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Greenspond

Greenspond is a community in the province of Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada.

Greenspond
Grin d'Espagne
Town
Nickname: 
Capital of the North
Greenspond
Location of Greenspond in Newfoundland
Coordinates: 49°04′00″N 53°34′34″W / 49.06667°N 53.57611°W / 49.06667; -53.57611
Country Canada
Province Newfoundland and Labrador
Settled1690s
Incorporated1951
Area
 • Total2.85 km2 (1.10 sq mi)
Population
 (2021)
 • Total257
Time zoneUTC-3:30 (Newfoundland Time)
 • Summer (DST)UTC-2:30 (Newfoundland Daylight)
Area code709

Greenspond is one of the communities that comprise an area called Bonavista North, in Bonavista Bay, on the northeast coast of the Island of Newfoundland. These communities have a shared history in that they were settled by people from England, predominantly from the West Country: Somerset, Devon, Dorset and Hampshire.

Greenspond is one of the oldest continuously inhabited outports in Newfoundland, having been settled in the 1690s. In the first 100 years after settlement, the people of Greenspond lived from the bounty of the sea. The community thrived and became a major trading centre because of its proximity to and its position on the main sea lanes and was known as the "Capital of the North".

Geography edit

The community of Greenspond comprises several islands: the largest is Greenspond Island, and the smaller ones include Batterton, Ship, Newell's, Wing's, Pig, Maiden, Groat's, and Puffin Island. There are several explanations of the origin of the name "Greenspond". The most popular is that it is based on the names of two of the early families, Green and Pond. Another states that the name reflected the green of the trees that covered the island and the harbour basin which resembled a pond. Records from the French Colonial office referred to Greenspond as "Grin d'Espagne", roughly translated it means "a little bit of Spain". "Grin d'Espagne" could have subsequently been pronounced Greenspond by the English settlers.[1]

History edit

 
Greenspond, Newfoundland, 1846.

The fabric of the church is deeply woven into Greenspond's history. The early settlers from the West Country of England brought their religious affiliations with them. The first visit by a clergy was Rev. Henry Jones of the Church of England, who under the auspices of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel served in Bonavista Bay in the 1720s. His first trip to Greenspond was in 1728 but the first church came much later. St. Stephen's Church was opened in 1812 and owes its construction to the efforts of Governor Sir John Thomas Duckworth who had allocated funds for the building of the church. In 1829 a resident clergyman, Rev. N.A. Coster, was appointed to Greenspond followed by Rev. Julian Moreton in 1849. Moreton wrote: "the mission of Greenspond ... is the largest ... in the diocese of Newfoundland, extending along the 70 miles of coast and requiring a journey of 200 miles to visit all its stations." The size of the mission facilitated the enlargement of the church in the 1850s.

Wesleyan Methodism made its first appearance in 1796 when Rev. George Smith, a travelling missionary from Trinity, organized a small Methodist class in the community. Services were held in stores and private houses, and, with the assistance of laymen, Methodist membership gradually increased. In 1862 Rev. John Allen became Greenspond's first Methodist clergyman in a mission that extended from Flat Islands to Musgrave Harbour. In 1873, the first Methodist church was opened with a seating capacity for 600. It served the congregation until 1965 when it was torn down to make way for a new building. In the late 19th century the Salvation Army came to Greenspond and built a citadel up on the Island. Later, as membership grew another larger citadel was built down by the main road. There were never many Roman Catholics in Greenspond. In 1826 there were 500 Protestants and 100 Catholics but many of them were to move elsewhere. The 1874 census shows 945 Church of England adherents, 499 Methodists, and 79 Roman Catholics. In 1901 there were only 18 Roman Catholics listed. Nevertheless, they built a small Roman Catholic chapel in Pond Head.[2]

The Orange Order edit

The Orange Order was formed in Ireland in 1795 to honour the defeat of James II of England by William of Orange at the Battle of Boyne on July 12, 1690. The Orders origin spawned from distrust and conflict between Protestant and Catholic groups in the province of Ulster in Northern Ireland during severe economic problems in the 18th century.

