*** Welcome to piglix ***

Nipper's Harbour

Nipper's Harbour
Town
NippersHarbour.JPG
Nipper's Harbour is located in Newfoundland
Nipper's Harbour
Nipper's Harbour
Location of Nipper's Harbour in Newfoundland
Coordinates: 49°47′11.03″N 55°51′41.74″W / 49.7863972°N 55.8615944°W / 49.7863972; -55.8615944Coordinates: 49°47′11.03″N 55°51′41.74″W / 49.7863972°N 55.8615944°W / 49.7863972; -55.8615944
Country  Canada
Province  Newfoundland and Labrador
Settled 1804
Population (2011)
 • Total 128
Time zone Newfoundland Time (UTC-3:30)
 • Summer (DST) Newfoundland Daylight (UTC-2:30)
Area code(s) 709

Nipper's Harbour, a community of 190 people, is located on the east coast of the Baie Verte Peninsula in the Province of Newfoundland & Labrador, Canada. This incorporated community is located on a rocky inlet that combines Nipper's Harbour and Noble's Cove, and where the primary industry is the inshore fishery.

In 1804, John Noble from England settled on the present Nipper's Harbour site and made a living fishing salmon. Fifteen years later, Thomas Starkes, also of England, settled there. Today, Starkes and Noble are still the most prominent family names in Nipper's Harbour, while Bowers and Prole round out the limited array of family names. In 1904, it was one of the larger and more prosperous towns in the region, with a population of 250, and was one of the few places with a hotel.

The presence of mineral wealth on other parts of the Baie Verte Peninsula led to the sinking of a mine shaft at Nipper's Harbour in the early 1900s. While nearby mining sites, notably Burton's Pond, Bett's Cove, and Tilt Cove, were able to deliver some mineral wealth, Nipper’s Harbour was never able to extract minerals of economic value.

The inshore fishery was the prominent industry in the region and supplied bountiful amounts of codfish, turbot and salmon. Nipper's Harbour became known as "the Capital of Green Bay" and was a center for trade in the area, with fishermen from smaller communities up and down the coast delivering their fish to the merchants there for export. These included the small outport Burton’s Pond, Bett’s Cove, and Indian Burying Place. The cod was salted, dried, and packed in casks for export on foreign vessels to destinations as distant as Russia and Norway.

A government sponsored bait depot was commissioned by the government in 1950 and had a capacity of 120,000 lbs at its peak. The bait depot received squid, caplin and herring, which was frozen and stored. It was later resold to fisherman as a means to lure ground fish near the fishing nets and cods traps; previously, individual fishermen jigged for squid to use as bait. The absence of local refrigeration made the bait depot a popular place to store personal goods before the advent of electricity and personal refrigeration in the 1970s. Before the bait depot, meat was kept outdoors in a "store" during the winter, sometimes packed in boxes of sawdust. The bait depot closed in 1978 as fishing methods developed and no longer required bait for harvesting the local ground fish.

A road went through in the 1960s; before this time, the preferred methods of transportation were coastal steamers in summer and snowshoes and dogsleds in winter.

Nipper's Harbour suffered the same fate of many communities in Newfoundland & Labrador with the closure of the inshore fisheries in 1990: an economic and social death toll rang. The removal of the primary livelihood resulted in a decline in the population to 190 by 2001. A viable inshore fishery remains that permits the harvesting of limited amounts of ground fish and provides the only source of industry for the remaining local citizens.


...
Wikipedia

...