Tuesday, July 7, 2020

Can you help identify this old mason-type jar?

I love a random history request. This one comes from Ben, Pilley's Island, who found this old jar:




On the top, cast in the glass, is written 128 fluid ounces. On the bottom of the jar is 1867. I think 1867 is the year of the patent.  See: "Jars marked “PAT NOV 26 67” on the base."

It is likely a GEM brand canning jar, made by the Hero glass company, see page 223 of this pdf:

Any bottle/jar collectors out there who might have a bit more information? Comment below!

Monday, July 6, 2020

Living Heritage Economy Case Study - Building on Traditional Knowledge: Wooden Boat Museum of Newfoundland and Labrador

The newest Living Heritage Economy Case Study focuses on the Wooden Boat Museum of Newfoundland and Labrador.

Boat building room at the Wooden Boat Museum of Newfoundland and Labrador.
The Wooden Boat Museum of Newfoundland and Labrador was established as a provincial museum in 2008 and has its headquarters in Winterton, NL. Their focus is on connecting wooden boat builders and wooden boat enthusiasts across the province. Their workshops, programs, and exhibits share the knowledge and skills associated with traditional wooden boat building, promoting the use of wooden boats in the province and encouraging a new generation of wooden boat builders.

You can download a pdf version of the case study here.

And you can listen to an interview with museum folklorist Crystal Braye on researching wooden boat building here.

This is part of a series of case studies examining the links between living heritage, traditionality, entrepreneurism, and community economic development in Newfoundland and Labrador. For more information, contact Dale Jarvis at dale@heritagenl.ca. Photo courtesy of Wooden Boat Museum of Newfoundland and Labrador.

It's a Family Tradition: Working with Sealskin with Laurie Pitcher. #MakerMonday

For #MakerMonday we'll be profiling some of the people practicing traditional skills on the Baccalieu Trail.
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Laurie Pitcher of Heart's Content has been sewing ever since she was taught by her grandmother at 12 years old. She was more used to working with silks and satins until her husband asked her to make him a sealskin jacket. She's been hooked on sealskin ever since.

Sealskin mittens. Photo courtesy of Sealskin Treasures.
Her company Sealskin Treasures makes everything from keychains to purses to jackets and employs several women in her area. Their work appears at craft shows across the island every fall and winter. Through their online shop, Laurie says they have shipped their sealskin products all over the world, wherever it is legal to do so.

Sealskin purse in the Republic of Newfoundland colours. Photo courtesy of Sealskin Treasures.
It is important to Laurie to source whatever materials she can locally. She works with companies within the province to source the pelts she uses, some of which are then tanned by her son, Tyler, a taxidermist in Harbour Grace.


Well, I think the most important thing that people should know about it is that, 'cause you know, you hear so much with Greenpeace and all that kind of thing. And, you know, we've been, like I said, this is 7 years now we've been going across the island with our stuff, and we've had very little people say anything to us. But I know I've had people who have gone on the mainland and stuff and, you know, people say things to them. I mean, years ago people used to throw paint on people that had sealskin. So, I think the biggest thing to know is that our seals are harvested humanely. It's a beautiful product, is a very durable product, and it's truly Newfoundland. It's a part of our heritage. The seal hunt has been going on here for a long, long time, and I'm just proud to be able to do that and to continue it.
Laurie is carrying on a family tradition of working with seals. Her father and grandfather, as well as her husband's family were seal hunters. Working with sealskin allows Laurie to participate in this family tradition, and help educate people on the importance of the seal hunt in the history of the province.

Sealskin hat. Photo courtesy of Sealskin Treasures.
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Do you live on the Baccalieu Trail and practice a traditional skill or know someone who does? Fill out our survey!

Thursday, July 2, 2020

Living Heritage Ep 179: Phantom Ships Along the Baccalieu Trail

Image courtesy of Karin Murray-Berquist.

In this episode, PhD candidate Karin Murray-Berquist shares her research on phantom ship sightings in Newfoundland and Labrador. Karin is a PhD Candidate in the Folklore Department at Memorial University. After working in Memorial University's Folklore and Language Archive (MUNFLA), she became fascinated by stories of shipwrecks and ghost ships. Karin created an online map that shows the location of all the ghost or phantom ship stories she’s found in the archive so far.


Photo courtesy of Karin Murray-Berquist.


In this episode, we talk about Karin’s research and dive into a few phantom ship stories from the Baccalieu Trail region.