By the 20th century the Orange Order had become a worldwide movement, with over 5000 lodges worldwide, 1700 of them in Canada alone.

The first members of the Orange Order in Greenspond joined in St. John's around 1870. Some of these men were, Charles Whitemarsh, Thomas Wornell, Edward Meadus, Sylvester Green, Job Granter, Ethelred Carter, William White, and Sr. James Burry. Around 1875 the Burnette Lodge number 28 was formed in Greenspond and had its first meetings in Fred White’s store.

The first Orange Hall in Greenspond was built in 1880, which was shared by Greenspond’s two lodges, Burnett and Glover. Glover Lodge number 33, named after the Newfoundland Governor of the time, Sir John Glover, was formed from a split among the Anglican and Methodist Burnett members.

Unfortunately the Hall was destroyed by fire in 1898, causing the two lodges to hold meetings elsewhere. The Burnett Lodge held meetings at the St. James Society of United Fishermen Hall and the Glover Lodge met at the Blandford Society of United Fishermen Hall. In 1900 the Glover Lodge bought John Oakley’s shop and made it into their Orange Hall, while the Burnett Lodge bought the old Court House.

The hall that burned down was eventually restored by the Orange Young Britons (LOYBA), who were very active in the 1880s. They named their lodge "No Surrender, number 29", and their first master was George Burry of Greenspond. The LOYBA went dormant in the early 1920s until it reorganized in 1929. Another group, the Royal Black Preceptory, number 647, was formed in 1904 named "William Johnson RBP 647" and used the Glover Orange Hall. The first worshipful preceptor was a Mr. Edward Carter of Greenspond. This lodge went dormant in 1986.

A Greenspond resident, Kenneth Oakley began correspondence with Newfoundland’s Prime Minister and Grand Master of the Loyal Orange Association, Sir Richard Squires, in 1914 to inquire about uniting the Burnett and Glover lodges in Greenspond. Oakley was the Worshipful Master of the Glover Lodge, and with over 150 members by 1914, the hall was no longer big enough to accommodate them.

Therefore, in 1920 the Glover Lodge completely renovated and enlarged their hall. Four years later, the two lodges, Burnett and Glover, amalgamated and under the new charter the united lodges became Greenspond Loyal Orange Lodge, number 205. In the 1970s the hall was renovated once more by free labour which included a new roof, windows, siding and interior work.

In Greenspond, Orangemen paraded around the New Year but the fishermen always paraded on Candlemas Day (February 2). The parades were attended by Anglicans and Methodists, and eventually by the Salvation Army as well. They were usually large celebrations with a band and banners. The height of Orange activity in Greenspond occurred around the war years (1939–1945). Even when Orangeism was declining across the country Greenspond continued to thrive. In 1981, for example, Greenspond received a plaque for the most initiations in Newfoundland, presented to them by the Grand Master R.W. Bro. Renea Locke. Just three years later in 1984, however, the Lodge in Greenspond was inactive.[3]

Education edit

The history of education in Greenspond followed that of the churches. In 1815 the residents of Greenspond petitioned the government to appoint Thomas Walley as lay reader and teacher. Mr. Thomas Walley read in the church every Sunday and was capable of teaching the children to read and write. Therefore, residents John Edgar, Thomas Read, Nathanial Smith, and James Cram wrote to the S.P.C.K. asking them to pay a salary to Mr. Walley so he could be the school master. On October 25, 1815, The Newfoundland Governor at the time, wrote that Mr. Walley was being given 15 pounds per annum by the government to read prayers on Sunday in the absence of a missionary. He was also appointed school master and was given 30 pounds for two years. Thomas Walley continued to teach there until 1825 when he moved to Gooseberry Island to serve as schoolmaster there.[4]

In a letter, written by Archdeacon George Coster on July 21, 1827, he said Greenspond had started building a house and schoolroom, and that the Newfoundland School Society promised to send a teacher. The first Newfoundland School Society teacher in Greenspond was a Mr. and Mrs. William King who left England and came to Greenspond in 1828. They opened the day school with 34 children, and the Sunday School with 54 children. In an 1829–1830 school report, it said the school in Greenspond was nearly completed and that the attendance was 56 children attending day school and 26 adults attending the night school. By 1831 there were 111 children in day school, 142 children in Sunday School, and 49 adults in night school. These numbers were unprecedented for a small community in Newfoundland during this period.[4]

Mr. Benjamin Fleet succeeded Mr. and Mrs. King when he arrived in August 1832 and began school.

