Jump to content

Deer Island (New Brunswick)

Coordinates: 44°58′32.4″N 66°58′53.6″W / 44.975667°N 66.981556°W / 44.975667; -66.981556
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Deer Island
Map
CountryCanada
ProvinceNew Brunswick
CountyCharlotte
Settled1770
Area
 • Total
38.32 km2 (14.80 sq mi)
Population
 (2021)
 • Total
718[1]
 • Density18.7/km2 (48/sq mi)
 • Pop 2016-2021
Decrease 9.9%
 • Dwellings
475

Deer Island is one of the Fundy Islands at the entrance to Passamaquoddy Bay in the Bay of Fundy, Canada. The Old Sow tidal whirlpool is the largest in the western hemisphere[2] can be viewed from the southern tip of the island.[3]

Settled in the 18th century primarily by Loyalists fleeing the United States,[4] its economy is built around fishing and aquaculture, especially its well-known herring weirs.[5]

Although its population is less than half what it was,[6][5] [7] Deer Island is the main centre of West Isles Parish and falls under the Southwest NB Regional Service Commission.[8]

History

[edit]

Early Settlement

[edit]

There are "traces" of visits to the island by indigenous Passamaquoddys, although no settlement by either the natives or French appears to have ever been attempted[9][10][11][12] In 1604, Samuel de Champlain noted that a crewmember, Mssr. Poutrincourt, had almost become lost on the island.[13] A 1733 map by Cyprian Southack suggested there may have been French homes built at one time on the southern tip of Deer Island.[14]

A 1733 map showing Campobello and Deer Island believed to be a single island.

The origin of the name is attributed either to Estêvão Gomes having dubbed the Penobscot River the "River of Deer" in 1525 leading to the island's similar naming,[15], or a Passamaquoddy legend about the island being a deer chased by wolves represented by the Wolf Islands.[13]

Until the end of the French and Indian Wars in 1760, it was not considered safe for English families to settle in the region due to the French influence over the natives since at least 1704 when the Le Treille family settled Indian Island, after Cardinal Richelieu granted the region to the care of Isaac de Razilly.[7] At this time, Col. Gorham and Col. Benjamin Church were sent to Indian Island to raid the natives and guard over the Le Treille family.[5]

In 1762 the colony of Massachusetts, and in 1767 the colony of Nova Scotia, began cautiously settling the area as the Passamaquoddy were now friendly and open to trade.[7] Josiah Heney, John Frost, Alexander Hodges and James Parsons were among the first Loyalist settlers in 1763, building homes near Pleasant Point although legally squatters without title.[16][17]. In 1964, Reginald Richardson was scuba-diving and discovered the wreck of an unidentified colony ship with its cannonade, wine and anchor near the Sandly Island ledges off Deer Island, dated between 1770-1790.[5]

The government assigned formal ownership of Deer Island to Joseph William Gorham on August 21 1767 on condition that he settle families there as per an agreement of Dec 2 1766.[7] It was presumed to be influenced by Gorham being the son or grandson of the original Col. Gorham.[5] However Gorham was appointed to command in Newfoundland and unable to keep his pledge to settle and oversee the island, so agreed on February 3 1770 to sell the island to another officer, Thomas Farrell for 470 pounds sterling.[7] Here, ownership became more murky and the subject of legal battles.[9][18]

Farrell led a multifaceted life, gifting land and selling cheaply on the island to families that would settle there - regaling them with tales of his marriage to a Lady-in-Waiting to Queen Charlotte, his duels and time in battle as a British lieutenant.[19][20] Farrell said he had served as an ensign under Gnl. Edward Braddock at the Battle of Fort Duquesne.[7] His sword passed through hands to Viola Calder of Fairhaven.[5]

Six months after signing the purchase of Deer Island from Gorham, Farrell listed his Montreal property for sale and in 1805 he claimed to have relocated to Deer Island as his "general residence" by 1772 although again it is contested as he was not listed among residents when the government surveyed all early settlers to ascertain which local river had been commonly named St. Croix to settle a boundary dispute.[7] It was later surmised that Farrell had agreed to sell the property on January 21 1778 to an American, Thomas Macdonald Reed of North Carolina, for the same 470 pounds sterling he'd paid himself as Farrell was himself heading to the United States to take up arms against the British as part of the American Revolution where it appeared he was named a Captain.[7]

