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{{Short description|Island of Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada}} | |||
{{dablink|For Cape Verde's Fogo Island see ].}} | |||
{{Other uses|Fogo (disambiguation){{!}}Fogo}} | |||
{{For|the town on the island|Fogo Island, Newfoundland and Labrador}} | |||
{{Use Canadian English|date=January 2023}} | |||
] | |||
] | |||
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] general store, ]<ref name="mun.ca-seldomcomeby"/>]] | |||
] | |||
'''Fogo Island''' (''Fogo'', ] for "Fire") is the largest of the offshore ], Canada. It lies off the northeast coast of ], northwest of ] across ], just east of the ]. The island is about {{cvt|25|km}} long and {{cvt|14|km}} wide. The total area is {{cvt|237.71|km2}}. It is home to the ], which encompasses ], ], ], ], and previously unincorporated areas of Fogo Island.<ref name=amalgamation/> | |||
] | |||
Though migratory French fishermen visited Fogo Island from the early 16th century until 1718, the first permanent ] of the island took place in the 18th century. Fogo Harbour and Tilting Harbour were the first settlements on the island. The English and Irish descendants of the first inhabitants retained traces of their Elizabethan English and Old Irish dialects, which can be heard on the island today. The island has many ancient folk customs brought from England and Ireland, but they are disappearing. | |||
'''Fogo Island''', the largest of ]'s offshore islands, is off the Northeast Coast of Newfoundland near ] and ]. The ] is about 25 km long and 14 km wide. | |||
==History== | |||
The island consists of eleven communities and has a population of about 5,000 people. | |||
Fogo Island is one of the oldest named features on the coast of Newfoundland. The Bertius map from 1606 shows Fogo Island as one of only about a dozen important features around the coast of Newfoundland. On French maps of the 16th to 18th centuries, the island is referred to as ''Ile des Fougues''. The island was likely named by Portuguese explorers and early fishing crews in the 16th century (''Fogo'' means ''Fire'' in ]). | |||
Until 1783, Fogo Island was on an area of the coast called the French Shore. Though English and Irish were not supposed to settle here, under the terms of the ], they did settle; by 1750, Fogo was a thriving part of the British mercantile system of fisheries, based out of ] English towns such as ], in ]. | |||
Because the original ] took place in the 18th Century and the area remained isolated well into the twentieth century, the descendants of the first inhabitants retained traces of their Elizabethan dialect which can be heard on the Island today. The Island has many ancient folk customs brought from ] that are disappearing. | |||
] on Fogo Island is a National Cultural Landscape District of Canada and is Newfoundland and Labrador's first Provincial Heritage District. Tilting is unique for its Irish culture and, some people say, its Irish dialect. The Irish Cemetery in Tilting may be the oldest in North America. | |||
Fogo Island was once called Y del Fogo, meaning Isle of Fire. There are three theories for the name: | |||
Local oral history indicates that Tilting was originally a French harbour before becoming a venue of Irish settlement. This is highly likely, given the traditional commercial and cultural links between southern Irish and northern French fishing ports. The first Irish settled in Tilting in the 1750s, and uniquely for Newfoundland, Tilting evolved into an exclusively Irish and Catholic town by the 1780s. | |||
•Many huge accidental or natural ]s destroyed the dense forests of the Northern part of the Island. | |||
] traversed Fogo Island for many hundreds of years before Irish and English settlers arrived. The Beothuk pursued the ] and ] fisheries in the area. They also travelled out to the Funk Islands to collect feathers and eggs from the birds there. In the early years of European settlement at Fogo, there were incidents of violence between the Beothuk and the Europeans. This contact ended around the year 1800. The Beothuk became extinct as a people in the late 1820s. | |||
•Europeans continually saw the burning ]s of the ], when they were visiting from across the ]. | |||
Fogo Island first attracted Europeans because of the extensive opportunities for commodity harvesting, including seal skins and oil, lumber, fur-bearing animals, salmon and of course cod. Over time, settlers on the island concentrated on processing dried cod, mainly because that was the product that most interested the merchants who dealt in the region of Fogo. From about 1850 until the widespread depletion of fish stocks in the 1990s, cod was king. In recent years, the economy of the island has seen diversification away from solely fishing to tourism and cultural industries. | |||