In 1839, Mr. Robert Dyer arrived from England and stayed for 20 years as the teacher in Greenspond. The Newfoundland School Society maintained a very successful elementary school in Greenspond. In 1844, for example, there was an average attendance of 103 children and by May 1847, 119 girls and 110 boys were recorded on the attendance, a total of 229 students. In 1850 Robert Dyer recorded in his diary that a visiting judge, Judge Des Barres, had claimed that the school in Greenspond was the "largest in the island". In 1852 Dyer recorded an attendance of 283, shortly after, Dyer made a request for an infant school, and in 1854 the number on the books for the infant school was 300. The Rev Vicars inspected the school on August 28, 1856, and found 109 infants under the care of a school mistress, Miss Oakley.[4]

The Methodists opened a school in 1880 and a Salvation Army school opened in 1900.

Economy edit

Greenspond's chief asset was its proximity to the inshore cod fishing grounds. During the 19th century, fishermen not only exploited the local fishing grounds but also went further afield to find codfish, some as far as the coast of Labrador. By mid-century it had become a prominent supply centre and clearing for the Labrador fishery which led to the appointment of a collector of customs by the colonial government in 1838.

The annual seal hunt was another asset in the Greenspond economy. The community's advantageous location, in the path of the northern ice floe, enabled land-based hunters using guns and nets to capture seals. By the early 19th century the seal hunt had become an important part of life at Greenspond. Historian Judge D.W. Prowse reported that in 1807 "from Bonavista and Greenspond 6 ships went to the ice with 64 men." He also reported that in the town of Greenspond itself 80 men took 17,000 seals in nets. In 1860, 18 vessels, each with a crew of about 20 men, prosecuting the seal hunt out of Greenspond. Because most of the crews and sealing captains were drawn from Greenspond and neighbouring communities, sealing ships would leave St. John's and Conception Bay in the fall of the year and anchor in Greenspond Tickle until spring when the hunt would begin. There was great pride in the accomplishment of local sealing captains, such as Darius Blandford who made the "quickest trip ever recorded" and Peter Carter who secured the heaviest load of seals in the history of the industry.

Its importance as a major trading and supply centre meant that Greenspond enjoyed a steady population growth of prosperous tradesmen and artisans: tinsmiths, blacksmiths, coopers, cobblers, carpenters and others. Merchant firms included Slade, Fryer, Brooking and Co., William Cox & Co., Ridley & Sons, E. Duder, W. Waterman, Philip Hutchins, Harvey & Co, James Ryan, and J&W Stewart. These companies were primarily engaged in the buying and selling of fish but also in supplying and outfitting for these fisheries. The fish-trading business houses were also general stores. Early in the 20th century, the Fisherman's Protective Union, which had a large branch in Greenspond, opened a Union Trading Store in the community and in 1910 Greenspond had the honour of hosting the Union's annual Convention.[1]

Culture edit

Demographics[5]
  Population in 2001     383  
  Population change from 1996     -9.9%  
  Median age     39.7  
  Number of families     115  
  Number of married couples     100  
  Total number of dwellings     135  
  Protestant     100%  
  Land Area (km2.)     2.85  

Statistics Canada detail demographics follow link here[permanent dead link]

The early inhabitants of Greenspond hailed from the West of England, mainly Dorset but also Devon, Hampshire, and Somerset. The names of these early settlers can still be found there today: Bishop, Blandford, Bragg, Burry, Burton, Butler, Carter, Chaytor, Crocker, Dominey, Dyke, Easton, Feltham, Granter, Green, Harding, Hawkins, Hoddinott, Hoskins, Hunt, Hutchins, Kean, Lovelace, Lush, Meadus, Mullett, Mullins, Oakley, Oldford, Osmond, Parsons, Pond, Rogers, Samson, Saunders, Smith, Stratton, Way, Wheeler, White, Wicks, Woodland, Wornell, Wright, and Young.