In 1783, John Rolf and his widowed daughter and six grandchildren moved to the island where she married John Fountain who had moved to Deer Island with his son and daughter in 1777 after nine years on Indian island.[16][7] Other loyalist settlers include John Appleby who settled in Chocolate Cove, Obediah Clarke who founded Clarke's Point at Northwest Harbour, and the Dow family.[16] Richardsonville was founded by Isaac Richardson, who had fought alongside Gnl. Wolfe in Quebec. George Cline of Maine had been a Sergeant during the Revolutionary War and died on Bar Island. In 1809 Joseph Conley moved to the island and later piloted the ship HMS Terror in the War of 1812, prior to its later calamity.[16] Daniel Lambert spent his post-Revolution time between Portsmouth, New Hampshire and Deer Island, founding Lambert's Cove.[16] Jonathan Stover was granted 25 prior to 1786 after being part of a major 1784 sawmill on the mainland.[21][22][9] Guss Stover ran a grocery business downhill from the Fairhaven Methodist Church, and his brother John W. Stover raised three sons and a daughter in Fairhaven towards Cummings Cove.[5]

The Loyalist George Leonard was put in charge of the suppression of smuggling on the Fundy Isles, which at the time was largely coordinated by David Owen "who professed that to believe that he was, by condition of his grant, exempt from the operation of New Brunswick law.".[5] Tea=chests and American goods were smuggled into New Brunswick. Sgt. Leonard "declared open war on the illicit trade of the islands" in 1798.[5] He settled on 25 acres on Deer Island in 1801, where he remained until his death.[23]

There was a boundary dispute with the United States over ownership of nearly all the Passamaquoddy Islands, which was settled by the 1817 Passamaquoddy Bay Commission which reaffirmed an 1803 commitment that only Moose, Frederick and Dudley Islands would not be British.[6][24]

Thomas Farrell re-settled in New Brunswick post-Revolution, as the southwest corner of the province was notably fluid in its allegiance between the two nations and not concerned with his American service,[7] seeking to have Deer Island re-granted to him and not gifted in title to a number of local families now petitioning the government for relief.[7] He claimed that Reed had never paid him in full before his death, so the earlier sale was null - and that he had been unaware of any obligation to register his initial purchase from Gorham for which he could produce the uncontested papers.[7] Complicating matters in 1789, Reed's surviving son David unsuccessfully filed suit claiming ownership of his late father's island and another claimant Patrick McMaster claimed to have paid 168 out of 500 pounds sterling due to purchase it from Reed before the latter's death in a tavern.[5][7] Patrick Flinn held in 1805 that he'd been undisturbed as a squatter improving a family farm and controlling Bar Island since the 1780s, other than a brief period a Thomas Doyle had spent a season building a fishing camp on the southern tip which Flinn later sold to Warren Hathaway, claiming at no time did Thomas Farrell play any role on Bar Island.[7] Farrell's neighbours on the island did not participate in the lawsuit seeking title deeds, while 22 others, including boys not yet adults, collectively sought 200 acres apiece guided by lawyer Ward Chipman including ironically threatening that if not granted title deeds by the British government in Canada they would remove themselves to the United States and swear loyalty there - while still seeking to impress upon the Crown Farrell's disloyalty in having done the same.[7]

One of the oldest houses to remain standing on the island is the Leonard/Garrison House near Chocolate Cove, built by the family of William Lloyd Garrison whose mother was born on the island and later tutored the family of Capt. John Shackford in Maine, and whose relatives continued inhabiting it.[18][25]

Ultimately the government re-granted the land back to Thomas Farrell in 1810, denying the families' petitions - leading author Martha Barto to surmise it may have been to protect the large tracts of land held by lumber and shipping magnates in St. Andrews on the mainland, as non-petitioners, John Wilson, Thomas Wyer, Dr. John Calef, Robert and William Pagan each had a vested interest in Farrell retaining ownership.[7] Farrell was noted to attend prominent balls in St. Andrews while wearing a tricorn, and the Pagans were listed as his trusted friends in his final will.[7][26] The re-grant noted that the island comprised approximately 6,300 acres - of which 4,000 acres were unsold - recognising the sales and gifts Farrell had given over the years.[7] Farrell built a frame house at Chocolate Cove in what is today known as Roscoe McNeill's field across from Ron Fountain's summer house.[5]

