Much of the debt that Newfoundland accrued was the result of raising its own fighting force, the Royal Newfoundland Regiment, during WWI. They were the only North American force to fight alongside the ANZACS at Gallipoli, and later on were all but wiped out during the Battle of the Somme, although they did recover and served with distinction on the western front for the remainder of the conflict.
Yes. Military pensions and wound allowances weighed heavily on Government finances in the 1920s. In WWII the UK paid for the active NFL units which, as artillery, suffered much lower losses and Canada collectively ended up paying for the military pensions and wound payments. So the lesson was learnt.
@@floopydoopy9410 it was our homeland and she called to her sons . This world's what we make it . I miss the old patriotic ways . We used to have pride and collective motivation for our actions . We used to get shit done . Newfoundland went for pride and for honour . Everyone else did their duty and so did we , with little complaint. In Newfoundland you won't hear people disgusted with our wartime contributions, only pride and determination
@@floopydoopy9410 To repeat, there was a wider British kith-and-kin identity at the time and Newfoundlanders felt it was in their interest to support Britain. You have to remember that it was only a decade before WWI that the British got the French to withdraw claims on the west coast of Newfoundland and it only became a self-governing Dominion in 1907. It had no army, because the Royal Navy protected it, and all its service manpower consisted of RN reservists because it had no naval vessels of its own.
“For what tho?” Although the Dominion of Newfoundland was an independent country in most respects, it did not have much independence from the UK in foreign policy, same as the rest of the Commonwealth. So when the UK declared war in 1914, Newfoundland, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and all the other Commonwealth countries were dragged in without any choice. However, we still accrued expenses. E.g., the cost of transporting troops across the ocean, feeding them, and supplying them were all charged back to the former colonies. Furthermore, they were under the command of British generals. Newfoundland did not have an army but rather a regiment. And those generals cared even less for the lives of the “colonials” than they did for their own countrymen.
Hello from a small cove community in Newfoundland! I am a 10th generation Newfoundlander (3rd generation Canadian) Thank you for making this video! There is another factor worth mentioning which helped lead to our demise. The severe losses we suffered in France in WW1 We lost many of our leaders and greatest men in the first morning of the battle of the Somme. Less then 10 percent of our army answered the role call then next morning. It was terrible stuff.
Newfoundlander here🤚 Just wanted to thank you for taking the time to learn about our history and culture, and for the care you put into showcasing it. Not many people know that we were once our own country.❤
My uncle was a USAF officer stationed at Goose Bay during the Cold War and I still have his lapel pin from the Goose Bay Curling Club. He told me Canadians pronounced it New-fun-LAND and lab-ruh-DOOR. And if that's the way they pronounce it, that's the way we should, as well. God bless our good friends and great neighbors in the True North, Strong and Free!
Wow. My grandfather was born in Newfoundland in about 1870 something . he was a fisherman , and he spent all of his summers in Labrador. No wonder he hated living in Massachusetts so much. wow. This video really opens my eyes a bit. No wonder he was so gruff!
I can't argue with you but can only say that our client in Newfoundland was the "Newfoundland and Labrador Power Commission. I may even have an old drivers licence from the time with N&L on it. I was there in the very late 1970's. I left in March 1980.
Adding Labrador to the name was also a challenge to Quebec whose provincial government often maintained a ridiculous territorial claim over Labrador. For decades official maps of Quebec showed Labrador as part of Quebec or just omitted any visible border.
Newfoundland is Canada's Ireland both in terms of its ethno-religious makeup but also its chief export, people... Fort McMurray, Alberta is often called the second and third largest Newfoundland city and for a good reason... Out of work fishermen went to work in the Alberta oil patch and still live at home working on a 2-week in 2-week out rotation system... This is still what drives MOST traffic in and out of YMM/Fort McMurray Airport to this day... Ditto for YZF/Yellowknife where the in and out Diamond/Gold commuters still make up a large percentage of traffic on airlines that service both cities... I've met plenty of Easterners who do this wicked long commute cross Canada every two weeks...
No other ethnic group would get such a cushy deal honestly. It's no secret that the Newfies on such cushy deals could be replaced overnight by Punjabis on minimum wage or less but they're kept on the payrolls to avoid a Newf separation crisis. Canada needs Newfoundland but it does not need Newfoundlanders.
@Simon-nw9bf First off, there is no Newfoundland without Newfoundlanders. Second. Newfoundland and Nova Scotia aren't allowed to do well... because if they do, the st. Lawrence causeway becomes a much longer and more expensive shipping route. You have more than two-thirds of the voting power of Canada on the St. Lawrence River. What happens when industries moves farther east or closer to the south. 78 seats from Québec 121 in Ontario. Newfoundland 7 Nova Scotia 11. You lose lots of votes/power by pleasing 18 seats. Newfoundlands' entire economy has been deconstructed, disassembled and has become a bureaucratic trickle down economic situation over national insecurity to the US orbit and pleasing our stupid voting system. If you haven't read "Don't Tell The Newfoundlanders" Thats okay because a six part documentary is coming out on Fibe/Crave soon. And the 75 years of illusions will dissolve. vimeo.com/223194253
Those of Irish descent and Roman Catholic religion make up roughly 40 % of the population. Roughly 50% are of English, Welsh and Scottish descent and mostly Protestant. The rest have French and First Nation ancestry. The English-Irish division had caused some conflict in the past that but, with one exception, never resulted in major violence. A 'power sharing' arrangement was reached in the late 1800s that the people in Northern Ireland should have followed.
