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Lifelines: Canada's East Coast Fisheries

Swales and Whales
Atlantic Canada's Sea Mammal Harvest
 
Crushing Ice
Swales and Whales: Atlantic Canada's Sea Mammal Harvest

 

Seals congregating on ice floes are difficult to reach from land or open water. Many lives and ships were lost trying.

Early hunters killed seals near the shore, but in 1793 a St. John's merchant sent two schooners to the ice fields off Newfoundland. The success of that venture, and the demand for oil and skins in Europe led to the establishment of the commercial hunt.


Sealers - 
National Archives of Canada - PA 121934

Watches of sealers leaving their ships, ca. 1914. The S.S. Adventure is in the background.
(Courtesy: National Archives of Canada
PA 121934)


Reduced seal stocks meant navigators had to penetrate deeper into the ice to allow hunters to reach the main seal herds. Ships were frequently trapped and crushed, even after steam-powered vessels with reinforced hulls were introduced. These "wooden walls" were in turn supplanted by steel-hulled icebreakers whose use for such purposes was pioneered in Newfoundland.

Sealing captains and crews became expert ice mariners and assisted in the exploration of polar regions.


MV Lady Johnson II - 
Fisheries and Oceans Canada

MV Lady Johnson II in the ice, 1980s
(Courtesy: Fisheries and Oceans Canada)


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