•The settlers deliberately burned the forests to clear land for ], but ironically lost the soil to spring washouts. | |||
Fishing has always been a hard life. Before Confederation with Canada, the mercantile classes of ] became rich by holding a near-monopoly stranglehold on both the supply of goods to the ]s and on the sale of fish from them. | |||
==History== | |||
] | |||
"In Cod We Trust" - Fogo, like most of the Newfoundland outports, was built upon the ]. Until the widespread depletion of fish stocks in the ]'s, cod was king. | |||
In the early 20th century, the ] was formed in an attempt to break this stranglehold. It was a form of ] with general stores owned by fishermen for fishermen. One of the Fishermen's Union stores still stands at ]<ref name="mun.ca-seldomcomeby">{{cite web |title=Seldom-Come-By |url=https://www.mun.ca/ich/inventory/profiles/seldomcomeby/seldomcomeby.php |website=Intangible Cultural Heritage |publisher=] |access-date=14 December 2021 |language=en-CA}}</ref> on Fogo Island, now open as a museum complete with general store, port installations, fishing implements and equipment for the manufacture of ]. | |||
Fishing was a hard life and there was a widespread perception that the mercantile classes of ] were becoming rich by holding a near-] stranglehold on imports to the tiny ]s. | |||
Today, the Fogo Island Cooperative continues to successfully stake footholds in new fish markets. Communities began recognising the appeal of their land and heritage as cultural tourism opportunities. | |||
On Fogo Island, the general response of fishers to the idea of Water Street in the St John's commercial district holding the largest concentration of ]s while the people of the outports lived in poverty was F.U. | |||
Crab and ] fisheries have largely replaced the cod fishery; a fish-packing ] remains in operation in the town of Fogo. | |||
The F.U. (or Fishermens' Union) Trading Company was a co-operative; general stores owned by fishermen for fishermen. One of the Fishermens' Union stores still stands at Seldom-Come-By on Fogo Island, open as a museum complete with general store, port installations, fishing implements and equipment for the manufacture of ]. | |||
A ] radio transmitting station was once operational atop a hill near the town of Fogo; operating with a ] to establish maritime communications, the station was forced to close around the time that radio became common for household use as the spark-gap design generated unacceptable levels of ]. Efforts to rebuild this station as a ] commenced in 2002. | |||
] and ] fisheries have largely replaced the cod fishery; a fish-packing ] remains in operation in Fogo village. | |||
In 1967, the island played a key role in the development of what came to be known as the "Fogo Process," a model for community media as a tool for addressing community concerns, when an Extension field worker from Memorial University, Fred Earle, and ] shot 27 films with Fogo Islanders as part of the ]'s ] program.<ref name="Quarry">{{cite book|last=Quarry|first=Wendy|title=The Fogo Process: An Experiment in Participatory Communication|publisher=Thesis, ]|year=1994|url=http://www.uoguelph.ca/~snowden/fogo.htm|access-date=2009-10-16|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20011104141440/http://www.uoguelph.ca/~snowden/fogo.htm|archive-date=2001-11-04|url-status=dead}}</ref> | |||
A ] radio transmitting station was once operational atop a hill near Fogo village; operating with a ] ] to establish maritime communications, the station was forced to close around the time that radio became common for household use as the spark-gap design generated unacceptable levels of ] ]. Efforts to rebuilt this station as a ] commenced in ]. | |||
Residents defeated the ] government's plans to resettle elsewhere Fogo Islanders in the 1950s but by 1967 a downturn in the inshore fishery had forced many to turn to welfare support. The northern cod fishery closed in 1992. While the island did recover from the downturn (in part owing to the Fogo Process), the depleted state of the fishery adversely affected islanders. | |||
From 1792 there was always a physician on the island. The last physician was due to leave the island in June 2022; medical care then only being available via a six-hour round trip by ferry, weather permitting. This follows economic problems and population decrease in Newfoundland and Labrador following the 1990s collapse in the cod fishery.<ref>{{Cite news |title=For the first time in 200 years, people on this Canadian island will be without a doctor |last=Cecco |first=Leyland |newspaper=The Guardian |date=4 May 2022 |url= https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/may/04/fogo-island-canada-no-doctor}}</ref> | |||