Lol. Good luck finding a foreigner that will work as hard and tolerate the weather like us. There's more newfies in Alberta than there are Albertans in some places. So mind your lip or we'll fold your clothes with you still in em.
Just came from spending 2 weeks in Nova Scotia and Newfoundland. It's quite an interesting place. The northern peninsula of Newfoundland is also sub arctic tundra at the tip and they can get some pretty heavy snowfall, too.
There are some important pivotal actions and decisions that affected the fate of the Dominion of Newfoundland. 1. NLers elected a National Assembly in 1946 to discuss and determine its fate. The Assembly voted on options for inclusion in any referendum. Options they wanted included "Responsible Government while seeking Economic Union with the US" (an option that was widely popular in NL at the time). The UK did not permit this option to appear on the ballot. 2. The UK did work with Canada to, in various ways, put its "thumb on the scale" in favour of Confederation with Canada. This started by even having Confederation on the ballot when there were numerous problems with this sequencing and defining terms of union (problems that would have also existed with a US Economic Union option - meaning the truest legal clarity would have resulted from a "stay with the Commission Govt for x years" vs "return to Responsible Govt" but instead, UK played favourites. They also did this with the phrasing of the Responsible Government; that ballot option read "as existed in 1933" - which for many conjured images of the worst point of time they can remember. NL in 1948 was in much better shape than in 1933. 3. While Smallwood and his supporters often frame Confederation as Canada being some kindly family member taking in a less fortunate cousin, the reality is Canada had immense interest in having NL in Confederation and not pursuing any agreements with the US. Newfoundland journalist Bren Walsh, in his 1985 book on Confederation ("More than a Poor Majority"), quoted from an official memorandum out of the Canadian Department of External Affairs from June 13th, 1947: "Newfoundland's economic union with the United States would greatly weaken the competitive of the eastern Canadian fishing industry, since the U.S. tariffs would no longer operate against Newfoundland fishery products. Under such circumstances, moreover, the Newfoundland [fishing] industry would undoubtedly attract U.S. capital. American Modernization of the Newfoundland fishery would jeopardize Canada's position." Canada, particularly the then-governing Liberal Party of Canada, got heavily involved in the referendum campaigns. The confederates had something like six or seven times the budget of the Responsible Government League or the Economic Union Party. There is even evidence of the advance sale of the six senate seats NL would have should it join Canada (all for fundraising). 4. Smallwood engaged in seriously troubling tactics A - taking advantage of recent hardships to further "run down" and disparage the capabilities of Newfoundland and Newfoundlanders as too poor and weak to be self-governing. . . calling NL a "third rate municipality" and "Cinderella of Empire." The scars from that campaign persist to this day and are even evident in some statements in this video. B - lying to the National Assembly and by extension, lying to Newfoundlanders. Charles F. Bailey, a member of the National Assembly representing Trinity South constituency warned about what confederation would mean for the fishery. He did so on November 25, 1947: "I Refer here again to British Columbia. On the coast of Vancouver Island in 1935 certain capitalistic concerns got control from the Canadian [federal] government. I was not able to get the whole story; but I found out that these trapmen had gotten control of the waters within the three mile limit and all the handline fishermen were not allowed inside it. I was told that RCMP were patrolling the coast. We [Newfoundland] have full control over our fisheries, something I believe we always had. I know something of the rows between trawlers and handline men. . . Should the people vote for Confederation, I want them to keep this in mind. There should be a clause whereby the federal government will not be able to lease any part of our waters to the detriment of the fishermen. I want our people, in negotiating for Newfoundland, whatever they do, not to turn our fisheries over to remote control. We want to see that the rights we have always fought for are kept for us." Smallwood responded: "I must say, the practice of the Department of Fisheries of Canada is this: any regulations they make governing the fisheries . . . all the practical details of the fishery, that is left entirely, completely, and absolutely to the province." This was incorrect. It's fairly clear Smallwood knew it. All these things were factors. Given the extremely narrow result in the 2nd referendum, they were likely deciding factors.
Labradorian here,Newfoundland wasn’t even part of Canada until recently.Labrador was its own separate province,then the government of Canada decided Newfoundland belongs to Canada and should govern Labrador because of its natural resource riches.
L’Anse aux Meadows is the name. The translation is Meadows Cove, yes, but we don’t say the translation. We just say the name in French. Lahnse Oh Meadows
Newfoundlanders are French in many places. Many still speak French as they're first language. And France is the closest country physically to Newfoundland (St Pierre and Miquelon) so yes. We are as much french as we are anything else. I have equal ancestry of French, English, Irish and Mi'kmaq. With many of my extended family that are French.
Great video! Only mistake I saw is that the capital city of Newfoundland and Labrador is erroneously spelled with Saint instead of with St. Meaning that the correct spelling is St. John's.