This episode is part of a special series about the Baccalieu Trail region of Newfoundland and Labrador. Join us as we explore the hidden gems of the Baccalieu Trail- from stories of phantom ship sightings to local art and history.

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Living Heritage is about people who are engaged in the heritage and culture sector, from museum
professionals and archivists, to tradition bearers and craftspeople - all those who keep history alive at the
community level. The show is a partnership between HeritageNL and CHMR Radio.
Theme music is Rythme Gitan by Latché Swing.


Tuesday, June 30, 2020

Bark Pots and Bark Tanning - Heritage NL releases new paper on the history of a local tradition


Bark Pot, Cape Broyle, c 1950s, from the slide collection of Mr. Ronald O'Brien.




As part of our work on safeguarding skills at risk, we've been doing some research on the various traditions in Newfoundland and Labrador related to the use of bark pots for tanning, preserving fishing gear, and colouring canvas. 

You can read the report "The History and Practice of Bark Tanning in Newfoundland and Labrador" online, right here

If you have a memory of bark pots, email dale@heritagenl.ca, or comment below. 



Monday, June 29, 2020

What Will Happen to the Storytellers?: Storytelling, Painting, and Newfoundland Ponies with Clifford George. #MakerMonday

For #MakerMonday we'll be profiling some of the people practicing traditional skills on the Baccalieu Trail.
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Clifford George of Whiteway wears many hats. He is a storyteller, an artist, and has been rescuing Newfoundland ponies for decades.

Storytelling comes naturally to Clifford. He says that growing up without electric lights and without television, stories were all around him. He was inspired by the stories of his father, Esau George, and others, and has been remembering and writing them down to safeguard them for future generations. His favourite stories to tell are about Newfoundland fairies. These stories about ghosts and fairies were told to him by older family members to encourage him to be home before dark.

He has also always been a painter, and credits his isolation growing up in a small town in Newfoundland with training his eye to see the shapes and colours of the land. He practices plein air painting, capturing the vivid colours of Newfoundland and Labrador outports. He says you can probably hear his palette knives clicking all over the harbour as he lays on the paint. He plans to continue painting this summer, and you may see him on the side of a road with his easel surrounded by yellow caution tape.

Clifford George and one of his paintings. Photo by Jackie Evans.
Clifford has also worked hard to save the Newfoundland pony from extinction. With his own money, he would buy ponies that were destined for meat trucks, and established a sanctuary for retired Newfoundland ponies to spend their days. While the generation of Newfoundland ponies that he saved in the 1980s and 1990s are mostly gone now, their legacy lives on.

To hear more stories from Clifford George, check out the Living Heritage Podcast Hidden Gems episode.
This episode is part of a special series about the Baccalieu Trail region of Newfoundland and Labrador. Join us as we explore the hidden gems of the Baccalieu Trail- from stories of phantom ship sightings to local art and history.
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Do you live on the Baccalieu Trail and practice a traditional skill or know someone who does? Fill out our survey!

Thursday, June 25, 2020

Living Heritage Ep 178: Green's Harbour Loyal Orange Lodge


The Green's Harbour Orange Lodge. Photo courtesy of Nancy Brace.

Nancy Grace is the founder of the Green's Harbour Heritage Society. She is a Green’s Harbour native who returned to Newfoundland in 2007. In 2009, she learned that the Orange Lodge in her community was for sale, and felt compelled to preserve one of the town’s oldest historic buildings. Nancy’s memories of the Green’s Harbour United Church being torn down when she was a teen motivated her to start the Green's Harbour Heritage Society and restore the community’s heritage architecture.

Mike Paterson delivering the Star of the East window. Photo courtesy of Nancy Brace.

The Loyal Orange Lodge, also known as the Orange Order, is a protestant fraternal organization. The Orange Lodge was established in Northern Ireland in 1795 in support of the Protestant monarchy in Britain. Every year on July 12th, the Orange Lodge celebrates the 1691 victory of Protestant Prince William of Orange, or William the Third, over the Catholic monarch King James the Second. Lodges all over the U.K. and North America traditionally hold an Orange Day parade on July 12th.


The Loyal Orange Lodge also had a women's association. This pin belonged to Jane Burgess (née Butt) born 1877 in Blow Me Down. She married Richard Burgess from Whiteway in 1901. As there was no lodge in Whiteway, they were both members of the Green’s Harbour lodge. Jane Burgess was made a honorary member of the Lodge on her 90 birthday in 1967.

