Cupids Cove Chatter

Cupids 400 – What's Happening

Archive for October, 2010

“Thank You” Reception for Cupids 400

Posted by Crout On October - 31 - 2010

A “Thank You” Reception was held in Legacy Hall of the Cupids Legacy Centre on October 28th. Volunteers and others who were involved in the many Cupids 400 events attended.

The Canadian Navy played a major role in a number of events during Cupids 400, since 2010 was the 100th Anniversary of the Canadian Navy as well as the 400th Anniversary of the Birth of English Canada. Cdr Larry Jones, CO, Canadian Forces Station, St. John’s, presented Roy Dawe, Chair, Cupids 400 with a photo commemorating the announcement of multimillion dollar improvements to CFS St. John’s by Prime Minister Stephen Harper on October 21st.

The Honourable Tom Hedderson with Dr. Alton Smith
The Honourable Tom Hedderson with Dr. Alton Smith

Among the special guests were the Honourable Tom Hedderson, MHA for Harbour Main, Minister of Transportation & Works, and Minister Responsible for the Newfoundland and Labrador Housing Corporation, and Dr. Alton Smith whose grandfather in 1910 attended the 300th Anniversary of the founding of Cupids.

More photos of Thank You Reception on Flickr > >

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print
  • RSS
  • Facebook
  • Add to favorites
  • Twitter
  • Google Bookmarks
  • del.icio.us
  • PDF
  • Yahoo! Bookmarks
  • Slashdot
  • MySpace

Digging up the Past from The Compass

Posted by Crout On October - 19 - 2010

Digging up the past

Baccalieu Trail archaeologist hopeful

Special to The Compass by Burton K. Janes

about additional discoveries

Accompanying Bill Gilbert on a tour of the Cupids Cove plantation archaeological site is a virtual lesson in history and interpretation.

Stooping down, he picks up two artifacts that were recently unearthed by a field worker. Glancing at them, Gilbert says, “A piece of pottery and a tobacco pipe bowl fragment. Both from the seventeenth century.” As simple as that.

There’s no doubt he knows his stuff. Not surprisingly, he’s deeply in love with history, a subject that has always captured his interest.

Gilbert grew up in Blaketown, where he went to school, as well as in New Harbour.

He earned an undergraduate degree in North Atlantic history from Memorial University. He also took some archaeology courses, including a hands-on course in field techniques.

“I soon realized I loved fieldwork and wanted to continue at it, if I could,” he says.

He stayed on at MUN and earned a graduate degree in archaeology/anthropology. He then accepted a job at a dig in Labrador. “Things just took off from there,” he states. A professional archaeologist since 1980, the 55-year-old has worked at several significant provincial sites, including the Beaches, Boyd’s Cove, Ferryland, Red Bay and Signal Hill.

Since 1994, he has been the chief archaeologist for the Baccalieu Trail Heritage Corporation.

“For a long time, I’ve had a sense that (the Baccalieu Trail) was a special place with a lot of important history,” he indicates. He grew up hearing stories about John Guy and Peter Easton. Gilbert’s work led to the excavation of the Russell’s Point site and the discovery and excavation of several other key sites in the region, including a 1,200-year-old Indian site on Dildo Island and the Hefford Plantation in New Perlican, established in 1675.

Gilbert and his crew also conducted survey work and/or excavations at Anderson’s Cove, Heart’s Delight, Heart’s Desire, Heart’s Content, Winterton, Hant’s Harbour, Old Perlican, Bay de Verde and Harbour Grace.

The crown jewel of Gilbert’s career is his work at the original 1610 colony at Cupids, the birthplace of English Canada.

On June 15, 1995, after seven days of testing, Gilbert and his team discovered a substantial seventeenth-century site in the Conception Bay town.

Early on, Gilbert realized this work was “important from an historical and scientific point of view,” he says. “If properly developed and interpreted, it could have great cultural and economic benefits for the entire region.”

What he thought would be a one-year job has turned into 16 years of research, excavation and interpretation. His work is a lasting contribution to the heritage, history and economy of the region. This year, the Cupids Cove plantation archaeology site is a beehive of activity, with visits from thousands of tourists from around the world.

Archaeology is a slow and tedious discipline, Gilbert suggests, made up of two levels of discovery.

The first is the survey process itself: “ You are actually looking for a site.”

In the absence of historic documents, “ you have to base your survey strategy on other factors, such as the lay of the land and potential access to resources,” Gilbert explains.

Admittedly, surveying can be frustrating. “ You may spend days, weeks or months testing various locations and finding nothing,” he says.

The second level is the actual discovery of artifacts, which more than compensates for the gruelling surveys.

“ When you finally do find what you’re looking for, it can be extremely exciting and rewarding,” Gilbert adds.

Some discoveries garner greater excitement than others.

“There is always that sense of excitement and direct connection with the past that you get from knowing you are the first person to uncover and pick up an object that was dropped by someone hundreds or maybe even thousands of years ago,” he comments.

At Cupids, more than 135,000 artifacts have been uncovered since 1995. Ceramic, glass, tobacco pipes, cannon balls and wrought-iron nails, among other objects, have been brought to the surface. The oldest English coin ever found in Canada came to light at Cupids.

Excavations since August have uncovered the remains of an early seventeenth-century gun platform for mounting a cannon.

One of the main projects at the Cupids Cove Plantation this summer has been the creation of a volumetric reconstruction, or ‘ghost structure,’ over the site of the original dwelling house and storehouse built by John Guy and his men in the autumn of 1610.