@@revinhatol What mineral booms? The two main minerals were iron ore from Wabana on Bell Island and copper from Buchans. Neither was exactly a boom for most of NFL.
Labrador was not independant it was at first part of Quebec, but some englisjh lords who wanted to get their hands on the failing Labrador Mining Company made it independent from Quebec. When they gave it back to Canada, The canadian government, insrtead of returning it to its proper "owner" (Quebec) offereed it to Newfoundland in exchange of them joining Canada.
Found the Quebecer lmfao, Labrador has Been and always will be apart of Newfoundland. It’s true that a portion of Labrador was owned by Quebec” Quebec at the time was a colony of France at the time as was Newfoundland a colony of Britain” but after the 7 year war concluded with France losing, one of the territories lost was French Labrador being given to Britain which Britain gave to Newfoundland. The ownership of Labrador has been decided for a long time over blood and law. With both international”UK” and Canadian courts ruling Labrador belongs to Newfoundland.
@@robin-bq1lz Mon commentaire n’a rien à voir avec la population autochtone… mais à en juger par votre commentaire, je suppose que vous pensez que je ne suis pas autochtone. Pourtant, je le suis. Cela dit, continuez, je suis sûr que vous avez quelque chose de substantiel à dire.
So, being a small poor, isolated country dominated by others is preferable? Just like Trump is going after Greenland, Newfoundland would be just as vulnerable to being taken over by the United States if it had remained "independent". Canadian overlords are preferable to American ones.
Not really as it's suspension of self governance was not held to a public vote, it was just done by the government. It's one of the reasons why it had such a strong independence movement for a while, despite its previous economic hardship. It's initial loss of independence wasn't because of the people
Its also important to remember the first referendum vote was to remain, but the second referendum removed a 3rd option (to join the US). This vote was 52/48 and counted once. Theres a book called “dont tell the Newfoundlanders” that talks about it
@@patches.742 it is a really good book. I don't think we would have joined America and I'm kind of glad that we didn't . The vote was awful tho . Many wanted to have another go at independence but within the empire still . However it's understandable that Britain couldn't afford us and Canada is a loyal member of the empire so we were given to them to look after
Another source of income that could have helped maintain an independent Nfld was trade deals with the USA such as the Bond-Blaine Treaty. It was squashed by the UK privy council due to objections by Canada who competed with Nfld for similar trade with the USA. There were many in Nfld in 1948 who had disliked Canada, recognizing its role in stunting the economic growth of the dominion
@@Nx0-o1i Yes, it was! I had an old map of Canada showing Labrador being a territory part of the province of Quebec before Britain decided to give it to Newfoundland.
@danbon7554 A fake map means nothing you fool the fr0gs have been making fake maps for generations because they can't get over the fact Newfoundland has always owned Labrador which is why Newfoundlands lawyers beat Quebec's lawyers at the highest level of court possible in 1927. Keep crying about it though I love it.
@@ShadowDragon246 "the majority of MY province as part of THEIRS" Where did you learn that? You must have been having a nightmare. And yes Labrador has been part of Quebec for some time during the Dominion, it has changed various times in history. Originally Newfoundland, as a colony, only had the east coast of Labrador. Labrador has been a separate territory at times, and even part of the North-West Territories at other times. What Quebec was claiming is that the southern border should be as originally decided, meaning following the river instead of cutting straight south of the river as the Privy Council decided later. Do your research!
Bro, the Labrador name comes from a Portuguese explorer. Plus Basque Fishermen were all over that area. There is a place in New Foundland called Channel-Port aux Basques.
Newfoundlander here! I’m gonna do a check list of sorts on topics from this video, first off our province is pronounced NEW-FIN-LAND not “new-finland”. Our winters are far from “mild”, we tend to get winter for around 7 months of the year but with that being said our weather is very bipolar and if you aren’t lucky could see sun, rain, hail, and snow all in one day. It’s rare for us to see or hear of any bears being on the island but in the winter there’s a chance of a polar bear who wandered over the ice sheet from Labrador. Also moose aren’t native to Newfoundland they were brought over from Nova Scotia and thought to help with the eco system but since they have no natural predators here they run rampant and cause car accidents. You pronounced Beothuk wrong it’s “BEE-OTH-ICK”. Good job on the video and thanks for taking the time to represent my province!
@kparkz47 A suggestion: if you're going to try to write words phonetically to assist the reader with pronunciation, please write only the syllable(s) which are emphasized in capital letters, not the entire word. Newfoundland, for example, is pronounced "NOOF-end-land" (with the last syllable being pronounced as in Disneyland, not "-lind").
It’s true. I live in Saskatchewan and the only provinces we share anything in common with is Alberta and Manitoba. BC seems like a lefty drug infested dump, Ontario seems like a bunch of Liberal snobs, Quebec is too self-absorbed in itself and wants to be like France without calling themselves France, and the Maritimes and Newfoundland all seem the same: just a bunch of strange people with funny accents. Not saying this is necessarily true, that’s just how we view the rest of Canada. Canada is very diverse. And no, there definitely is no single Canadian accent. In the Prairie Provinces we sound more like Americans from the Midwest with either a slight German or Ukrainian touch, depending on what town or area you’re from. I can tell people who are not from the Prairie Provinces the second they open their mouths.
