the
immense populousness of the ocean. Fishing on a large scale is most
effectively carried on by the Baltow system or one of its modifications.
Each vessel carries thousands of fathoms of rope, baited and trailed at
measured intervals. Thousands of hooks are thus distributed over many
miles, and the whole is suitably moored. After a night's interval the
catch is examined.
In 1890 a Fisheries
Commission was established for the purpose of conducting the fisheries
more efficiently than had been the case before. Modern methods were
introduced, and the artificial propagation of cod and also of lobsters
was begun. In 1898 a Department of Marine and Fisheries was set up, and
with the minister in charge of it an advisory Fisheries Board was
associated.
Though the cod-fishery
is the largest and the most important of the Newfoundland fisheries, the
seal, lobster, herring, whale and salmon fisheries are also
considerable, and yield high returns As to all these fisheries, the
right to make regulations has been placed more effectively in the hands
of Great Britain by the Hague arbitration award, which was published in
September 1910, and which satisfied British claims to a very large
extent.
A pathetic chapter in
the history of colonization might be written upon the fate of native
races. A great English authority on international law (Philliinore) has
dealt with their claims to the proprietorship of American soil in a very
summary way.
"The North American
Indians," he says, "would have been entitled to have excluded the
British fur-traders from their hunting-grounds; and not having done so,
the latter must be considered as having been admitted to a joint
occupation of the territory, and thus to have become invested with a
similar right of excluding strangers from such portions of the country
as their own industrial operations covered."
It is better to say
frankly that the highest good of humanity required the dispossession of
savages; and it is permissible to regret that the morals and humanity of
the pioneers of civilization have not always been worthy of their
errand.
It rarely happens that
the native, as in South Africa, has shown sufficient tenacity and
stamina to resist the tide of the white aggression : more often the
invaders have gradually thinned their numbers. The Spanish adventurers
worked to death the soft inhabitants of the American islands. Many
perished by the sword, many in a species of national decline, the
wonders of civilization, for good and for bad, working an obsession in
their childish imaginations which in time reacted upon the physique of
the race.
Sebastian Cabot has
left a record of liis standard of morality in dealing with the natives
When he was Grand Pilot of England it fell to his lot to give
instructions to that brave Northern explorer, Hugh Willoughby:
"The natives of strange
countries," he advises, "are to be enticed aboard and made drunk with
your beer and wine, for then you shall know the secrets of their
hearts." A further practice which may have caused resentment in the
minds of a sensitive people, was that of kidnapping the natives to be
exhibited as specimens in Europe.
The natives of
Newfoundland were known dirinctively as Boeothics or Beotbuks (a name
probably meaning red men), who are supposed to have formed a branch of
the great Algonquin tribe of North American Indians, a warlike race that
occupied the north-eastern portion of the American continent. Cabot saw
them dressed in skins like the ancient Britons, but painted with red
ochre instead of blue woad. Carrier, the pioneer of Canadian adventure,
who visited the island in 1534, speaks of their stature and their
feather ornaments. Hayes says in one place: "In the south parts we found
no inhabitants, which by all likelihood have abandoned these coasts, the
same being so much frequented by Christians. But in the north are
savages altogether harmless." Whit-bourne, forty years later, gives the
natives an equally good character . 1 These savage people being
politikcly and gently handled, much good might be wrought upon them: for
I have had apparant proofes of their ingenuous and subtle dispositions,
and that they are a people full of quicke and lively apprehensions.
"By a plantation "[in
Newfoundland]" and by that means only, the poore mis-beleeving
inhabitants of that country' may be reduced from barbarism to the
knowledge of God. and the light of his truth, and to a civill and
regular kinde of life and government "
The plantation, but it
must be admitted that the policy of the planters was not, at first
sight, of a kind to secure the admirable objects indicated above by King
James's correspondent. In fact, for hundreds of years, and with the
occasional interruptions of humanity or curiosity, the Boeothics were
hunted to extinction and perversely disappeared, without, t must be
supposed, having attained to the "civill and regular kinde of life"
which was to date from the plantation.
As lately as 1819 a
"specimen" was procured in the following way. A part of furriers met
three natives—two male, one female—on the frozen Red Indian Lake. It
appeared later that one of the males was the husband of the female. The
latter was seized; her companions had the assurance to resist, and were
both shot. The woman was taken to St. John's, and given the name of May
March; next winter she was escorted back to her tribe, but died on the
way. These attempts to gain the confidence of the natives were, perhaps,
a little brusque, and from this point of view liable to misconstruction
by an apprehensive tribe. Ironically enough, the object of the attempt
just described was to win a Government reward of £100, offered to any
person bringing about a friendly understanding with the Red Indians.
Another native woman, Shanandithit, was brought to St. John's in 1823
and lived there till her death in 1829, She is supposed to have been the
last survivor. Sir Richard Bonnycastle. who has an interesting chapter
on this subject, saw her miniature, which, he says, " without being
handsome, shows a pleasing countenance."
Before closing this
introductory chapter a few figures may be usefully given for reference
to illustrate the present condition of the island.1 At the end of 1917
the population, including that of Labrador, was 256,500, of whom 81,200
were Roman Catholics and 78,000 members of the Church of England. The
estimated public revenue for the year 1917--18 was 5,700,000 dollars;
the estimated expenditure was 5450,000 dollars. In the same year the
public debt was about 35,450,000 dollars. The estimated revenue for
1918-19 was 6,500,001) dollars; expenditure, 5,400,000 dollars. In 1898
the imports from the United Kingdom amounted to £466,925, and the
exports to the United Kingdom to £524,367. In the year 1917-iS the
distribution of trade was mainly as follows : imports from the United
Kingdom, 2,248,781 dollars; from Canada, 11,107,642 dollars; from the
Unrted States, 12,244,746 dollars; exports to the United Kingdom,
3,822,931 dollars; to Canada, 2,750,990 dollars; to the United States,
7,110,322 dollars. The principal imports in 191617 were flour, hardware,
textiles, provisions, coal, and machinery; the chief exports were dried
cod, pulp and paper, iron and copper ore, cod and seal oil, herrings,
sealskins, and tinned lobsters. In 1917 there were 888 miles of railway
open, of which 841 were Government-owned; and there are over 4600 miles
of telegraph line. The tonnage of vessels entered and cleared at
Newfoundland ports in 1916-17 was 2,191,006 tons, of which 1,818,016
tons were British. The number of sailing and steam vessels registered on
December 31st, 1917, was 3496. |