Matching Articles"Settlement" (Total 11)

  • The industrialization of Newfoundland and Labrador's fisheries during the late 20th century changed the way people in the province worked and lived.
  • With the construction of the railway, workers began to leave their coastal homes to find employment at new mines and mills in the island's interior.
  • Much of our knowledge of daily life in outport Newfoundland in the late 18th and early 19th century comes from the pens of visitors. They were typically missionaries, explorers, naturalists, and geologists whose work brought them to outlying communities not often visited by outsiders or even the local government.
  • Considerable uncertainty surrounds our understanding of daily life in Newfoundland during the late 18th and early 19th centuries.
  • A histroy about the communities Broomclose and Sailors Island, located on the Eastport Peninsula of Newfoundland.
  • Information about the definition of a city as well as information about St. John's, Mount Pearl, and Corner Brook.
  • A community is a group of people who live in the same area and share the same culture. This article is all about the function of communities.
  • Information about the communities of Burnside and St. Chad's on the Eastport Peninsula of Newfoundland.
  • The Neck, a parcel of land used for inter-community and peninsular activities, is located between Eastport, Happy Adventure, and Sandy Cove.
  • Newfoundland and Labrador is often described as having the most homogeneous population of European origin in Canada.
  • Families of Salvage were very closely intertwined through marriage and migration with those in nearby places.