@@oilersridersbluejays Thé Québécois have absolutely no loyalty to France as they were abandoned by them years ago. The culture most similar to Quebec is English Canada. Regarding diversity, as someone pointed out, it is found in every nation state. Using France as an example as you don’t seem to aware of that country, Paris/Île de France is extremely different from Bretagne, Normandie, or Provence. Regarding the States, Texas has very little in common with the New England states. In the U.K. Shetland Islands or Aberdeen are quite a contrast to London, Surrey or Sussex. Kerala is quite different from Punjab or the Bengal State, one can go on and on….
As a Newfoundlander, you have done a great job with our history. Just a couple of corrections: The First Nations of Newfoundland were the Beothuks, but it is pronounced “BEE-OTH-UUK” and the first European settlement in North America was by the Vikings, however, the area is not “Meadow Cove”. The area is L'Anse aux Meadows, part of the “French Shore” and the community name is in French. We have a strong French heritage in many parts of Newfoundland and Labrador and we maintain the original French names and do not translate them into English.
I live in St John's Newfoundland. Thanks for the video. It's very informative. I encourage everybody to come visit our little paradise. All are welcome.
My family is newfies and my great grandfather was in the royal newfoundland regiment during ww1. My grandma told stories of him rip grandma. I lived in nfld from age 12 to like early 20s. Beautiful place to be scenery wise, and the people are the nicest around. Its just not a good place for job opportunity which is why so many newfies have been leaving "the rock" and coming back here to ontario or alberta. They government is very poor and doesnt have funds to pave and patch roads so there are alot of potholes on the toads to damage your car. Add that with not many jobs so you have to drive a city or two away (30 mins to 1 hr as the cities are mostly spaced out between forest/hills). So it really is only a great place after you retire. But the hunting for moose is the best, you have had a burger until you had a moose burger
It was far more complex than "Gave up its Independence". The Book "Don't tell the Newfoundlanders" and its TH-cam video will put it right into perspective of the Criminal Act the occurred. It is laughable to see it now when you fill in the blanks of when it was agreed, when it was planned and how it was pulled off- of what was already agreed before any "Referendums"- of which they had to have 3 and which the last would be considered legally dubious today. Say "Understand" and then Newfoundland and it is the correct pronunciation.
I would recommend reading "Don't tell the Newfoundlanders" by Greg Malone. It details the conspiracies between England, Canada and the United States to determine NL's fate after WW I.
A great presentation Geoff. It's just a pity that you used several Mercator projection maps which don't really work at these latitudes. Canada's northern islands and Greenland re nowhere near as bigger as that projection suggests and the length and direction of the great circle route to Europe is distorted.
A couple books to read about Newfoundland history if you're interested: More Than a Poor Majority by Bren Power and Come Near at Your Peril by Patrick O'Flaherty.
I appreciate the level of research. One note: you’re pronouncing the name of the province oddly. It’s New-fun-land. An easy way to remember is “understand-Newfoundland.” You’re pronouncing it like New-Finland…is there an Old-Finland? 😁 Enjoyed watching!
Thanks for making this video on the topic! However, I would not say it is “firmly Canadian” today. Many people still identify as Newfoundlanders first. There was no mention of Canada’s mismanagement and decimation of the fishing industry or the immense level of outmigration from Newfoundland since. NFLD’s position in Canada is far from ideal
I agree, not only Newfoundlanders but it seems that each region is identifyingwith thier region and not the country as a whole . I am all for regional affiliations but we are all also Canadian
Always wondered where the name Labrador originated from. Well, from Portuguese explorer Joao Fernandes Lavrador who was the first European who sailed the Labrador coast. At some point it was changed from Lavrador to Labrador. Lavrador means farmer in Portuguese. Oh and the breed of dog which bares its name also originated from this area. Very interesting.
Lavrador was Joāo fernandes’ title not surname. It means “Azorean land-holder”. And the name probably comes from Joāo’s title even though like Cabot and Newfoundland it’s not for sure he ever saw Labrador or just Greenland.
Nice video! Two things to add: Ktaqmkuk (The Island of Newfoundland) is also the home of the Mi'kmaq people, and the Quebec provincial government still doesn't recognize the official Labrador border!
Some have made a comparison between Newfoundland and Iceland. Both are islands in the north atlantic and both were colonies of European nations until the 20th century. Geography and resources should have favoured Newfoundland as an independent country, yet it's Iceland that became successful at being a nation. This has always puzzled me. Perhaps being colonized by Denmark (Iceland) was more advantageous than being a colony of the UK (Newfoundland).
I took the opportunity in 1998 to drive across Canada from Alberta to pick up my son who with government program called Katimivik volunteered in Guelph, La Mal Baie and on Bell Isle in Conception Bay. When I get another opportunity I'd focus on a province or two and train or fly to them. Its a long drive and I didn't have nearly enough time. Funny just recently I was wondering why Labrador was never part of Quebec, still don't know.