In Newfoundland, the Orange Lodge serves many functions. One of the tenets of the Lodge is to encourage its members to do good works in their community without seeking recognition. The Green’s Harbour Orange Lodge is now amalgamated with nearby communities, but Nancy and the Green’s Harbour Heritage Society are looking to adapt the historic Lodge building as a multi-use center for the community. In this interview, Nancy shares stories about the lodge and the new life being brought to the building through restoration.



This episode is part of a special series about the Baccalieu Trail region of Newfoundland and Labrador. Join us as we explore the hidden gems of the Baccalieu Trail- from stories of phantom ship sightings to local art and history.


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Living Heritage is about people who are engaged in the heritage and culture sector, from museum
professionals and archivists, to tradition bearers and craftspeople - all those who keep history alive at the
community level. The show is a partnership between HeritageNL and CHMR Radio.
Theme music is Rythme Gitan by Latché Swing.


Monday, June 22, 2020

It Was the Music That Got Me: Tin Whistle and Wooden Flute with Gerry Strong. #MakerMonday

For #MakerMonday we'll be profiling some of the people practicing traditional skills on the Baccalieu Trail.
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Gerry Strong is a self-taught tin whistle and wooden flute player living in Carbonear. He has always been interested in music, playing in the brass band in his high school, but it wasn't until he moved to Ireland after graduation that he found his calling in the tin whistle.

Gerry Strong playing the wooden flute. Photo provided by Gerry Strong.
The tin whistle has given him the opportunity to travel the world and share traditional Newfoundland and Irish music with people in other countries. He has been a member of several bands including Tickle Harbour, A Crowd of Bold Sharemen, What Odds, and Cotillion with Dave Panting and Hugh Scott. The only challenge he finds with the tin whistle is to always keep learning and improving.

Knowing to play a traditional instrument allows Gerry to connect with his heritage. As long as he has one or two people who appreciate the music, he will sit and play for them all day.  He is part of a project which is working to get tin whistle introduced into school music programs to foster a love for the instrument and traditional music with future generations.



It means a fair bit. It's part of what we are and who we are and it's important that we keep it alive, to keep it going. It's made us unique in the world. When I started playing, I was mostly Irish traditional music and stuff, and I was up in Toronto at a session. A session is where you're just sitting around at a bar with a bunch of other musicians and you're just playing. There's no set list or anything you have to play. It's like a kitchen party. And people were really interested. Those musicians were saying, "Play some of your music now!" And I had one or two Newfoundland tunes, not an awful lot, and it made me realize that you go out into the world and you can hear the Irish music pretty well anywhere. It's very popular all around the world now. But the Newfoundland, the pure, traditional Newfoundland music is not that well known, and people are eager to hear it. So, it's important that we learn it, and carry it on, and pass it on to others. And it is starting to get a much broader audience now. There are musicians from Ireland that have come over here and gone back over to Ireland, now, and they've recorded some Newfoundland tunes they've learned while they're here. So, I mean, it's important that we learn these and pass them on to the future.
The reaction from the crowd when playing traditional music inspires him. But it also brings him a personal joy. He says that if you've had a hard day, and you can get a chance to sit down and play a few tunes, all is forgotten.
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Do you live on the Baccalieu Trail and practice a traditional skill or know someone who does? Fill out our survey!

Thursday, June 18, 2020

Living Heritage Ep177: Hiking and History on the Baccalieu Trail



Photo courtesy of Barb Parsons-Sooley.

We’re hitting the trails with Barb Parson Parsons-Sooley. Barb is a founding member of Hike Baccalieu, a trail maintenance association in the Baccalieu Trail region. She’s also a hiking tour guide for Roots Adventures. Barb grew up in Bay Roberts and lived away in Alberta working as a flight medic and firefighter for many years. When she returned to Newfoundland, she settled in Hearts Delight and began hiking. She started taking her garden clippers with her on trails that needed some trimming, and she’s been maintaining the trails ever since.


Barb Parsons-Sooley sits beside the outport village built by her father on the Western Point Trail.



This episode is part of a special series about the Baccalieu Trail region of Newfoundland and Labrador. Join us as we explore the hidden gems of the Baccalieu Trail- from stories of phantom ship sightings to local art and history.


###

Living Heritage is about people who are engaged in the heritage and culture sector, from museum
professionals and archivists, to tradition bearers and craftspeople - all those who keep history alive at the
community level. The show is a partnership between HeritageNL and CHMR Radio.
Theme music is Rythme Gitan by Latché Swing.