In 1821, 35 petitioners on the island again brought an unsuccessful suit to the government seeking title deeds to award them each land on the island in view of having lived on the island for decades.[7] In 1822, Thomas Farrell died and was buried on Haskins Head on the property of Herman Creamer.[5] His will assigned half his estate to his youngest and favourite child Sophia, and half his estate to be shared between his son George and other daughter Isabella.[7] This led to the sale of the lands on Deer Island for approximately 1,000 pounds sterling, allowing settled families to finally obtain legal title.[7]

In 1822, brothers Coburn Leonard Cummings and William Cummings built a shipyard which became Cummings Cove, although it ceased production ceased by 1850[7] or 1876.[9] In 1850, Thomas Richardson began building fishing boats at Richardson, a business turned over to his son George Everett and family who continued the business until 1965.[18][7]

Heyday of the mid-19th century

[edit]

In 1866, in response to the ongoing Fenian Raids meant to destabilise and drain British forces which resulted in a brief paramilitary venture to seize Campobello, the 3rd Battalion of Charlotte County Militia were stationed on Deer Island although primarily overseen by those from Grand Manan.[5]

The first waterwheel on the island was operated by the Leemans near Lord's Cove., although a more important tidal mill was built in Mill Cove.[5]

The 1869 Saxby Gale destroyed a vast wharf infrastructure that covered much of the Leonardville harbour in a complex of buildings, sheds, and smokehouses; the area never recovered to the industry it had been prior to the storm.[5]

Religiously, as of 1876, the Churches of Christ were planted at Bar Island Harbour, with Free Will Baptist and Methodist churches elsewhere on the island.[9] There were 800 members of the Churches of Christ, 646 Baptists, 74 Anglicans, 111 Methodist, 9 Catholics and 6 Adventists, as well as 15 professing no religion.[27]

Leonardville and Bar Island

The island was historically a dry county,[13] forbidding the sale of alcohol even outside Prohibition, with author John Lorimer noting in 1876 "No license for rum-selling goes from Deer Island into the county treasure box. Prohibition is hers. The flag of total abstinence waves proudly over her rocky hills and verdant valleys. Deer Island has set an exmaple to her sister isles worthy of all imitation", and predicting Deer Island would excel above the rest of the region due to its stance.[9] Nonetheless, a private still created whiskey in Fairhaven for a time.[5] A government investigation of the state of the Fundy fisheries in 1851 further noted "the Sons of Temperance had greatly improved conditions of these [Deer] Islanders".[5] [28]

In 1874, Charles Dudley Warner advocated that the United States seize Deer Island and Campobello by force, to the point of war if necessary - to ensure Canada was not used against the United States.[29][30][31]

Myer Lord lived in Northern Harbour, with his wife Eunice, and claimed to be a faith healer be right of being the seventh son of a seventh son.[5]

20th century

[edit]
The steamship Viking. Captained at a time by Frank Johnson, who leapt off the ship to save Blanche Stuart of Lord's Cove from drowning.[5]

The island was not easily reached except by those with private boats, until 1900 when the steamship Viking began taking passengers from the mainland to Leonardville, after which the Grand Manan and the Connors Bros also made regular weekly stops at the island.[5][18] Notable guests to attend the island formally included Governors-General Freeman Thomas Willingden and Vincent Massey, as well as William Lyon Mackenzie King.[5]

In 1903, island residents formed a joint stock company the West Isles Telephone Company Ltd, and sold 400 shares at $5 apiece, then connected the island by telephone and within a year connected to the telephone exchange in Eastport, Maine.[18][5] It was taken over by the NB Telephone Company in 1953.[5] In the 1920s, when Grace Helen Mowat was gaining fame in St. Andrews for her Cottage Craft wares, she employed Deer Island residents Floyd Doughty and James Stuart to operate the pottery wheel and kiln.[32]

In 1913, Hartley Wentworth and Frank Macdonald started a Fairhaven oil refining business "Swift Tide Oil" collecting waste oil from the ten sardine factories operating on the island, refined it and sold it to the St. Croix Soap Company.[5] Twenty years later, Wentworth patented a children's vitamin tablet with Ganong combining fish liver with chocolate.[33] In July 1921 a fire destroyed much of the forest southeast of Fairhaven.[5]

In 1925, James S. Lord became the first island resident to reach provincial legislature as the representative for Charlotte County; he was also a key figure in the Ku Klux Klan's operations in Atlantic Canada.[5][34][35]

In 1928, the Bremen flight became the first to cross the Atlantic from Europe to North America flying over Deer Island before its crash landing in Quebec. On the return flight of its three crewmen, heavy fog required them to set down their amphibious plane just off the shore of Richardson boathouse.[5]