] | |||
==Communities== | ==Communities== | ||
*Town of Fogo Island: | |||
**Fogo | |||
*] | |||
**Joe Batt's Arm | |||
*] | |||
**Seldom | |||
*] | |||
**Little Seldom | |||
*] | |||
**Tilting | |||
*] | |||
*] | **] | ||
*] | **] | ||
*] | **] | ||
*] | **] | ||
**Shoal Bay | |||
*] | |||
**Barr'd Islands | |||
*] | |||
On March 1, 2011, the towns of Fogo, Joe Batt's Arm-Barr'd Islands-Shoal Bay, Seldom-Little Seldom and Tilting and the Fogo Island Region (Stag Harbour, Island Harbour, Deep Bay, and Fogo Island Central) amalgamated to form the Town of Fogo Island.<ref name=amalgamation>{{cite web | url=http://www.statcan.gc.ca/pub/92f0009x/2012000/tbl/xls/92F0009XIB2012000_T1_Can.xlsx | title=Interim List of Changes to Municipal Boundaries, Status, and Names From January 2, 2011 to January 1, 2012 (Table 1 - Changes to census subdivisions in alphabetical order by province and territory) | publisher=] | type=] | date=November 14, 2012 | accessdate=December 3, 2012}}</ref> | |||
==Name== | |||
{{unreferenced section|date=December 2021}} | |||
Fogo Island was once called Y del Fogo, meaning Isle of Fire.<ref>https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/fogo-island</ref> There are a number of theories for the name: | |||
*Many accidental or natural ]s destroyed the dense forests of the northern part of the island. | |||
*European mariners often saw the burning fires of the ] natives, when they were visiting from across the ]. | |||
*The island may have been named Fogo after the Cape Verde Island's active volcano. Note that many Newfoundland geographical features were named by the Spanish, the Portuguese and the French before anglophones (the English, the Irish and the Scots) arrived. Cape Bonavista, Cape Spear, Cape Race, Trinity Bay, Placentia Bay, Notre Dame Bay, Cape St Francis, Baccalieu Island, Baie Verte, Taslow, Baie l'Argente and even St John's or Catalina are place names that were originally named by non-English-speakers. | |||
==Transportation== | |||
Fogo Island is connected to mainland Newfoundland by the ferry ], and is served by the ] airport. The primary roads on the island are ] and ], as well as Deep Bay Road and Island Harbour Road. | |||
==Tourism and attractions== | |||
]]] | |||
The island attracts a wide range of visitors interested in its history, local wildlife and other attractions. It has seven hiking trails, such as Lion's Den, Brimstone Head, Turpin's and Joe Batt's Point Trail. It also has ten Town-owned local museums and heritage properties, including the Marine Interpretation Centre, the Lane House Museum, and the Bleak House Museum. There are also museums run by local individuals, including Mona's Quilts & Jams and ], now closed. | |||
Fogo Island Arts (launched in 2008) provides a platform for contemporary art on the island, via a series of residencies hosted at different studios around Fogo. | |||
==Literature== | |||
Fogo Island appears in fictional form in the novel ''Blaze Island'' by ].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Bush |first=Catherine |title=Blaze Island |publisher=Goose Lane Editions |year=2020 |isbn=978-1773101057 |author-link=Catherine Bush}}</ref> | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
*] a charity devoted to economic development of the island | |||
* ] | |||
==References== | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
{{Wikivoyage|Fogo Island and Change Islands}} | |||
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{{Commons category-inline|Fogo Island}} | |||
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{{Coord|49|39|49|N|54|10|13|W|type:isle_scale:200000_region:CA-NL|notes=<ref>{{Cite cgndb|AAHEK|Fogo Island}}</ref>|display=title}} | |||
{{Subdivisions of Newfoundland and Labrador}} | |||
{{Authority control}} | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Fogo Island, Newfoundland And Labrador}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 13:22, 6 January 2025
Island of Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada For other uses, see Fogo. For the town on the island, see Fogo Island, Newfoundland and Labrador.
Fogo Island (Fogo, Portuguese for "Fire") is the largest of the offshore islands of Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada. It lies off the northeast coast of Newfoundland, northwest of Musgrave Harbour across Hamilton Sound, just east of the Change Islands. The island is about 25 km (16 mi) long and 14 km (8.7 mi) wide. The total area is 237.71 km (91.78 sq mi). It is home to the Town of Fogo Island, which encompasses Fogo, Joe Batt's Arm-Barr'd Islands-Shoal Bay, Seldom-Little Seldom, Tilting, and previously unincorporated areas of Fogo Island.
