Port au Choix National
Historic Site of Canada
Natural Wonders & Cultural
Treasures
History
Groswater Paleoeskimo
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Groswater blade exhibit
at Port au Choix Visitor Centre
©Parks
Canada
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About 2800
years before present (B.P.), several hundred years after the
Maritime Archaic Indians had abandoned the area, the Groswater
Paleoeskimos arrived at Port au Choix. These people originating
from the Arctic may have moved south to Newfoundland during a
period of climatic cooling. Coming from the Arctic, the Groswater Paleoeskimos may have been culturally better adapted
and had better technology to exploit the marine resources during
a period of a colder climate.
The
Groswater Paleoeskimos were even more marine focussed than the
Maritime Archaic Indians. Their tools were for hunting marine
animals such as seals and were distinctive in their smallness
and fine craftsmanship. To date their unique bone, ivory and
antler harpoon heads have only been found at Port au Choix.
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Groswater Paleoeskimo
tools, (left) Harpoon head, (right) Side-notched
endblade
©Parks Canada
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With these
tools, including the distinctive side-notched harpoon endblades,
the Groswater Paleoeskimos returned to Port au Choix every
spring to hunt seals. They would set up camp at Phillip's
Garden, near where modern-day seal hunters take off by boat.
Excavations of the Groswater Palaeoeskimo camps at Phillip's
Garden East and Phillip's Garden West suggest that the Groswater
occupied the sites only on a seasonal basis.
About 1900
years B.P. the Groswater Paleoeskimos disappeared from this site
and seemingly from history itself. Perhaps these people were
displaced or assimilated by the newly arriving Dorset Paleoeskimos. Another idea suggests the Groswater were ancestral
to the Dorset Paleoeskimos. There is simply not enough evidence
to make an absolute conclusion about the fate of the Groswater
Paleoeskimos and archaeologists continue to disagree on this
point.
Cooler times
brought an arctic folk, the Palaeo-Eskimos to these shores.
These people specialized in hunting marine mammals and intensely
used whatever resources were abundant. Seals were their most
important food, and when seals were scarce starvation came. For
16 centuries they hunted these shores, then left no further
trace.
The term
‘Recent Indian Cultures’ encompasses all Indian occupation of
Newfoundland since the end of the Palaeo-Eskimo period.
Unfortunately this occupation is not well represented in the
archaeological record of the park, and the people who left the
remains are unidentified. There are traces of Indian occupation
within Gros Morne National Park at Cow Head and Broom Point
about a thousand years ago, but so far nothing more recent has
been found.
Arrival of
the Europeans
A thousand
years ago, Norsemen exploring west from Greenland built the
oldest known European dwellings in the Americas, just a few
days’ sail north of Gros Morne National Park. The remains of
their camp, discovered in 1960 by Helge and Anne Stine Ingstad
are now a part of the
L’Anse aux Meadows National Historic Site.
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Underwater archaeology at
Red Bay
© GMNP / PNGM / 01-151
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During the
1500s, in the wake of explorers John Cabot and Jacques Cartier,
Basque fishermen and whalers crossed the North Atlantic to ply
their trades in Newfoundland and Labrador each summer. Find out
more about the Basques fisherman and whalers at the Red Bay
National Historic Site.
Jacques
Cartier, sailing for the King of France, charted the waters
around the Island in 1534 and landed at St. Paul’s Inlet on June
16th. This voyage gives us the oldest description and map of the
park area. Two hundred years later, the British Admiralty
commissioned James Cook to survey the north, south, and west
coasts of the colony. He named many of the places around Bonne
Bay.
The French
Shore
Britain and
France fought for decades over ownership of eastern North
America. Britain gained sovereignty over Newfoundland in 1713,
but France retained the lucrative rights to catch and cure fish
on the island’s northeast coast. By 1783 the boundaries of the
French Shore had to be redrawn. Newfoundland’s expanding
population wanted control of the fishery of the northeast coast.
In exchange, France gained fishing rights along the west coast.
By treaty, neither French nor British subjects were allowed to
erect permanent buildings along the west coast. In the late
1700s, while the French were away at war, transient fishermen
began to encroach on the French fishing area. They caught and
cured salmon and codfish, then returned to St. John’s and the
Avalon Peninsula to sell their summer’s catch. Eventually, some
built rough cabins and began to over-winter, facing conditions
very similar to those experienced by the earlier cultures.
Settlers had
to use resources as they came into season. Fishing was the main
occupation. Meat and firewood came from the woods, and berries
supplemented garden produce. Winter was a time for trapping, and
in March men went out on the sea-ice to hunt seals for meat,
oil, and skins. With only infrequent visits by merchant vessels
and official ships, isolation was a way of life.
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Woody Point with Norris
Point in the background, early 1900’s.
© GMNP / PNGM /
11-2-900-003
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By 1809,
Bonne Bay had a trading station set up by Joseph Bird, a
merchant from Dorset in England. He provided supplies in
exchange for fish and furs, making year-round habitation easier.