Gradually Greenspond acquired the services and facilities needed by a bustling commercial town. In 1848 there was a regular mail and passenger service, a fortnightly steamer, and a weekly overland route between Greenspond and St. John's. To insure the safety of the steamer into Greenspond after nightfall, the government erected a lighthouse in 1873 on Puffin Island at the approach to Greenspond harbour. In winter when the steamers did not run, the trains transported the mails to Gambo and from there couriers - often Micmac - carried it overland to Greenspond. John Joe, perhaps the most notable Micmac courier travelled for many years with his dogs from Gambo to Greenspond. The laying of a submarine cable between Greenspond and the Newfoundland mainland in 1885 and the subsequent provision of a telegraph service greatly enhanced Greenspond's communication with the rest of Newfoundland and the outside world. The turn of the 20th century marked Greenspond's zenith with a population of almost 2000, a resident doctor, magistrate, policeman, customs officer, clergy, postmaster, teachers, and numerous business enterprises. It can be said that Greenspond's export of human resources equals or exceeds its export in cod, seals, salmon and the like.

Throughout the 20th century the fishery remained the major economic enterprise of the people of Greenspond: a bait depot was established in 1946, a fresh-fish processing plant was built in 1957 and a smokehouse was opened in the 1970s. In 1951 the town was incorporated, and with municipal government came water and sewer facilities, improved light and power services, improvements in local roads and, perhaps, the most important of all, the construction of a causeway connecting Greenspond Island with the Newfoundland mainland. In the 1990s Greenspond continues to thrive, a superb example of a Newfoundland coastal community which has survived and prospered for three hundred years despite the inherent fluctuations in a fishing economy.[1]

Puffin Island Lighthouse
 
 
LocationPuffin Island, Greenspond
Coordinates49°03′42″N 53°33′04″W / 49.061653°N 53.551047°W / 49.061653; -53.551047
Tower
Constructed1873 (first)
Foundationconcrete base
Constructionwooden tower
Height8 m (26 ft)  
Shapesquare truncated tower with balcony and lantern[6][7]
Markingswhite tower with a horizontal red band
OperatorCanadian Coast Guard  
Light
First lit1951 (current)
Focal height21 m (69 ft)  
Range16 nmi (30 km; 18 mi)  
CharacteristicFl W 5s  

Demographics edit

In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, Greenspond had a population of 257 living in 116 of its 177 total private dwellings, a change of -3.4% from its 2016 population of 266. With a land area of 2.75 km2 (1.06 sq mi), it had a population density of 93.5/km2 (242.0/sq mi) in 2021.[8]

Attractions edit

  • Harding House Bed and Breakfast
  • Greenspond Trail
  • Harding House Heritage Newfoundland

See also edit

References edit

[1]

  1. ^ a b c d Encyclopedia of Newfoundland and Labrador
  2. ^ White, Linda. The Greenspond Letter
  3. ^ The Greenspond Letter, editor Linda White
  4. ^ a b c Winsor, Naboth. A History of Education in Greenspond, Newfoundland 1816–1976
  5. ^ . www12.statcan.ca. Archived from the original on 2005-12-22.
  6. ^ Rowlett, Russ. "Lighthouses of Canada: Southwestern Newfoundland". The Lighthouse Directory. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Retrieved 2017-02-10.
  7. ^ List of Lights, Pub. 110: Greenland, The East Coasts of North and South America (Excluding Continental U.S.A. Except the East Coast of Florida) and the West Indies (PDF). List of Lights. United States National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency. 2016.
  8. ^ "Population and dwelling counts: Canada, provinces and territories, census divisions and census subdivisions (municipalities), Newfoundland and Labrador". Statistics Canada. February 9, 2022. Retrieved March 15, 2022.

