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Lifelines: Canada's East Coast Fisheries

The Cod Rush
The European Fishermen, 1497-1763
 
The Fisheries, 1500-1763
The Cod Rush: The European Fishermen, 1497-1763

 

After Newfoundland was discovered, Europeans came to fish for cod on the banks off northeastern North America, where there was an abundance of fish.

Two types of fishery developed: the dry fishery on the coast and the green fishery at sea on Newfoundland's Grand Bank.

Despite many obstacles, fishing stations then colonies gradually emerged in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. These early settlements ran counter to the freedom to fish. The presence of fishermen, and later settlers, posed a real threat to the Native people living in coastal areas. The Beothuk nation disappeared in the early nineteenth century.


The Cod Fishery - 
© Rouen, Musée des Beaux-Arts

The Cod Fishery (1754)
Detail of an oil painting
by A. Louis Garneray, 1832
Photo: Didier Tragin / Catherine Lancien
© Rouen, Musée des Beaux-Arts



THE DRY FISHERY | THE GREEN FISHERY ON THE BANK


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