Anchor Point, Newfoundland
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Anchor Point is located in St. Barbe Bay, south of Flower's Cove on the west side of the Great Northern Peninsula. It was the first English settlement on what is called the 'French Shore' of Newfoundland.
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[edit] History
Anchor Point was first settled by Robert Barlett, a British seaman, and his nephew Robert Genge, both from Yeovil, Somerset, England in 1740. They used the cove as a base for fishing and fur hunting from Anchor Point to Barlett's Harbour in the late 18th century. Robert Barlett eventually returned to England while Robert Genge was joined by his brother Abram, who employed men from England seasonally to sell his furs and fish to American vessels. Trapping, salmon fishing and sealing were very important industries of Anchor Point in the 19th century. By the 1850s, Anchor Point was established as a commercial center for fur trading and fishing on the St. Barbe coast. The land around Anchor Point was also very productive with excellent pasture which led to extensive cultivation of the land and the raising of livestock.
In 1848, an english Bishop visited the Northern Peninsula. It was at this time that the first cemetery on the Strait of Belle Isle was consecrated in Anchor Point. By 1849, a schoolhouse was built. However, because of its isolation, Anchor Point had difficulty retaining teachers. Therefore, from the 1850s to the 1950s, educational facilities remained relatively poor. By 1960, there was a larger elementary school and high school available in neighbouring Flower's Cove so that students could be bused to it. By the 1970s, all students attended school there. Also in the 1970s, the first Anglican church at Anchor Point was built.
Seal hunting, salmon fishing and fur trapping would eventually become less profitable. By the 1920s, cod, lobster and herring fishing had become increasingly important. The population grew steadily from 51 people in 1911, 160 people in 1951, 208 in 1956, and 329 by 1976.
Starting in 1980, a fish plant was operating seasonally for four months of the year. The plant shipped fish packed in ice daily to Port Aux Basques for distribution.
[edit] Present
Today, Anchor Point's population has been steadily declining since the demise of the cod fishery in Newfoundland. Many people from Anchor Point have left to find work in mainland Canada. However, the lobster, shrimp and scallop fishery are still functioning as well as other available small fisheries and fur trading. The community still has three general stores operating.
[edit] Census
In 1996, 350 people resided in Anchor Point.
In 2001, 201 people resided in Anchor Point.
[edit] See also
[edit] External link