External links edit

greenspond, confused, with, green, pond, jersey, wing, island, redirects, here, video, game, wing, island, community, province, newfoundland, labrador, canada, grin, espagnetownnickname, capital, northlocation, newfoundlandcoordinates, 06667, 57611, 06667, 576. Not to be confused with Green Pond New Jersey Wing s Island redirects here For the video game see Wing Island Greenspond is a community in the province of Newfoundland and Labrador Canada Greenspond Grin d EspagneTownNickname Capital of the NorthGreenspondLocation of Greenspond in NewfoundlandCoordinates 49 04 00 N 53 34 34 W 49 06667 N 53 57611 W 49 06667 53 57611Country CanadaProvince Newfoundland and LabradorSettled1690sIncorporated1951Area Total2 85 km2 1 10 sq mi Population 2021 Total257Time zoneUTC 3 30 Newfoundland Time Summer DST UTC 2 30 Newfoundland Daylight Area code709 Greenspond is one of the communities that comprise an area called Bonavista North in Bonavista Bay on the northeast coast of the Island of Newfoundland These communities have a shared history in that they were settled by people from England predominantly from the West Country Somerset Devon Dorset and Hampshire Greenspond is one of the oldest continuously inhabited outports in Newfoundland having been settled in the 1690s In the first 100 years after settlement the people of Greenspond lived from the bounty of the sea The community thrived and became a major trading centre because of its proximity to and its position on the main sea lanes and was known as the Capital of the North Contents 1 Geography 2 History 2 1 The Orange Order 3 Education 4 Economy 5 Culture 6 Demographics 7 Attractions 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksGeography editThe community of Greenspond comprises several islands the largest is Greenspond Island and the smaller ones include Batterton Ship Newell s Wing s Pig Maiden Groat s and Puffin Island There are several explanations of the origin of the name Greenspond The most popular is that it is based on the names of two of the early families Green and Pond Another states that the name reflected the green of the trees that covered the island and the harbour basin which resembled a pond Records from the French Colonial office referred to Greenspond as Grin d Espagne roughly translated it means a little bit of Spain Grin d Espagne could have subsequently been pronounced Greenspond by the English settlers 1 History edit nbsp Greenspond Newfoundland 1846 The fabric of the church is deeply woven into Greenspond s history The early settlers from the West Country of England brought their religious affiliations with them The first visit by a clergy was Rev Henry Jones of the Church of England who under the auspices of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel served in Bonavista Bay in the 1720s His first trip to Greenspond was in 1728 but the first church came much later St Stephen s Church was opened in 1812 and owes its construction to the efforts of Governor Sir John Thomas Duckworth who had allocated funds for the building of the church In 1829 a resident clergyman Rev N A Coster was appointed to Greenspond followed by Rev Julian Moreton in 1849 Moreton wrote the mission of Greenspond is the largest in the diocese of Newfoundland extending along the 70 miles of coast and requiring a journey of 200 miles to visit all its stations The size of the mission facilitated the enlargement of the church in the 1850s Wesleyan Methodism made its first appearance in 1796 when Rev George Smith a travelling missionary from Trinity organized a small Methodist class in the community Services were held in stores and private houses and with the assistance of laymen Methodist membership gradually increased In 1862 Rev John Allen became Greenspond s first Methodist clergyman in a mission that extended from Flat Islands to Musgrave Harbour In 1873 the first Methodist church was opened with a seating capacity for 600 It served the congregation until 1965 when it was torn down to make way for a new building In the late 19th century the Salvation Army came to Greenspond and built a citadel up on the Island Later as membership grew another larger citadel was built down by the main road There were never many Roman Catholics in Greenspond In 1826 there were 500 Protestants and 100 Catholics but many of them were to move elsewhere The 1874 census shows 945 Church of England adherents 499 Methodists and 79 Roman Catholics In 1901 there were only 18 Roman Catholics listed Nevertheless they built a small Roman Catholic chapel in Pond Head 2 The Orange Order edit The