In World War II, a German U-boat had placed a German espionage agent into Atlantic Canada having dropped, and later retrieved, him at Northwest Harbour on Deer Island where the ship had been spotted by Osgood Leslie.[5]

The primary source of electricity was Richardson's shipyard's generator until 1938 when connection was made to the mainland.[36][5] [37] A blacksmith operation by Edward Gardener, and a shop, were situated in Richardson.[5] In 1959, Canada's first summer theatre was set up at Chocolate Cove but operated only four years.[5] [38]

Geography

[edit]
There are two inland freshwater ponds, Little Meadow Pond and the Lily Pond near it halfway down the island and speckled trout may be caught in its brooks.[9][18] Big Meadow Pond is also known as Johnson's Pond.[5]

Situated exactly halfway between the Equator and North Pole, the 45th line of parallel passes through Deer Island just above Johnson's Lake.[5] The island is covered in pine trees,[9] and wildlife includes partridges, rabbits, waterfowl and historically foxes which were later eradicated to protect poultry flocks.[9] In 1876, the soil was noted as ideal for potatoes, oats and vegetables.[9] Squire James Ward built a dam across a stream on his property between English Bar and Hersonvill to harvest marsh cranberies, and incidentally creating a skating pond.[5][34][35] By 1960, there was "no farming whatsoever...not a cow, sheep, pig or any other livestock remains" leaving farm goods as a trade deficit for the island.[5]

Between Richardson and Lord's Cove is a hill locally known as Daddy Good's Mountain, after the quaint gentleman who used to own the property which offered a fire-scarred peak from which to view the Bay of Fundy.[18] Hannah Dow Hill sits in Leonardville, named for a young woman who became lost and froze to death in a snowstorm in the island's early settlement days.[16]

There are eight well-sheltered harbours around its irregular coast, including Chocolate Cove, Clam Cove Head and Cummings Cove.[9] In 1876 there was a store at Cummings Cove, another at Bar Island, another at Fairhaven and two at Lord's Cove although mercantile trade was also operated out of private homes,[9] and by 1908 there were two general stores in Leonardville.[18] Following his father's success, a son of Grand Manan's John Cook opened a satellite lobster factory on Deer Island but it soon faltered.[9]

Low tide at Deer Island Point with the Old Sow in action.

The largest whirlpool in the Western Hemisphere, dubbed the Old Sow, is immediately off the southern tip of Deer Island, caused as tides rush past Indian Island and reach a 400' undersea trench that abuts a 281' underwater mountain.[39] .[18] On March 28 1830, a two-mast schooner was destroyed in the whirlpool drowning brothers Robert, James and William Stover whose widowed mother lived in Fairhaven.[39][40]

The 1803 census found Deer Island contained 32 men, 30 women and 55 children for a total population of 117.[7] The 1840 census found 1,225 residents in addition to two "persons of colour" and another 200 men absent on ocean voyages.[7] The 1851 census found 1,252 residents and five schools on the island, in addition to four churches, two sawmills, five handmills and residents producing moderate amounts of hay, turnips and potatoes while holding 240 milk-cows producing 20,000lb of butter, and 971 sheep.[7] In 1861, the population was 1,190, and sheep had increased to 1,500, and there were 920 acres planted with hay, 103 acres with potato, 42 acres with oats, and 196 farmers now outnumbered the 144 fishermen although the latter industry still employed more labourers.[7] While oxen were plentiful, it was a matter of note that there were no horses to be found on the island.[6][7] There were also nearly 200 barrels of crude oil taken from the island.[7] In 1871 there were 1,556 residents and 23 fishing vessels on the island alongside 208 smaller boats.[7]

In 1880, the census determined there were 332 families in 286 houses, for a total population of 1,661.[27] Of these, 1,446 identified as English, 129 Irish, 55 Scottish, 20 French, 4 Dutch, 1 German and 1 Russian.[27]

As of 1908, there were 43 houses and a Customs Housed in Leonardville.[18]

Mail-day in Lambert's Cove

The only mineral rights held by the Crown are for potential finds of gold, silver or coal - although no traces of valuable minerals are known to exist.[9][7]

A nearby islet, named Pope's Folly, saw a settler named Pope establish an ill-fated trading post.[18] The ship New England was wrecked on the nearby Wolf Islands in 1872.[41] The nearby Beans Island once held a number of settlers, and its own school, but has long since been abandoned.[5] The nearby Doyle's Island, also called Pendleton's Island, has a 500' cliff that historically drew thrillseekers to attempt to climb.[18] Other adventurers were prone to imagine buried pirate treasure, even from Captain Kidd locally pinpointed as somwhere behind Alonzo Calder's house, but with little historical backing.[9][5]

