Dr. George Frederick Clarke
A man of wide and passionate interests fights
his last battle against dams on the Saint John River.
r. George Frederick Clarke
(1883-1974) was a Woodstock dentist, author, historian, archaeologist,
sport fisherman, and conservationist. In Song of the Reel
(1960) and Six Salmon Rivers and Another (1963), he reveals
the thrill of the hunt for trout and salmon, the camaraderie on the
rivers, and the mystical joy of quiet moments. He also expresses his
deep concern for the province's fishing waters, especially the Saint
John River.
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Clarke saw industrial pollution as a severe threat to fish stocks,
but even worse were three hydro-electric dams, the first across
the mouth of the Tobique River (1953), the second at Beechwood (1957),
above Woodstock, and the third, by far the largest, to be constructed
at Mactaquac, above Fredericton, in the late 1960s. Clarke crusaded
against the Mactaquac Dam at meetings and in the press. Although he
lost the battle, he galvanized the river conservation movement that
remains strong and vigilant today.
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The hydroelectric dam at Mactaquac,
erected by the New Brunswick Electric Power Commission in 1968
(New Brunswick Museum)
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Dr. Clarke's trout fishing creel
(Collection of George Frederick Clarke Jr.)
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