Beaver Pond Municipal Heritage Site
Harbour Breton, Terre-Neuve et Labrador, A0H, Canada
Reconnu formellement en:
2009/02/25
Autre nom(s)
s/o
Liens et documents
Date(s) de construction
Inscrit au répertoire canadien:
2009/04/01
Énoncé d'importance
Description du lieu patrimonial
Beaver Pond is located along Route 360 at the entrance to the community of Harbour Breton, in an area of the community known as The Arm. The municipal heritage designation includes the body of water known locally as Beaver Pond and a buffer zone of ten metres from the edge of that body of water.
Valeur patrimoniale
Beaver Pond has been designated a municipal heritage site by the Town of Harbour Breton because of its historic and cultural values.
Beaver Pond has historic value for the community of Harbour Breton because of its long association with the fishing industry, in particular the supply trade that flourished in the community. Beaver Pond was an important source of ice for fishing schooners. The pond is shallow and produces thick ice. During the winter months many residents cut the ice and sold it to schooners from Nova Scotia and Newfoundland, who used the ice to preserve bait on the journey to the fishing grounds. Beaver Pond was a primary source of ice from the early 1800s, when the British merchant firm Newman and Company were established in Harbour Breton, up until the mid 1900s.
Once the pond had frozen, the ice was cut into blocks using pit saws. The blocks measured approximately 45 or 50 centimetres square. The ice blocks were loaded on wooden slides and hauled to icehouses that were constructed from heavy timbers and located near the waterfront. The ice was covered in sawdust that was obtained from sawmills in Bay d’Espoir and the icehouses were surrounded with boughs to shade them from the sun. The ice was stored in the icehouses until it was sold. During the 1930s ice often sold for five dollars a dory load and many icehouses held twenty dory loads of ice. It would take about two weeks to cut this amount of ice. The demand for ice would drop once the caplin run was over, usually around the latter part of June.
Cutting ice was a successful enterprise for many individuals, families and businesses in Harbour Breton, as numerous fishing schooners used the port as a supply centre. Over the years, business people such as Mr. John Rose, Mr. Henry Elliot and Mr. Hugh Coady all “put up ice” in Harbour Breton. They sold ice to the bankers, along with keeping a supply for their own usage. Mr. George Chapman and his two sons, Tom and Bill and the Pierce family also cut ice from Beaver Pond for many years.
Beaver Pond has cultural value because of its continued use by the community - historically for subsistence activities and modernly for recreational uses. As well as being a source of ice, the frozen pond was used as an access route to good stands of timber, particularly in the Bungay’s Pond and Bobby’s Droke (now known as Moonlit Valley) areas. Beaver Pond is still used today as a winter recreational area for ice skating and snowmobiling.
Source: Town of Harbour Breton Regular Council Meeting Motion 09-012:W February 25, 2009
Éléments caractéristiques
Those elements relating to this landscape feature’s historic and cultural values, including:
- public access to and use of Beaver Pond, and;
- the name Beaver Pond.
Reconnaissance
Juridiction
Terre-Neuve et Labrador
Autorité de reconnaissance
Municipalités de TNL
Loi habilitante
Municipalities Act
Type de reconnaissance
Terre, structure ou édifice patrimonial municipal
Date de reconnaissance
2009/02/25
Données sur l'histoire
Date(s) importantes
2009/01/01 à 2009/01/01
Thème - catégorie et type
- Économies en développement
- Exploitation et production
Catégorie de fonction / Type de fonction
Actuelle
Historique
- Environnement
- Élément naturel
Architecte / Concepteur
s/o
Constructeur
s/o
Informations supplémentaires
Emplacement de la documentation
Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador
1 Springdale Street
St. John's, NL
A1C 5V5
Réfère à une collection
Identificateur féd./prov./terr.
NL-4471
Statut
Édité
Inscriptions associées
s/o