Orange Order was formed in Ireland in 1795 to honour the defeat of James II of England by William of Orange at the Battle of Boyne on July 12 1690 The Orders origin spawned from distrust and conflict between Protestant and Catholic groups in the province of Ulster in Northern Ireland during severe economic problems in the 18th century By the 20th century the Orange Order had become a worldwide movement with over 5000 lodges worldwide 1700 of them in Canada alone The first members of the Orange Order in Greenspond joined in St John s around 1870 Some of these men were Charles Whitemarsh Thomas Wornell Edward Meadus Sylvester Green Job Granter Ethelred Carter William White and Sr James Burry Around 1875 the Burnette Lodge number 28 was formed in Greenspond and had its first meetings in Fred White s store The first Orange Hall in Greenspond was built in 1880 which was shared by Greenspond s two lodges Burnett and Glover Glover Lodge number 33 named after the Newfoundland Governor of the time Sir John Glover was formed from a split among the Anglican and Methodist Burnett members Unfortunately the Hall was destroyed by fire in 1898 causing the two lodges to hold meetings elsewhere The Burnett Lodge held meetings at the St James Society of United Fishermen Hall and the Glover Lodge met at the Blandford Society of United Fishermen Hall In 1900 the Glover Lodge bought John Oakley s shop and made it into their Orange Hall while the Burnett Lodge bought the old Court House The hall that burned down was eventually restored by the Orange Young Britons LOYBA who were very active in the 1880s They named their lodge No Surrender number 29 and their first master was George Burry of Greenspond The LOYBA went dormant in the early 1920s until it reorganized in 1929 Another group the Royal Black Preceptory number 647 was formed in 1904 named William Johnson RBP 647 and used the Glover Orange Hall The first worshipful preceptor was a Mr Edward Carter of Greenspond This lodge went dormant in 1986 A Greenspond resident Kenneth Oakley began correspondence with Newfoundland s Prime Minister and Grand Master of the Loyal Orange Association Sir Richard Squires in 1914 to inquire about uniting the Burnett and Glover lodges in Greenspond Oakley was the Worshipful Master of the Glover Lodge and with over 150 members by 1914 the hall was no longer big enough to accommodate them Therefore in 1920 the Glover Lodge completely renovated and enlarged their hall Four years later the two lodges Burnett and Glover amalgamated and under the new charter the united lodges became Greenspond Loyal Orange Lodge number 205 In the 1970s the hall was renovated once more by free labour which included a new roof windows siding and interior work In Greenspond Orangemen paraded around the New Year but the fishermen always paraded on Candlemas Day February 2 The parades were attended by Anglicans and Methodists and eventually by the Salvation Army as well They were usually large celebrations with a band and banners The height of Orange activity in Greenspond occurred around the war years 1939 1945 Even when Orangeism was declining across the country Greenspond continued to thrive In 1981 for example Greenspond received a plaque for the most initiations in Newfoundland presented to them by the Grand Master R W Bro Renea Locke Just three years later in 1984 however the Lodge in Greenspond was inactive 3 Education editThe history of education in Greenspond followed that of the churches In 1815 the residents of Greenspond petitioned the government to appoint Thomas Walley as lay reader and teacher Mr Thomas Walley read in the church every Sunday and was capable of teaching the children to read and write Therefore residents John Edgar Thomas Read Nathanial Smith and James Cram wrote to the S P C K asking them to pay a salary to Mr Walley so he could be the school master On October 25 1815 The Newfoundland Governor at the time wrote that Mr Walley was being given 15 pounds per annum by the government to read prayers on Sunday in the absence of a missionary He was also appointed school master and was given 30 pounds for two years Thomas Walley continued to teach there until 1825 when he moved to Gooseberry Island to serve as schoolmaster there 4 In a letter written by Archdeacon George Coster on July 21 1827 he said Greenspond had started building a house and schoolroom and that the Newfoundland School Society promised to send a teacher The first Newfoundland School Society teacher in Greenspond was a Mr and Mrs William King who left England and came to Greenspond in 1828 They opened the day school