Though migratory French fishermen visited Fogo Island from the early 16th century until 1718, the first permanent settlement of the island took place in the 18th century. Fogo Harbour and Tilting Harbour were the first settlements on the island. The English and Irish descendants of the first inhabitants retained traces of their Elizabethan English and Old Irish dialects, which can be heard on the island today. The island has many ancient folk customs brought from England and Ireland, but they are disappearing.
History
Fogo Island is one of the oldest named features on the coast of Newfoundland. The Bertius map from 1606 shows Fogo Island as one of only about a dozen important features around the coast of Newfoundland. On French maps of the 16th to 18th centuries, the island is referred to as Ile des Fougues. The island was likely named by Portuguese explorers and early fishing crews in the 16th century (Fogo means Fire in Portuguese).
Until 1783, Fogo Island was on an area of the coast called the French Shore. Though English and Irish were not supposed to settle here, under the terms of the Treaty of Utrecht, they did settle; by 1750, Fogo was a thriving part of the British mercantile system of fisheries, based out of West Country English towns such as Poole, in Dorset.
Tilting Harbour on Fogo Island is a National Cultural Landscape District of Canada and is Newfoundland and Labrador's first Provincial Heritage District. Tilting is unique for its Irish culture and, some people say, its Irish dialect. The Irish Cemetery in Tilting may be the oldest in North America.
Local oral history indicates that Tilting was originally a French harbour before becoming a venue of Irish settlement. This is highly likely, given the traditional commercial and cultural links between southern Irish and northern French fishing ports. The first Irish settled in Tilting in the 1750s, and uniquely for Newfoundland, Tilting evolved into an exclusively Irish and Catholic town by the 1780s.
Beothuk traversed Fogo Island for many hundreds of years before Irish and English settlers arrived. The Beothuk pursued the seal and salmon fisheries in the area. They also travelled out to the Funk Islands to collect feathers and eggs from the birds there. In the early years of European settlement at Fogo, there were incidents of violence between the Beothuk and the Europeans. This contact ended around the year 1800. The Beothuk became extinct as a people in the late 1820s.
Fogo Island first attracted Europeans because of the extensive opportunities for commodity harvesting, including seal skins and oil, lumber, fur-bearing animals, salmon and of course cod. Over time, settlers on the island concentrated on processing dried cod, mainly because that was the product that most interested the merchants who dealt in the region of Fogo. From about 1850 until the widespread depletion of fish stocks in the 1990s, cod was king. In recent years, the economy of the island has seen diversification away from solely fishing to tourism and cultural industries.
Fishing has always been a hard life. Before Confederation with Canada, the mercantile classes of St John's, Newfoundland became rich by holding a near-monopoly stranglehold on both the supply of goods to the Newfoundland outports and on the sale of fish from them.
In the early 20th century, the Fisherman's Protective Union was formed in an attempt to break this stranglehold. It was a form of co-operative with general stores owned by fishermen for fishermen. One of the Fishermen's Union stores still stands at Seldom-Come-By on Fogo Island, now open as a museum complete with general store, port installations, fishing implements and equipment for the manufacture of cod-liver oil.
Today, the Fogo Island Cooperative continues to successfully stake footholds in new fish markets. Communities began recognising the appeal of their land and heritage as cultural tourism opportunities.
Crab and lobster fisheries have largely replaced the cod fishery; a fish-packing plant remains in operation in the town of Fogo.
A Marconi radio transmitting station was once operational atop a hill near the town of Fogo; operating with a spark-gap transmitter to establish maritime communications, the station was forced to close around the time that radio became common for household use as the spark-gap design generated unacceptable levels of radio interference. Efforts to rebuild this station as a historic site commenced in 2002.
In 1967, the island played a key role in the development of what came to be known as the "Fogo Process," a model for community media as a tool for addressing community concerns, when an Extension field worker from Memorial University, Fred Earle, and Colin Low shot 27 films with Fogo Islanders as part of the National Film Board of Canada's Challenge for Change program.
Residents defeated the Smallwood government's plans to resettle elsewhere Fogo Islanders in the 1950s but by 1967 a downturn in the inshore fishery had forced many to turn to welfare support. The northern cod fishery closed in 1992. While the island did recover from the downturn (in part owing to the Fogo Process), the depleted state of the fishery adversely affected islanders.
From 1792 there was always a physician on the island. The last physician was due to leave the island in June 2022; medical care then only being available via a six-hour round trip by ferry, weather permitting. This follows economic problems and population decrease in Newfoundland and Labrador following the 1990s collapse in the cod fishery.
