Matching Articles"Settlement" (Total 13)

  • 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.
  • 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.
  • About outports in Newfoundland and Labrador. An outport is literally any port other than the principal port of St. John's.
  • Modern day settlement on the Eastport Peninsula began permanent residency in Barrow Harbour and Salvage from the 1780s onward.
  • About the history of the francophone population on the Port-au-Port Peninsula in Newfoundland and Labrador.
  • An introduction to the Stephenville Integrated High School project: Stephenville...The American Influence.