with 34 children and the Sunday School with 54 children In an 1829 1830 school report it said the school in Greenspond was nearly completed and that the attendance was 56 children attending day school and 26 adults attending the night school By 1831 there were 111 children in day school 142 children in Sunday School and 49 adults in night school These numbers were unprecedented for a small community in Newfoundland during this period 4 Mr Benjamin Fleet succeeded Mr and Mrs King when he arrived in August 1832 and began school In 1839 Mr Robert Dyer arrived from England and stayed for 20 years as the teacher in Greenspond The Newfoundland School Society maintained a very successful elementary school in Greenspond In 1844 for example there was an average attendance of 103 children and by May 1847 119 girls and 110 boys were recorded on the attendance a total of 229 students In 1850 Robert Dyer recorded in his diary that a visiting judge Judge Des Barres had claimed that the school in Greenspond was the largest in the island In 1852 Dyer recorded an attendance of 283 shortly after Dyer made a request for an infant school and in 1854 the number on the books for the infant school was 300 The Rev Vicars inspected the school on August 28 1856 and found 109 infants under the care of a school mistress Miss Oakley 4 The Methodists opened a school in 1880 and a Salvation Army school opened in 1900 Economy editGreenspond s chief asset was its proximity to the inshore cod fishing grounds During the 19th century fishermen not only exploited the local fishing grounds but also went further afield to find codfish some as far as the coast of Labrador By mid century it had become a prominent supply centre and clearing for the Labrador fishery which led to the appointment of a collector of customs by the colonial government in 1838 The annual seal hunt was another asset in the Greenspond economy The community s advantageous location in the path of the northern ice floe enabled land based hunters using guns and nets to capture seals By the early 19th century the seal hunt had become an important part of life at Greenspond Historian Judge D W Prowse reported that in 1807 from Bonavista and Greenspond 6 ships went to the ice with 64 men He also reported that in the town of Greenspond itself 80 men took 17 000 seals in nets In 1860 18 vessels each with a crew of about 20 men prosecuting the seal hunt out of Greenspond Because most of the crews and sealing captains were drawn from Greenspond and neighbouring communities sealing ships would leave St John s and Conception Bay in the fall of the year and anchor in Greenspond Tickle until spring when the hunt would begin There was great pride in the accomplishment of local sealing captains such as Darius Blandford who made the quickest trip ever recorded and Peter Carter who secured the heaviest load of seals in the history of the industry Its importance as a major trading and supply centre meant that Greenspond enjoyed a steady population growth of prosperous tradesmen and artisans tinsmiths blacksmiths coopers cobblers carpenters and others Merchant firms included Slade Fryer Brooking and Co William Cox amp Co Ridley amp Sons E Duder W Waterman Philip Hutchins Harvey amp Co James Ryan and J amp W Stewart These companies were primarily engaged in the buying and selling of fish but also in supplying and outfitting for these fisheries The fish trading business houses were also general stores Early in the 20th century the Fisherman s Protective Union which had a large branch in Greenspond opened a Union Trading Store in the community and in 1910 Greenspond had the honour of hosting the Union s annual Convention 1 Culture editDemographics 5 Population in 2001 383 Population change from 1996 9 9 Median age 39 7 Number of families 115 Number of married couples 100 Total number of dwellings 135 Protestant 100 Land Area km2 2 85 Statistics Canada detail demographics follow link here permanent dead link The early inhabitants of Greenspond hailed from the West of England mainly Dorset but also Devon Hampshire and Somerset The names of these early settlers can still be found there today Bishop Blandford Bragg Burry Burton Butler Carter Chaytor Crocker Dominey Dyke Easton Feltham Granter Green Harding Hawkins Hoddinott Hoskins Hunt Hutchins Kean Lovelace Lush Meadus Mullett Mullins Oakley Oldford Osmond Parsons Pond Rogers Samson Saunders Smith Stratton Way Wheeler White Wicks Woodland Wornell Wright and Young Gradually Greenspond acquired the services and facilities needed by a bustling commercial town In 1848 there was a regular