A big thanks to you for making this video. Really interesting, my grandfather on my dads side was Canadian but took my father and English grandmother to UK just before WW2. He ended up joining the British army getting killed in Tunisia in May 1943. I sadly know little ese about him and I have never been to Canada. However, little bits of information on excellent videos like fill in some of the history about Canada. I visited the Canadian memorial at Vimy Ridge and the Newfoundland memorial at Beaumont Hamel, were Newfoundlanders considered to be British or Canadian troops in WW1 and WW2 as the CWGC website doesn't have a search option for Newfoundland when in the "Country Served" section?
Newfoundlanders were Newfoundlanders and not Canadians in WWI. They fought beside them but no different than fighting beside other allies like the French and Australians. In fact Newfoundland fought in gallipoli along the ANZACs while Canadians did not. Vimy Ridge was built in honour of the Canadians (not including Newfoundland) who found and won at vimy ridge for the first time as a Canadian unit (and not just as part of a large British force) thus it is one of the early unifying moments for the then young nation. British troops and others failed to take the ridge but Canadians won and as Canadians, not just part of a bigger British empire group. Beaumont Hamel was where the Newfoundland regiment (basically the army raised to fight for the empire by the independent nation of Newfoundland) suffered its worse defeat on July 1st 1916 on the first day of the battle of the Somme. Of over 800 men to start the day, only 68 made roll call the following. As the country only had about 240,000 people, this was a devastating loss. Also, Newfoundland didn’t send its destitute to war. Most were the sons of the elites and leading families. The loss of these men, many not even in their 20s yet, was like a huge brain drain to the country which likely played a huge role in its collapse less than 20 years later when if not for the war many of them would have been its leaders and captains of industry. The Newfoundland government couldn’t afford a big fancy war memorial like other allied powers so it instead bought a piece of land where many of its people died and for the most part left it as it was. Hence while other nations have beautiful monuments, the Newfoundland memorial instead gives you a look of what the land probably looked like when those that fought, died there.
I am currently watching a segment on Newfoundland,and noticed that your map featured on Around the World with Geoff replaces Newtoundland with a geograghically misplaced Baffin Island.
I also saw in another video a while back, that another major reason they wanted to settle Newfoundland and Labrador's status issue is because during WW2, lots of US military personnel and families moved to the island and slowly integrating in with the locals and making the economy better, so then there was a small Pro-US statehood movement growing, so the UK and Canadian governments wanted to move fast and pushed a referendum to not lose more land to the US.
I was told that when the Americans built their bases in Newfoundland they had to agree to pay the locals less than what they wanted to originally as the Brits and their local leaders didn’t want the locals to know how terrible they treated them. If the yanks pay them too much they might stop slaving away for the merchants
While important US bases and military personnel hardly equaled the influence of the connections with Canada, especially Cape Breton Island in Nova Scotia. Entire Communities in NS are populated with Newfoundland people. Port Hawkesbury in NS grew from a village into a substantial town with one of the last influxes of Newfoundland people circa 1961. Revisionist history at times forgets the Alphabet Fleet and the Ferry System beginning with the SS Bruce. Newfoundlanders took trips to Cape Breton to celebrate Dominion Day long before 1949 and long before US bases.
Newfoundland and Labrador, the easternmost province of Canada, is composed of the island of Newfoundland and the mainland Labrador Peninsula. Its diverse geography includes rugged coastlines, vast forests, and towering mountains. The province is famous for its maritime climate, which brings cooler temperatures and heavy rainfall. The map of Newfoundland and Labrador highlights its unique position, separated by the Strait of Belle Isle, with Newfoundland on the island to the south and Labrador on the mainland to the north. This region is rich in natural resources and a hub for outdoor exploration.
From the opening scene, the Mercator projection map super-exaggerates the Arctic islands, particularly Ellesmere. It is less than a ⅓ the size of Alberta.
Interesting video, but only complaint is that the music conflicts too much with your voice and makes it hard for me to understand. Thank you for listening.
No mention of St. Pierre and Miquelon. As a Geography centric channel,.. That was an opportunity missed. Signed - West Coast Canadian that knows his countries own geography. Cheers
@@DonKnight-qi4tu What's your point? Obviously it's France. That's what would have made highlighting that fact more intriguing and added to the depth of the video.
@@BC-X The video is about Newfoundland and Labrador. The only thing St. Pierre and Miquelon was known for was as a supply depot for Al Capone during prohibition. Don't drink, don't care and really don't care about France.
How is St Pierre relevant to the story of the Dominion of Newfoundland ending its independence? Did St Pierre influence that process in any way? (It didn’t)
Newfoundland & Labrador was an automonous dominion within the British Empire but was basically a colony. A lot of Irish immigrated to Newfoundland & developed a distinct dialect of the Irish language on the island 🇬🇧🇨🇦🇮🇪 Canada is still part of the British Commonwealth but the British government doesn't have direct jurisdiction over Canada. I've spoken with some Canadians from different provinces & several of them said that they want their country to be an independent republic.
Unfortunately for those that may want to toss the English crown aside, Justin’s dad Pierre made that almost impossible in the constitution they adopted in 1980.
@@bjdon99 my Canadian history is a bit hazy, but is that from the Constitution Act of 1982, where Canada could amend its own constitution without approval from the UK?
