History

  • The Buchans Miners A Mining and Hockey Legacy

    Creator

    Cranford, Garry

    Abstract

    This is a collection of true Newfoundland and Labrador stories about crime and punishment on land and sea. Included here are tales of murder, mutiny, and smuggling on the high seas, as well as riots, assaults, and frauds perpetrated in some of the strangest criminal cases this province has ever seen.

    Publisher (Source)

    St. John's

    Flanker Press

    Not specified
  • Faithful and Fearless A History of the St. John's Fire Department

    Creator

    Corbett, Robert

    Abstract

    St. John’s has been called the “City of Fire” for a reason, and the St. John’s Fire Department has responded to every call for help. Faithful and Fearless is a richly detailed history of over four hundred years of fighting fires in St. John’s. Outlining the equipment used and the firefighting methods employed from the seventeenth century to present day, the book also introduces the reader to the many firefighters who have worked to keep the city safe. Dramatic historic photographs complement this thorough history by retired St. John’s Deputy Fire Chief Robert Corbett.

    Publisher (Source)

    St. John's

    Flanker Press

    Not specified
  • Health Care A Postcard History of Twentieth-Century Attitudes and Practices

    Creator

    Crellin, John K.

    Abstract

    Ever since their early twentieth-century “Golden Age,” postcards on both sides of the Atlantic have recorded popular culture. Through humour, views of urban and rural places, photographs of individuals, fantasy, advertising, and succinct messages, they have documented art and entertainment, social events, commercial practices, reform movements, political propaganda, and countless byways of society.

    Publisher (Source)

    St. John's

    Flanker Press

    Not specified
  • The Trawlermen

    Creator

    Vautier, Clarence

    Abstract

    The fishermen who ply their trade on the Atlantic Ocean can tell thousands of tales of daring rescue and tragic loss of life. In The Trawlermen, Clarence Vautier explores the lives of some of Atlantic Canada’s best-known sea captains. He traces the history of these men and their stalwart vessels while highlighting their more heroic—and dangerous—exploits on the high seas.

    Publisher (Source)

    St. John's

    Flanker Press

    Not specified
  • The Grand Banks A Pictorial History

    Creator

    Andrieux, J. P.

    Abstract

    “It was the wild west, as all fished in a totally unregulated way in a free-for-all.” For centuries, fishermen the world over have been prosecuting the waters teeming with cod from the Grand Banks of Newfoundland and Labrador. The growing demand for fish in world markets, the inexorable march of technology, and the failure of international governments to limit the harvest from the sea have each played a part in turning this industry into a thin shadow of its once great majesty.

    Publisher (Source)

    [S.l.]

    Flanker Press

    Not specified
  • John Guy of Bristol and Newfoundland His Life, Times and Legacy

    Creator

    Williams, Dr. Alan F.

    Handcock, W. Gordon

    Sanger, Chesley W.

    Abstract

    This book relates to the two principal themes of the Cupids 400 Celebrations — the settlement of Cupids in 1610 and the origins of English settlement in Newfoundland and Canada. John Guy was an influential merchant and civic figure in Bristol and West of England history and an important figure in the early history of settlement in Newfoundland through his association with the London and Bristol Company and the colonization of Cupers Cove (Cupids). This book is the biography of one of the province’s and country’s most significant historical figures.

    Publisher (Source)

    [S.l.]

    Flanker Press

    Not specified
  • The White Fleet

    Creator

    Andrieux, J. P.

    Abstract

    The Portuguese White Fleet, whose name derived from its vessels’ white hulls, is an important part of Newfoundland and Labrador history. Gaspar Corte-Real’s followers had been fishing off the Grand Banks for more than 400 years, but it was not until the 1900s that Portuguese fishermen began persecuting the North American cod fishery in force. When these ships made calls to St. John’s, the sailors and fishermen became a prominent part of the city’s way of life.

    Publisher (Source)

    St. John's

    Flanker Press

    Not specified
  • A History of Newfoundland in the North Atlantic to 1818

    Creator

    Ryan, Shannon

    Abstract

    The waters off Newfoundland, in the North Atlantic, held the world’s most abundant supply of codfish, which, when discovered, was in great demand. Unlike the fur trade—the other major early commercial activity in what is now mainland Canada—the production of codfish did not require year-round residence. It did, however, require numerous men, young and old, for the fishing season, which ran from spring to early fall.

    Publisher (Source)

    [S.l.]

    Flanker Press

    Not specified
  • Solidarités provinciales Histoire de la Fédération des travailleurs et travailleuses du Nouveau-Brunswick

    Creator

    Frank, David

    Ouellette, Réjean

    Abstract

    La Fédération des travailleurs et travailleuses du Nouveau-Brunswick, fondée en 1913, est la deuxième plus ancienne fédération provinciale du travail au Canada. Son histoire remonte aux premières campagnes en faveur de l’indemnisation des accidents du travail et de la reconnaissance syndicale, et elle se poursuit dans les plus récentes luttes visant à défendre les normes sociales et à protéger les emplois et les droits syndicaux.

    Not specified
  • An Ethnohistorian in Rupert’s Land Unfinished Conversations

    Creator

    Brown, Jennifer S. H. S. H.

    Abstract

    In 1670, the ancient homeland of the Cree and Ojibwe people of Hudson Bay became known to the English entrepreneurs of the Hudson’s Bay Company as Rupert’s Land, after the founder and absentee landlord, Prince Rupert. For four decades, Jennifer S. H. Brown has examined the complex relationships that developed among the newcomers and the Algonquian communities—who hosted and tolerated the fur traders—and later, the missionaries, anthropologists, and others who found their way into Indigenous lives and territories.

    Not specified