mail and passenger service a fortnightly steamer and a weekly overland route between Greenspond and St John s To insure the safety of the steamer into Greenspond after nightfall the government erected a lighthouse in 1873 on Puffin Island at the approach to Greenspond harbour In winter when the steamers did not run the trains transported the mails to Gambo and from there couriers often Micmac carried it overland to Greenspond John Joe perhaps the most notable Micmac courier travelled for many years with his dogs from Gambo to Greenspond The laying of a submarine cable between Greenspond and the Newfoundland mainland in 1885 and the subsequent provision of a telegraph service greatly enhanced Greenspond s communication with the rest of Newfoundland and the outside world The turn of the 20th century marked Greenspond s zenith with a population of almost 2000 a resident doctor magistrate policeman customs officer clergy postmaster teachers and numerous business enterprises It can be said that Greenspond s export of human resources equals or exceeds its export in cod seals salmon and the like Throughout the 20th century the fishery remained the major economic enterprise of the people of Greenspond a bait depot was established in 1946 a fresh fish processing plant was built in 1957 and a smokehouse was opened in the 1970s In 1951 the town was incorporated and with municipal government came water and sewer facilities improved light and power services improvements in local roads and perhaps the most important of all the construction of a causeway connecting Greenspond Island with the Newfoundland mainland In the 1990s Greenspond continues to thrive a superb example of a Newfoundland coastal community which has survived and prospered for three hundred years despite the inherent fluctuations in a fishing economy 1 Puffin Island Lighthouse nbsp nbsp nbsp LocationPuffin Island GreenspondCoordinates49 03 42 N 53 33 04 W 49 061653 N 53 551047 W 49 061653 53 551047TowerConstructed1873 first Foundationconcrete baseConstructionwooden towerHeight8 m 26 ft nbsp Shapesquare truncated tower with balcony and lantern 6 7 Markingswhite tower with a horizontal red bandOperatorCanadian Coast Guard nbsp LightFirst lit1951 current Focal height21 m 69 ft nbsp Range16 nmi 30 km 18 mi nbsp CharacteristicFl W 5s nbsp Demographics editIn the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada Greenspond had a population of 257 living in 116 of its 177 total private dwellings a change of 3 4 from its 2016 population of 266 With a land area of 2 75 km2 1 06 sq mi it had a population density of 93 5 km2 242 0 sq mi in 2021 8 Attractions editHarding House Bed and Breakfast Greenspond Trail Harding House Heritage NewfoundlandSee also editList of lighthouses in Canada List of cities and towns in Newfoundland and Labrador Newfoundland School Society Julian Moreton Stella BurryReferences edit 1 a b c d Encyclopedia of Newfoundland and Labrador White Linda The Greenspond Letter The Greenspond Letter editor Linda White a b c Winsor Naboth A History of Education in Greenspond Newfoundland 1816 1976 2001 Community Profiles www12 statcan ca Archived from the original on 2005 12 22 Rowlett Russ Lighthouses of Canada Southwestern Newfoundland The Lighthouse Directory University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Retrieved 2017 02 10 List of Lights Pub 110 Greenland The East Coasts of North and South America Excluding Continental U S A Except the East Coast of Florida and the West Indies PDF List of Lights United States National Geospatial Intelligence Agency 2016 Population and dwelling counts Canada provinces and territories census divisions and census subdivisions municipalities Newfoundland and Labrador Statistics Canada February 9 2022 Retrieved March 15 2022 External links editGreenspond Historical Society and Archives Tourism Guide Archived 2005 12 24 at the Wayback Machine Heritage Foundation Greenspond Court House The Encyclopedia of Newfoundland and Labrador permanent dead link The Harding House Bed and Breakfast Archived 2007 10 08 at the Wayback Machine The Greenspond Courthouse Sealing Captains in Greenspond http www rootsweb com cannf bbnor htm http www ceaa acee gc ca 050 LocationInfo e cfm GeoID 2850 amp CEAR ID 4314 Greenspond Encyclopedia of Newfoundland and Labrador vol 2 p 731 736 Aids to Navigation Canadian Coast Guard Portals nbsp Canada nbsp Engineering Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Greenspond amp oldid 1185612958, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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