Yes. Any change to the status of the monarchy in Canada needs to be approved by both Houses of Parliament and all 10 provincial legislatures. It is hard to see that ever happening.
My (Newfoundlander) grandparents had a Rand-McNally globe that had all of Canada in pink...except for Labrador in orange. Took me years to consider that maybe they marked it as a contested territory, as it was contested by Newfoundland & Quebec.
There are some errors in the history. Newfoundland became a dominion (a colony which is completely internally self-governing, whilst Britain remains responsible for external affairs and defence) in 1907 - exactly 40 years after Canada achieved the same status, in 1867. Along with Canada (and Australia, NZ, Ireland and South Africa), Newfoundland became completely independent in 1931. In 1934, it voluntarily relinquished both internal and external independence and ceased to be a dominion (it did not become a dominion, per the video, that year). It was administered directly from Westminster as a crown colony until it joined the Dominion of Canada in 1949.
Love your geography, but recommend you show maps of large areas on a spherical projection. Canada’s Arctic doesn’t have an enormous northern extent as appears in the flat protection
The Lake Melville area of Labrador is something to marvel at, as people there have their gardens planted before June, summers that can go past 40C, salmon rivers thrive, people grow things like corn and tomatoes, and its more akin to northern Ontario. Be aware, the way you showed the Inuit & Innu of Labrador gives the implication of relation, they are not. Inuit are their own people from Siberia to Greenland (including Nunatsiavut in Northern Labrador), whereas the Innu are 'First Nations' (or 'indian' as some used to refer to them as). There are two reservations but there is zero innu presences on Labrador's south coast (thats more southern Inuit who call themselves Nunatukavut) but there are Innu further down on the Quebec North Shore. but the Innu do not use Igloos or actual dog teams or the komatik, that is all Inuit. They live in proximity to each other (the 'border' is Northwest River which is over 50% Inuit and Sheshatshiu Innu First Nation Reserve across the river from it and formerly a part of NWR til 1976). The Inuit of Nunatsiavut live in their land claim negotiated by their treaty, a special administrative district called Nunatsiavut. Labrador never even got it's own MP til the 1980s, before then sharing one with Green Bay, an area in Central Newfoundland. Also of note, there is a lot of regional disparity between Labrador and Newfoundland as there is a history of Newfoundland exploiting Labrador's resources from mining to silviculture to fishing to hydroelectricity. also 14:12 that's not Labrador, that's Corner Brook/Curling/Bay Of Islands on Newfoundland's west coast (before Corner Brook existed, the pic was taken in Curling which to this day operates as a fishing town, now a part of the City Of Corner Brook).
I like your video's but being from newfoundland I got to let you know that the name is said the way it's spelled New-found-land. Keep up the good videos!
OMG! as a Canadian I had no idea it wasnt till 1939 that NL&L became a province in Canada. like i know about the flame with all the creasts and dates but i guess i didnt look close enough. I also had no idea about the wars in NL&L. I wasnt taught any of this in school.
Some maps show that parts of the border between Labrador and Quebec are disputed in some areas and undefined in another area. Although Canada abandoned its territorial claim when Newfoundland joined confederation the Province of Quebec maintains its claim to some of the Labrador territory. I hope that both provinces can come to a mutually beneficial agreement on a definitive and permanent border.
@@groupewaite, Canada became the first Dominion of the British Empire becoming independent on July 1, 1867. Originally, it consists of Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia as they build a railway between Windsor in Ontario and Halifax and Cape Breton in Nova Scotia. As Canada expands, the railway goes north of Lakes Huron and Superior and through the Prairies and then it makes it to Vancouver. Dominions formed their own government, but kept the monarch as their head of state.
It took two referendums. Independence won the first but as it didn’t get 51% they had a second one with the third option (remain a colony) removed in which confed won 52 to 48%. Many question its validity and wonder if England may have weighted the scales. 1940s Newfoundland got a taste of American prosperity after centuries of British austerity. And these were saviours of the free world Americans whose image wasn’t yet tainted by Vietnam and other Cold War ventures. I doubt an independent Newfoundland would have survived long but next time it fell it may have been Uncle Sam offering a bail out instead of mother England and the dominion may have then become either a US territory like Puerto Rico or quite possibly a state (remember in 1949, both Alaska and Hawaii were also territories and unlike those two distant lands, Newfoundlanders were pretty much just cold water Bostonians).
Newfoundland had no choice in the end. The referendums were the Newfs being dragged kicking and screaming into the Canadian Confederation . But the Brits were shedding the empire and the idea of the US taking over was not going to fly either.
My dad was stationed at a US Air Force post at the northern top of Labrador in the late 1940's early 50's. It made a profound I impact on him throughout his life.
My dad was stationed there too at that time. Met and married my mom at Fort Pepperrell, St. John's. Mom passed in 2017 and never lost her voice accent.
The podcast clearly states that in 1927 that two soverign nations at the time, Canada and Newfoundland, with England's agreement, agreed to whom Labrador belonged to. Quebec (their interests were Canada's responsibility) was and is a province of Canada, so I do not think there is a legal case to refute the boundry in my opinion. The vote to join Confederation was close, only 52%.