Communities
- Town of Fogo Island:
- Fogo
- Joe Batt's Arm
- Seldom
- Little Seldom
- Tilting
- Stag Harbour
- Island Harbour
- Deep Bay
- Fogo Island Central
- Shoal Bay
- Barr'd Islands
On March 1, 2011, the towns of Fogo, Joe Batt's Arm-Barr'd Islands-Shoal Bay, Seldom-Little Seldom and Tilting and the Fogo Island Region (Stag Harbour, Island Harbour, Deep Bay, and Fogo Island Central) amalgamated to form the Town of Fogo Island.
Name
This section does not cite any sources. Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (December 2021) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
Fogo Island was once called Y del Fogo, meaning Isle of Fire. There are a number of theories for the name:
- Many accidental or natural forest fires destroyed the dense forests of the northern part of the island.
- European mariners often saw the burning fires of the Beothuk natives, when they were visiting from across the Atlantic.
- The island may have been named Fogo after the Cape Verde Island's active volcano. Note that many Newfoundland geographical features were named by the Spanish, the Portuguese and the French before anglophones (the English, the Irish and the Scots) arrived. Cape Bonavista, Cape Spear, Cape Race, Trinity Bay, Placentia Bay, Notre Dame Bay, Cape St Francis, Baccalieu Island, Baie Verte, Taslow, Baie l'Argente and even St John's or Catalina are place names that were originally named by non-English-speakers.
Transportation
Fogo Island is connected to mainland Newfoundland by the ferry MV Veteran, and is served by the Fogo Aerodrome airport. The primary roads on the island are Route 333 (Fogo Island Road) and Route 334 (Joe Batt’s Arm Road), as well as Deep Bay Road and Island Harbour Road.
Tourism and attractions
The island attracts a wide range of visitors interested in its history, local wildlife and other attractions. It has seven hiking trails, such as Lion's Den, Brimstone Head, Turpin's and Joe Batt's Point Trail. It also has ten Town-owned local museums and heritage properties, including the Marine Interpretation Centre, the Lane House Museum, and the Bleak House Museum. There are also museums run by local individuals, including Mona's Quilts & Jams and the Museum of the Flat Earth, now closed.
Fogo Island Arts (launched in 2008) provides a platform for contemporary art on the island, via a series of residencies hosted at different studios around Fogo.
Literature
Fogo Island appears in fictional form in the novel Blaze Island by Catherine Bush.
See also
- Shorefast a charity devoted to economic development of the island
References
- ^ "Seldom-Come-By". Intangible Cultural Heritage. Memorial University of Newfoundland. Retrieved 14 December 2021.
- ^ "Interim List of Changes to Municipal Boundaries, Status, and Names From January 2, 2011 to January 1, 2012 (Table 1 - Changes to census subdivisions in alphabetical order by province and territory)" (XLSX). Statistics Canada. November 14, 2012. Retrieved December 3, 2012.
- Quarry, Wendy (1994). The Fogo Process: An Experiment in Participatory Communication. Thesis, University of Guelph. Archived from the original on 2001-11-04. Retrieved 2009-10-16.
- Cecco, Leyland (4 May 2022). "For the first time in 200 years, people on this Canadian island will be without a doctor". The Guardian.
- https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/fogo-island
- Bush, Catherine (2020). Blaze Island. Goose Lane Editions. ISBN 978-1773101057.
- Community Profile: Fogo Town, Newfoundland and Labrador; Statistics Canada
- Community Profile: Joe Batt's Arm-Barr'd Islands-Shoal Bay Town, Newfoundland and Labrador; Statistics Canada
- Community Profile: Seldom-Little Seldom Town, Newfoundland and Labrador; Statistics Canada
- Community Profile: Tilting Town, Newfoundland and Labrador; Statistics Canada
- Community Profile: Fogo Island Region, Newfoundland and Labrador; Statistics Canada
- Fogo Island Region designated places; Statistics Canada
External links
Media related to Fogo Island at Wikimedia Commons
- Fogo Island - Change Islands - Farewell - Ferry Schedule
- Archaeological Survey, 1997
- Fogo Island Central Academy
- Town of Joe Batt's Arm
- Folklore and Oral History collection for Little Fogo Island
49°39′49″N 54°10′13″W / 49.66361°N 54.17028°W / 49.66361; -54.17028
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