By the
1870s, trawl fishing for codfish created a great demand for
herring as bait. Herring were abundant, and wintered in the deep
waters of Bonne Bay. This lucrative fishery drew a flood of
year-round settlers. Merchants prospered and tradesmen became
established. Teachers, doctors, and itinerant clergymen arrived.
A steamship now served the coast, a courthouse was built at
Woody Point, and telegraph and postal service became available.
In the
late-1870s, herring stocks declined. Fishermen from Nova Scotia
initiated the trapping and canning of lobster for the Boston
market. Lobster was so important by the end of the century that
76 canneries employed 1,400 people year-round, and every
available inlet was occupied. So hot was the competition that it
led to hostility between French and Newfoundland fishermen.
Things were
getting out of hand on the “uninhabited” French Shore.
Settlement increased while stocks of cod, salmon, herring, and
lobster dwindled. In Europe, war loomed. The time had come for
France and Britain to settle territorial and tariff differences.
In 1904 France exchanged her Newfoundland fishing rights for
warmer territory in Africa, although she retained the islands of
Saint-Pierre and Miquelon off Newfoundland’s south coast. The
west coast was free to enter the Twentieth Century. Today there
is a plaque commemorating the French Shore Treaty at Point
Riche, Newfoundland.
A New
Beginning
The ocean’s
bounty is not endless - the over-exploited 6 fishery failed.
People turned to the woods. In the 1920s, the St. Lawrence
Timber, Pulp, and Steamship Company set up in a place called
Lomond, named by the mill manager, George Simpson from Scotland.
Logging brought cash to a society based on barter. Fishermen
took to the woods for the winter working out of lumber camps.
During World
War II, Canada recognized Newfoundland’s strategic importance,
and was worried by American ambitions in the colony. After two
referendums, Newfoundland and Labrador agreed to Confederation
in 1949. Canada’s social programs and the development of new
industries completed the switch to a cash economy. Roads linked
communities, and new schools were built. Electricity and
television brought a very different way of life.
The national
importance of the Bonne Bay area was recognized in 1973. By
agreement with the Province of Newfoundland and Labrador, the
Government of Canada established Gros Morne National Park to
protect and present an outstanding example of Newfoundland’s
western highlands. In 1987, the United Nations declared Gros
Morne National Park a World Heritage Site for its exceptional
geological features and natural beauty.
Brief Description

Situated on
the west coast of the island of Newfoundland, the park provides
a rare example of the process of continental drift, where deep
ocean crust and the rocks of the earth's mantle lie exposed.
More recent glacial action has resulted in some spectacular
scenery, with coastal lowland, alpine plateau, fjords, glacial
valleys, sheer cliffs, waterfalls and many pristine lakes.
http://www.greatcanadianparks.com/nfoundland/gmornnp/index.htm
The
spectacular Long Range
Mounwtains, land-locked
fjords,
http://www.greatcanadianparks.com/nfoundland/gmornnp/page3.htm
pillo rocks
http://www.greatcanadianparks.com/nfoundland/gmornnp/page4.htm
and mysterious
Tablelands
http://www.greatcanadianparks.com/nfoundland/gmornnp/page5.htm
of Gros Morne National Park not only bestow the land with
incredible beauty, but reveal secrets of the major stages of the
earth's evolutionary history and are an essential part of the
reason the park was declared a UNESCO World Heritage
Site.
Woodland Caribou
can be seen in summer at higher elevations, and the
Moose
population, non-native to Newfoundland, has exploded!
Although
permanent settlement on these shores did not occur
until the turn of the 19th century,
archaeological evidence has provided a record of
human history that goes back 3500 years.


The
spectacular, complex geology and glacier-sculpted scenery of
this 1,805 5 5 sq km park have earned it designation as a UNESCO
World Heritage Site, as the tale told by its ancient Precambrian
rocks was instrumental in the formation of the Plate Tectonics
theory of moving continents. Located on the west coast of the
island of Newfoundland, in Atlantic Canada, Gros Morne National
Park has landlocked fiords, ocean cliffs, sandy beaches,
serpentine barrens, coastal lowlands, the large fiord of Bonne
Bay, and the sudden rise of the Long Range Mountains. There are
over 40 sites rich in ancient fossils such as trilobites, and
some exposed rock strata are 1.25 billion years old.
The park
contains 2 distinct ecoregions, the coastal lowlands along the
Gulf of St. Lawrence and the alpine plateau of the Long Range
Mountains, creating a richly diverse mix of arctic, boreal, and
temperate species. It is home to moose, red fox, black bear,
snowshoe hare, herds of woodland caribou, ptarmigan, bald eagle,
and osprey. Offshore, harbour seals breed on small islands, and
whales can be seen on migration. Activities include hiking and
backpacking on the more than 100 km of trails, rock and ice
climbing, and ski mountaineering.
http://www.pc.gc.ca/apps/dci/src/3d_e.asp?what=site&sitename=capespear&theme=te&btn_state=HTML
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