@@raymondfranke154There isn’t, you’re right. But that’s not stopping Quebec from currently drawing their maps like they own Labrador though apparently.
I wouldn’t characterize it as “depressive.” That’s a little much. When I was growing up, we just accepted the weather as it was and moved on with our lives. Not much you can do about it. 🤷 Except move.. 😅
The west coast and central are amazing. A lot of the east is too. It's just St John's is notorious for it's weather and everyone moves there. Oh well it weeds out the good ones for us
@@ODDentitypodAlmost everyone I know suffers from seasonal depression and everyone is miserable in April as the winter has dragged on now for 6 months, and we are still getting wet, slushy snowstorms while we see the rest of the country get close to 20° days.
Wonderful. My mom and I will be traveling from Alberta to Newfoundland in August and after viewing a remarkably small variety of geographic type videos I thought I would just prefer to start at the start. I did learn that at jobs was the first place of North America. Makes sense……..English, Irish, Scottish immigrants flooded west as it expanded, with bits of Italians, Germans, Dutch, polish and wee bit of Chinese and middle eastern immigrants. I heard recently that many who now immigrate hear that prairie people, with their ancestral “baggage” aren’t overly welcoming and Toronto is the geographical barrier to further immigrate west. Nonetheless I have travelled very little and I want to learn about where I am going so I can make a more informed decision on where I want to go and what I want to do when I get there, instead of relying on anyone else to convince me how to spend my money and my time. Though it does not take much to learn about it about a place so you might find marvelous conversations with people that your will meet. Those who’ve been there for a few generations. We are only 150 years old. The (surprise) baby of the global human family. History, language, I just can’t get enough of these topics, so I am delighted to watch this excellently presented trip through history. Thank you kindly my friend
Good! - but a couple things: the only time population is mentioned in its contemporary pop - knowing its population size in earlier periods would have been useful. Also, the use of Mercator projections is highly misleading - it makes the Arctic archipelago many many time larger than it actually is.
I sort of knew this but didn't understand why. I visited the Newfoundland memorial at Beaumont Hamel and the Canadian memorial at Vimy Ridge so this does explain some reasons why they were considered separate back then.
It was its own country for about 25 years. Until 1934 when it couldn't afford to be independent and went back to being a colony of England. In the late 1940s England didn't want to continue with Newfoundland as a colony so Newfoundland had to choose either becoming an independent country again, join Canada, or join the US. Couldn't afford to be independent country, didn't want to be Americans, so joined Canada.
Unless you LOVE driving, you should pick & choose what you want to see. The tourism videos always show Gros Morne, The Viking Settlement at L'Anse aux Meadows, & St. Johns in the same commercial, but they are almost as far from each other as you can get while staying on the island (that is bigger than Ireland).
@@arizonajoe6813 tip number 1... Don't pronounce it Newfie land.... We love a good joke at our expense but we don't like the mispronunciation of Newf in LAND. BTW... you'll love it... Best time weather wise is late June through end of August. George Street festival in St. john's, whale watching, Gros Morne National park etc etc ..
Joey yup the first and worst! Might want to visit his resting place on James lane in st.johns. I can’t think of a better place on the island to relieve yourself ,that pure feeling of happiness will overcome you!!!
Portugal, Ireland, Greece, and Spain just about 16 years ago. And pretty much most of South America at one time or other. Fortunately for them the IMF existed (or for some South Americans, teddy Roosevelt and his love for the Monroe doctrine did). And Newfoundland didn’t declare bankruptcy. It wanted to but the UK wouldn’t let it (probably because they were the ones who the money was owed to). So instead to cover its debts it was forced to give up its independence. And to think, the Greeks thought the Germans and the EU gave them a hard bargain in 2008. Maybe it’s a cruel comparison but the closest to Nfld giving up independence to UK rule would probably be the German Annexation of Austria in 1938.
Hey Geoff I'm from Western nfld you should speak for central or Eastern nfld cause Western nfld doesn't have a mild climate we get winter below freezing as low as -40 c summers are nice but winter I'd argue what you laid down I've seen snow completely covering houses too an add in fact I only lived on the island for 20 years Eastern nfld is far more mild from what I've seen and heard tho
Great video highlighting the history of the province. One thing though.. it’s not pronounced Newfin-lind. It’s -land.. Newfoundland rhymes with understand.
Dude, there is so much you missed regarding French and Mi’kmaq relationships and how the Mi’kmaq ended up moving to NL in more numbers. Joey Smallwood did not claim having Indigenous people on the land when they joined Canada which has serious implications and troubles for the Mi’kmaq people today.
Much of the debt that Newfoundland accrued was the result of raising its own fighting force, the Royal Newfoundland Regiment, during WWI. They were the only North American force to fight alongside the ANZACS at Gallipoli, and later on were all but wiped out during the Battle of the Somme, although they did recover and served with distinction on the western front for the remainder of the conflict.
Yes. Military pensions and wound allowances weighed heavily on Government finances in the 1920s. In WWII the UK paid for the active NFL units which, as artillery, suffered much lower losses and Canada collectively ended up paying for the military pensions and wound payments. So the lesson was learnt.
