LIFELINES | Cross Currents | The Cod Rush | Swales and Whales |
Possessions | A Lobster Tale | The Lure of the River | Nova Scotia Motor Fishing Boats



Lifelines: Canada's East Coast Fisheries

The Lure of the River
Sport Fishing in New Brunswick
 
Everyone A Fisherman
The Lure of the River: Sport Fishing in New Brunswick

 

Fishing waters gradually open to the average citizen as the sport becomes more popular.

Ordinary New Brunswickers wanted to enjoy the sport of angling, and they began to demand access to prime fishing waters as soon as they achieved some leisure and extra income. A small step was taken in 1898 when several lakes near Saint John were opened to local anglers, who paid a rod day charge to fish trout and landlocked salmon.


Family outing by a stream - 
Provincial Archives of New Brunswick

Family outing by a stream (detail),
Miramichi region, about 1900
(Larsen Collection, Provincial Archives of New Brunswick, P6-330)


The public first gained access to the northern Atlantic salmon waters in 1927, when a five-mile Crown Reserve was established on the Restigouche. Lucky anglers, chosen by lot, paid a substantial rod day fee. By the early 1950s, more than 100 lakes and over 450 miles of river had become Crown Reserve or unrestricted Crown Open Waters. The exclusive fishing clubs still held most of the best waters under Crown Lease, but ordinary people had become enthusiastic salmon anglers.


Cliff Davis - 
Provincial Archives of New Brunswick

Cliff Davis of the Boston Post fishing from horseback,
York County, probably Southwest Miramichi River, 1940
(Provincial Archives of New Brunswick, P93-Y88)



THE BUZZWAGON | ORDINARY FLY FISHERS | RUN TO THE RIVER
DR. GEORGE FREDERICK CLARKE | THE MOVE TO CONSERVE | SPORT FISH FUTURES


Design

 

 
Menu - Lifelines Menu - The Lure of the River

Back