The Story of Newfoundland | Page 5

Earl of Birkenhead
stature and their feather ornaments. Hayes says in one place:
"In the south parts we found no inhabitants, which by all likelihood
have abandoned these coasts, the same being so much frequented by
Christians. But in the north are savages altogether harmless."
Whitbourne, forty years later, gives the natives an equally good
character: "These savage people being politikely and gently handled,
much good might be wrought upon them: for I have had apparant
proofes of their ingenuous and subtle dispositions, and that they are a
people full of quicke and lively apprehensions.
"By a plantation" [in Newfoundland] "and by that means only, the
poore mis-beleeving inhabitants of that country may be reduced from
barbarism to the knowledge of God, and the light of his truth, and to a
civill and regular kinde of life and government."
The plantation came, but it must be admitted that the policy of the
planters was not, at first sight, of a kind to secure the admirable objects
indicated above by King James's correspondent. In fact, for hundreds of
years, and with the occasional interruptions of humanity or curiosity,
the Boeothics were hunted to extinction and perversely disappeared,

without, it must be supposed, having attained to the "civill and regular
kinde of life" which was to date from the plantation.
As lately as 1819 a "specimen" was procured in the following way. A
party of furriers met three natives--two male, one female--on the frozen
Red Indian Lake. It appeared later that one of the males was the
husband of the female. The latter was seized; her companions had the
assurance to resist, and were both shot. The woman was taken to St.
John's, and given the name of May March; next winter she was
escorted back to her tribe, but died on the way. These attempts to gain
the confidence of the natives were, perhaps, a little brusque, and from
this point of view liable to misconstruction by an apprehensive tribe.
Ironically enough, the object of the attempt just described was to win a
Government reward of £100, offered to any person bringing about a
friendly understanding with the Red Indians. Another native woman,
Shanandithit, was brought to St. John's in 1823 and lived there till her
death in 1829. She is supposed to have been the last survivor. Sir
Richard Bonnycastle, who has an interesting chapter on this subject,
saw her miniature, which, he says, "without being handsome, shows a
pleasing countenance."
* * * * *
Before closing this introductory chapter a few figures may be usefully
given for reference to illustrate the present condition of the island.[3]
At the end of 1917 the population, including that of Labrador, was
256,500, of whom 81,200 were Roman Catholics and 78,000 members
of the Church of England. The estimated public revenue for the year
1917-18 was 5,700,000 dollars; the estimated expenditure was
5,450,000 dollars. In the same year the public debt was about
35,450,000 dollars. The estimated revenue for 1918-19 was 6,500,000
dollars; expenditure, 5,400,000 dollars. In 1898 the imports from the
United Kingdom amounted to £466,925, and the exports to the United
Kingdom to £524,367. In the year 1917-18 the distribution of trade was
mainly as follows: imports from the United Kingdom, 2,248,781
dollars; from Canada, 11,107,642 dollars; from the United States,
12,244,746 dollars; exports to the United Kingdom, 3,822,931 dollars;

to Canada, 2,750,990 dollars; to the United States, 7,110,322 dollars.
The principal imports in 1916-17 were flour, hardware, textiles,
provisions, coal, and machinery; the chief exports were dried cod, pulp
and paper, iron and copper ore, cod and seal oil, herrings, sealskins, and
tinned lobsters. In 1917 there were 888 miles of railway open, of which
841 were Government-owned; and there are over 4600 miles of
telegraph line. The tonnage of vessels entered and cleared at
Newfoundland ports in 1916-17 was 2,191,006 tons, of which
1,818,016 tons were British. The number of sailing and steam vessels
registered on December 31st, 1917, was 3496.
* * * * *
FOOTNOTES:
[1] "A Historical Geography of the British Colonies." Vol. v. Part 4.
Newfoundland. (Oxford, 1911.)
[2] Op. cit., p. 192.
[3] In view of the nature and object of the present book, only a few
figures can be given here; fuller information can easily be obtained in
several of the works referred to herein, and more particularly in the
various accessible Year Books.
CHAPTER II
THE AGE OF DISCOVERY (1497-1502)
"If this should be lost," said Sir Walter Raleigh of Newfoundland, "it
would be the greatest blow that was ever given to England." The
observation was marked by much political insight. Two centuries later,
indeed, the countrymen of Raleigh experienced and outlived a shock far
more paralyzing than that of which he was considering the possible
effects; but when the American colonies were lost the world
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