Infrastructure

[edit]
Deer Island Ferry

The major route is New Brunswick Route 772. Two government ferries, the Deer Island Princess II and Abnaki II, connect Deer Island with L'Etete, New Brunswick on the mainland. During the summer, East Coast Ferries Ltd. operates a ferry, Hopper II, from Cummings Cove on the southern shore of Deer Island onward to Campobello Island. A defunct ferry, the Fundy Trail II, operated between Cummings Cove and the US state of Maine until 2014. Ferry service came about in 1930 after residents campaigned for reduced taxation and registration fees as they had access to only twenty kilometres of roadway which was not accessible in winter and spring - leading the Board of Trade to propose regular government ferry service.[5]

In the 1920s, the Bank of Nova Scotia operatedin the building east of the Lord's Cove schoolhouse,[5] following which a Deer Island Credit Union operated until its funds were depleted by a wayward employee's embezzlement landing in front of the Supreme Court of Canada.[5]

The road to Deer Island Point, on the southern tip of the island above the whirlpool, did not exist until 1932 previously requiring a boat to travel to the homestead of George Chaffey and his family.[5] After the Boer War, accomplished sportsman Arnie Arneson started a Deer Island Volunteer Rifle Association which practised with .303 Lee-Enfields in Seward Welch's field and at Cumming's Cove, considering themselves part of a reserve militia army unaffiliated with the Canadian Army.[5]

There are two lighthouses on Deer Island, a square frustun tower with balcony and lantern at Leonardville[42][43], and another at Deer island Point.

Herring weirs, the world's largest lobster pound[44] and salmon pens supplement the fishing economy.[38]

There is a primary school on the island, while older pupils attend Fundy High School on the mainland.