As recently as Dec. 2, 2009, Gilbert “was truly amazed” when an amateur genealogist from Ontario, searching for documents related to the north side of Conception Bay, found on the British National Archives website a will dated 1674.

“It is the last will and testament of ‘Master James Hill inhabitant of Cupits Cove,’ written at Cupids on March 4, 1674,” Gilbert explains. “It is brief, but at the same time provides us with some vital new information.”

Unfortunately, the excitement associated with such discoveries is sometimes muted by other frustrations that detract from the work being done. One is responding to accusations that Cupids is not the original site of Guy’s colony.

“I have better things to do with my time than respond to such things,” he says. Still, he patiently takes the time and effort to address the issue in newspapers.

Today, Gilbert spends less time in archaeological survey and excavation. Since 2001, he has lived in his family home in Blaketown, where he spends most of his time researching, interpreting and writing.

“Just writing notes and keeping track of it all is almost a full-time job,” he says.

His articles, often about Cupids, appear in such publications as Newfoundland Studies, Avalon Chronicles and Riddle Fence. He’s the author of the booklet, Journeys Through Time: Ten Years of Archaeology on the Baccalieu Trail. He’s planning to write a book about his archaeological pursuits.

Gilbert is personally committed to Baccalieu Trail archaeology, and credits ongoing funding from the provincial and federal governments for being able to continue the work.

“ The work we’re doing to interpret our early history is going to be ongoing for a long time, and I’m looking forward to doing it,” he says.


    Share and Enjoy:
    • Print
    • RSS
    • Facebook
    • Add to favorites
    • Twitter
    • Google Bookmarks
    • del.icio.us
    • PDF
    • Yahoo! Bookmarks
    • Slashdot
    • MySpace

    Dale Jarvis – Visiting Authors Series

    Posted by Crout On October - 18 - 2010

    Dale's Latest Book

    Author/Storyteller Dale Jarvis. Hosed by the Cupids Historical Society as part of its popular Visiting Author Series.

    Thursday, October 21 at the Cupids Legacy Centre at 7:30 pm.

    Admission is $5 and proceeds go to the Cupids Legacy Trust.

    Refreshments served.

    Dale will feature his newest book “Haunted Waters” and will treat us to a story or two.

    About Dale Jarvis from Flanker Press:

    Dale Gilbert Jarvis is a performer, researcher, writer and storyteller living and working in St. John’s. He holds a B.Sc. (honours) in anthropology from Trent University and an MA in folklore from Memorial University of Newfoundland. He currently works for the Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador as the province’s intangible cultural heritage development officer. Dale’s fortnightly exploration of all things paranormal in the province, “Newfoundland Unexplained,” is a regular column in the Telegram.   As a storyteller, Dale has performed locally and at international festivals, but is perhaps less well known than his alter ego, the distinguished Reverend Thomas Wyckham Jarvis, Esquire. Since 1997, the Reverend has been the host and guide of the St. John’s Haunted Hike, a walking ghost tour through the haunted streets of St. John’s. Under his supervision, locals and tourists have been introduced to the vengeful lovers, murdered soldiers, and mysterious fires which await those brave enough to explore the secrets that lie in wait in St. John’s darkest corners. Mixing history, humour, and traditional storytelling, Dale has been winning over audiences and throwing in the odd scare here and there, and has been covered by a wide variety of local, national, and international media.

    Click here to listen to The Ghostly Ballerinas of Gower Street. Storyteller and author Dale Jarvis shares a story of ghostly ballerinas that dates back to the years of the Second World War. In the tale, a young girl receives nightly visitations from phantom dancers, as well as a black-haired lady in a black dress. When the girl’s mother finds an old photograph at the bottom of a drawer, the mystery deepens.

    About “Haunted Waters” from The Telegram. [See video trailer at right]

    Once upon a time, in a city, very much like this one, there was a young man who liked to collect ghost stories …

    Dale Jarvis, is the author of “Haunted Shores,” “Wonderful Strange” and “The Golden Leg.” “Haunted Waters” is his latest collection of spirit tales from Newfoundland and Labrador.

    The new release includes stories of spirits of Newfoundland dogs standing on shorelines, a phantom nun wandering the bowels of the Arts and Culture Centre in St. John’s and a warning out of Bonavista Bay to beware “the lone mummer…

    n “Haunted Waters,” Jarvis relays such a piece of informal storytelling shared with him by a former resident of Lime Street in St. John’s. While living on the street, the woman told Jarvis, she would be awakened nightly by the spirit of a young girl who would be at the foot of her bed. It was just one of the ghosts in the story of “The Lime Street Phantoms.” Jarvis writes the woman’s family believed yet another entity was responsible for more eerie acts.

    “I would put my daughter to bed with a couple of teddy bears … in the morning they would be sat up in the chair next to her bed,” the woman is quoted as telling Jarvis.

    Ultimately, the living family would be scared from the home by even more aggressive actions.

    Share and Enjoy:
    • Print
    • RSS
    • Facebook
    • Add to favorites
    • Twitter
    • Google Bookmarks
    • del.icio.us
    • PDF
    • Yahoo! Bookmarks
    • Slashdot
    • MySpace

    VIDEO

    TAG CLOUD

    Sponsors

    About Me

    Henry Crout, one of John Guy\'s Colonists is the avatar for Cupids Cove Chatter. The hand represents his journal writing. Although a number of people including John Guy and Sir Percival Willoughby recorded information about the first English colony in Canada, Henry Crout recorded what was happening on the ground. We hope this blog will introduce and describe events from an - on the ground - perspective. We hope to have guest bloggers who will add their descriptions and opinions. If you are interested, please contact us.

    Twitter

    Photos