Cupids Cove Chatter

Cupids 400 – What's Happening

Bay de Verde Mural and Story Panels

Posted by Crout On June - 25 - 2010

Ready to Unveil
Originally uploaded by John Guy2010

On June 23rd, the Town of Bay de Verde unveiled the Mural and Interpretive Panels depicting the voyage of John Guy to Bay de Verde when the colonists sailed into Trinity Bay to meet the Beothuk.

Photos of the unveiling of the Mural and Interpretive Panels in Bay de Verde >>

The Story of the Voyage of the Indeavour  in 1612 > >

Paul Butler – Cupids 400 Visiting Authors Series

Posted by Crout On May - 24 - 2010

An Evening with Paul Butler

Cupids: A Novel

Cupids: A Novel

New Date – Thursday, June 10th
Cupids Community Centre,  Seaforest Drive.
Adm:  $5 – proceeds to Cupids Legacy Centre Trust.  Refreshments will be served
Books available for purchase.  For more information, please contact
Cupids 400 – Kathi Stacey @ 528-1610 or kstacey@cupids400.com

As part of the Visiting Author Series, Paul Butler, award winning NL author of Cupids, will be visiting on June 10th. Cupids (Flanker Press), was released in May 2010. The novel is a fast moving Jacobean revenge tragedy set around John Guy’s colony at Cupers Cove, 1610-1612.

Cupids is the fourth historical novel he has written about the Conception Bay North Area. The other three: NaGeira, Easton’s Gold and Easton are based on often told legends and recorded history in the region, and are set in about the same time period.

About this Book from Flanker Press

In the fall of 1611, John Guy prepares to return from his colony in Cupers Cove, Newfoundland, to Bristol, England, where he plans to woo Eliza Egret, the daughter of one of the principal stockholders of the colonization venture. Guy must return, however, with a prisoner, a mysterious young man named Bartholomew, who is responsible for burning the colony’s stored grain. As the presence of a convict might cause the backers to question his leadership, Guy chooses a radical course — to use the silken-tongued Bartholomew as an ally. So Guy and his companion enter a tale of intrigue and danger reminiscent of the revenge tragedies of the Jacobean period.

About Paul Butler from Flanker Press.

Paul Butler

Paul Butler

Paul Butler is the author of several critically acclaimed novels including Hero, 1892, NaGeira, Easton’s Gold, Easton, and Stoker’s Shadow.

His work has appeared on the judges’ lists for Canada Reads, the Relit longlist, and he was a winner in the Government of Newfoundland and Labrador Arts and Letters Awards four times between 2003 and 2008.

A graduate of Norman Jewison’s Canadian Film Centre, Butler has written for the Globe and Mail, The Beaver, Books in Canada, Atlantic Books Today, and Canadian Geographic, and has also contributed to CBC Radio, local and national.”

For more information see his website:
paulbutlernovelist.com

Building Full Sized Model of the Indeavour.

Posted by Crout On April - 24 - 2010

winterton-logo

From  June 15th to September 10th , 2010, the Wooden Boat Museum in Winterton will be engaged in an exciting project. Winterton Master Boat Builder, Jerome Canning, using the tools, techniques, and skills of the 17th century settlers will build a reconstruction of the Indeavour, the 34-ft. bark that John Guy and the colonists built in Cupids to sail to Trinity Bay to attempt to meet and trade with the Beothuk.

Visitors are invited to  be part of the project.  Reaching back in time to 1610 – the visitor can work side by side with John Guy, as he builds the “Indeavour”, a 34-ft. bark, for the historic voyage from Cupids to Trinity Bay. Come spend a day or two working along our Exhibit Builder, as he brings to life the skills & tools of the 17th century. Help erect the keel, stem, counter and main frames of this full sized exhibit. Leave your mark in history by etching your initials on the keel.

Indeavour - 12 ton bark for exploring the island

Then relive the thrill for years to come as you lift the lid of your unique cedar box filled with wood shavings taken from the experience….. The cost is $150.00 per person (Snacks, Lunch & Keepsake Box Included.)

For more information, see the  Wooden Boat Museum of Newfoundland & Labrador > >

About the Voyage of the Indeavour

Having completed building the Indeavour, in the Fall of 1612, the colonists set sail to explore Trinity Bay to try to make contact with the Beothuk   people and begin a profitable fur trade with them. Beaver furs were extremely valuable in Europe at that time and the settlers wanted to trade with the Beothuk for these furs.

They used two boats they had constructed in Cupids Cove (Cupers Cove). The larger of the two boats, the Indeavour, was a 12 ton vessel. The smaller was a 5 ton shallop. We know a great deal about this voyage because John Guy and Henry Crout describe it in their journals. Henry also talked about the trip in a letter he wrote to Sir Percival Willoughby in England.

On October 7th 1612, the two boats left Cupers Cove  around 2 o’clock in the afternoon. The Indeavour carried John Guy, Henry Crout, and 12 other men. The shallop carried another five men on board, for a total of 19 men.

At 11 o’clock that night, they arrived at Harbour Grace and anchored their boats close to the pirates’ fort that the notorious pirate, Peter Easton, had built. There they found a 120 ton French ship full of salt. In those days, salt was very important for preserving fish and meat and the settlers spent the next nine days storing the salt in a safe, dry place.

They continued on their journey, reaching the bottom of Bull Arm, where the town of Sunnyside is today, on November 4 and finding  a number of Beothuk houses and a Beothuk canoe hauled up on the beach.  Finally, after more exploration of the region, on November 6th, the colonists met and shared a meal with a group of Beothuk somewhere in Bull Arm.

After a successful meeting with the Beothuk, John Guy and his men began their return trip to Cupers Cove. On the way back, the shallop overturned near Bay de Verde, throwing the men overboard. Fortunately, they were able to get to shore safely. For the next ten days, the men from the shallop walked from Bay de Verde to Carbonear. According to a letter written by one of the men, Bartholomew Pearson, the lives of the explorers were in great danger as they were faced with “great famine and much hunger”. He also stated that they were “like to be starved”. Upon arrival at Carbonear, the men found some “rotten, stinking fish” and “moulix made of mussels” .  Not a great dinner, but it kept them alive long enough to return home. At Carbonear, the men were also lucky enough to find an abandoned boat in which they were able to sail back to the colony at Cupids Cove (Cupers Cove.)

For a complete account of the journey, see Baccalieu: Crossroads for Cultures, “The Journey of the Indeavour

Voyage of the Indeavour to Meet the Beothuk

Voyage of the Indeavour to Meet the Beothuk

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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.

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