There have been suggestions of building a Quoddy Power project, from the island's southern tip with dams to the mainland of Maine and from its northern tip to the mainland of New Brunswick however they have not come to fruition.[5]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (February 9, 2022). "Profile table, Census Profile, 2021 Census of Population - West Isles, Parish (P) [Census subdivision], New Brunswick". www12.statcan.gc.ca.
  2. ^ "Old Sow Whirlpool". Retrieved 2 January 2017.
  3. ^ "Public Parks Recreation Areas Hiking Trails". Quoddy Loop. Retrieved 2 January 2017.
  4. ^ "Deer Island History and Little Known Facts". Retrieved 2 January 2017.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq Welch, H. Wesley. "Welcome to Deer Island: Deer Island History", 1967. In reference collection St. Croix Library
  6. ^ a b c Rees, Ronald. "St. Andrews and the Islands", 1995. https://archive.org/details/standrewsislands0000rees/mode/2up?view=theater&q=deer
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae Barto, Martha Ford. Passamaquoddy: Genealogies of West Isles Families
  8. ^ "Communities in each of the 12 Regional Service Commissions (RSC" (PDF). Government of New Brunswick. Retrieved 26 October 2021.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Lorimer, John G. "History of Islands and Islets in the Bay of Fundy, Charlotte County, New Brunswick", Archive.org copy, 1876
  10. ^ Black, D. W. (1984a). BgDr38: Test Excavations at a Multi-component Prehistoric/Historic Archaeological Site on Deer Island, New Brunswick. Manuscripts in Archaeology 7, Department of Historical and Cultural Resources, New Brunswick,Fredericton.
  11. ^ Sanger, David, "Carson Site and the Late Ceramic Period in Passamaquoddy Bay, New Brunswick"
  12. ^ "The Archaeological Exploration of Deer Island, N.B.: History and Recent Research | Canadian Archaeological Association / Association canadienne d'archéologie".
  13. ^ a b c https://backyardhistory.ca/f/the-song-of-the-old-sow
  14. ^ "XXX - FROM THE DEPARTURE OF DE MONTS TO THE INCURSIONS OF CHURCH-Continued".
  15. ^ Letters patent, under the great seal of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, erecting the province of Upper Canada into the Bishopric of Toronto : and appointing John Strachan, D.D. Archdeacon of York, Bishop of Toronto, dated 27th July, 1839 https://archive.org/stream/letterspatentund00greauoft/letterspatentund00greauoft_djvu.txt
  16. ^ a b c d e f Saint Croix Courier, St. Stephen, NB June 21, 1894, https://carensecord.ca/locations/NewBrunswick/Glimpses/CXXI.html
  17. ^ Siebert, Wilbur Henry. "The exodus of the loyalists from Penobscot to Passamaquoddy"
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Thompson and Martin, s:The Smiling Isle of Passamaquoddy, 1908
  19. ^ "Xlii - Captain Ferrell".
  20. ^ St Croix Courier, November 17 1892, "Glimpses of the Past"
  21. ^ "Liii - Other Pre-Loyalist Settlers".
  22. ^ Vroom, Joseph. Saint Croix Courier, St. Stephen, NB. July 5, 1894 GLIMPSES OF THE PAST https://carensecord.ca/locations/NewBrunswick/Glimpses/CXXIII.html
  23. ^ Sabine, Lorenzo, Biographical sketches of loyalists of the American Revolution https://archive.org/details/cihm_47583
  24. ^ https://dn790006.ca.archive.org/0/items/historyofcanadaf00mcar_0/historyofcanadaf00mcar_0.pdf, pg 307
  25. ^ "Eastport and Passamaquoddy; a collection of historical and biographical sketches". Eastport, Me., E. E. Shead & Company. 1888.
  26. ^ "NATIONAL HISTORIC PARKS AND SITES BRANCH: Manuscript Report Number 134", Pg 86, http://parkscanadahistory.com/series/mrs/134.pdf
  27. ^ a b c "Census of Canada, 1880-81. Recensement du Canada". Ottawa, Maclean, Roger & co.
  28. ^ Perley, M. W. "Maritime Advocate & Busy East
  29. ^ "Charles Dudley Warner's 1874 Perspective on the Difficulty of Sailing Past Campobello into Eastport, Maine - but a War?".
  30. ^ The Maritime Provinces, a handbook for travellers [microform] : A guide to the chief cities, coasts, and islands of the Maritime Provinces of Canada, and to their scenery and historic attractions; with the Gulf and River of St. Lawrence to Quebec and Montreal; also, Newfoundland and the Labrador coast. 1888. ISBN 978-0-665-49603-5.
  31. ^ "Baddeck, and that Sort of Thing". Houghton, Mifflin and company. 1902.
  32. ^ Peck, Mary. "The bitter with the sweet : New Brunswick, 1604-1984"
  33. ^ https://www2.gnb.ca/content/dam/gnb/Departments/thc-tpc/pdf/Heritage-Patrimoine/this-week-in-new-brunswick-history.pdf
  34. ^ a b James M. Pitsula (31 May 2013). Keeping Canada British: The Ku Klux Klan in 1920s Saskatchewan. UBC Press. p. 25. ISBN 978-0-7748-2492-7.
  35. ^ a b Gregory S. Kealey; Reginald Whitaker (1994). R.C.M.P. Security Bulletins: The Early Years, 1919-1929. Canadian Committee on Labour History. p. 342. ISBN 978-0-9692060-9-5.
  36. ^ Spicer, Stanley T. "Maritimers ashore & afloat : interesting people, places and events related to the Bay of Fundy and its rivers."
  37. ^ Fundy Fisherman, "Hydro, a Dream Come True!", 1938
  38. ^ a b Wright, Sarah Bird. "Islands of the NE United States and Eastern Canada", https://openlibrary.org/books/OL2206520M/Islands_of_the_northeastern_United_States_and_eastern_Canada
  39. ^ a b "Close Encounters with the Old Sow".
  40. ^ Quoddy Tides, "Rolling Back the Years", Oct 11 2013. https://qdy.stparchive.com/Archive/QDY/QDY10112013P08.php?tags=stover%7Cold%7Csow
  41. ^ https://ia801704.us.archive.org/27/items/b29349862/b29349862.pdf
  42. ^ Rowlett, Russ. "Lighthouses of Canada: Southern New Brunswick". The Lighthouse Directory. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Retrieved 2017-02-25.
  43. ^ List of Lights, Pub. 110: Greenland, The East Coasts of North and South America (Excluding Continental U.S.A. Except the East Coast of Florida) and the West Indies (PDF). List of Lights. United States National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency. 2016.
  44. ^ Thompson, Colleen. New Brunswick Inside Out", Waxwing Productions
[edit]

44°58′32.4″N 66°58′53.6″W / 44.975667°N 66.981556°W / 44.975667; -66.981556