For what tho? Like what did NF gain by sending troops? It’s not like they were dragged into the war like USA or Canadia
@@floopydoopy9410 it was our homeland and she called to her sons . This world's what we make it . I miss the old patriotic ways . We used to have pride and collective motivation for our actions . We used to get shit done . Newfoundland went for pride and for honour . Everyone else did their duty and so did we , with little complaint. In Newfoundland you won't hear people disgusted with our wartime contributions, only pride and determination
@@floopydoopy9410 To repeat, there was a wider British kith-and-kin identity at the time and Newfoundlanders felt it was in their interest to support Britain. You have to remember that it was only a decade before WWI that the British got the French to withdraw claims on the west coast of Newfoundland and it only became a self-governing Dominion in 1907. It had no army, because the Royal Navy protected it, and all its service manpower consisted of RN reservists because it had no naval vessels of its own.
“For what tho?” Although the Dominion of Newfoundland was an independent country in most respects, it did not have much independence from the UK in foreign policy, same as the rest of the Commonwealth. So when the UK declared war in 1914, Newfoundland, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and all the other Commonwealth countries were dragged in without any choice. However, we still accrued expenses. E.g., the cost of transporting troops across the ocean, feeding them, and supplying them were all charged back to the former colonies. Furthermore, they were under the command of British generals. Newfoundland did not have an army but rather a regiment. And those generals cared even less for the lives of the “colonials” than they did for their own countrymen.
Hello from a small cove community in Newfoundland! I am a 10th generation Newfoundlander (3rd generation Canadian) Thank you for making this video!
There is another factor worth mentioning which helped lead to our demise. The severe losses we suffered in France in WW1 We lost many of our leaders and greatest men in the first morning of the battle of the Somme. Less then 10 percent of our army answered the role call then next morning. It was terrible stuff.
Newfoundlander here🤚
Just wanted to thank you for taking the time to learn about our history and culture, and for the care you put into showcasing it. Not many people know that we were once our own country.❤
because ya failed miserably so no one cares!
@@rickhatesmisleadia7101 That's what happens when your economy is left in shambles after fighting two world wars.
@@mikeparsons7923
Love newfoundland and st. John's
My uncle was a USAF officer stationed at Goose Bay during the Cold War and I still have his lapel pin from the Goose Bay Curling Club. He told me Canadians pronounced it New-fun-LAND and lab-ruh-DOOR. And if that's the way they pronounce it, that's the way we should, as well. God bless our good friends and great neighbors in the True North, Strong and Free!
@@MrPerfesser right on. Easiest way to remember the pronunciation is that Newfoundland rhymes with understand
I live in goose bay!! We have a great museum here and the military respect still runs strong 😊😊
im pretty sure that club is still standing, its on the old canadian side of the base in GB.
Wow. My grandfather was born in Newfoundland in about 1870 something . he was a fisherman , and he spent all of his summers in Labrador. No wonder he hated living in Massachusetts so much. wow. This video really opens my eyes a bit. No wonder he was so gruff!
Huh. He was a tough dude!
@@linh8997 not you replying to yourself :skull:
We are a very hearty bunch. I’m born and raised in Newfoundland and as the son of a fisherman.
Come visit your ancestral home
My grandfather was born there in 1909, also a fisherman.
?? The "and Labrador" part wasn't added at confederation. Its name was officially changed from Newfoundland to Newfoundland and Labrador in 2001.
Correct, I was going to say the same thing. I remember when it changed and the postal abbreviation was also changed, from NF to NL.
Canadians 😂
But it was always referred to as Newfoundland & Labrador on all Provincial documents. 2001 was just when the Federal government caught up!
I can't argue with you but can only say that our client in Newfoundland was the "Newfoundland and Labrador Power Commission. I may even have an old drivers licence from the time with N&L on it. I was there in the very late 1970's. I left in March 1980.
Great and informative video. I'm really glad you share your passion with the rest of us on YT!
Adding Labrador to the name was also a challenge to Quebec whose provincial government often maintained a ridiculous territorial claim over Labrador. For decades official maps of Quebec showed Labrador as part of Quebec or just omitted any visible border.
I think it’s important to mention that Labrador is currently suffering from a harsh wildfire season and Labrador City is under an evacuation.
You mean arson
Some tweaker was off fent a started the fire
I miss home I'm from lab city
Labrador has wildfire every single year since beggining of times.
I don’t think that has anything to do with the context of this video
Newfoundland is Canada's Ireland both in terms of its ethno-religious makeup but also its chief export, people... Fort McMurray, Alberta is often called the second and third largest Newfoundland city and for a good reason... Out of work fishermen went to work in the Alberta oil patch and still live at home working on a 2-week in 2-week out rotation system... This is still what drives MOST traffic in and out of YMM/Fort McMurray Airport to this day... Ditto for YZF/Yellowknife where the in and out Diamond/Gold commuters still make up a large percentage of traffic on airlines that service both cities... I've met plenty of Easterners who do this wicked long commute cross Canada every two weeks...
No other ethnic group would get such a cushy deal honestly. It's no secret that the Newfies on such cushy deals could be replaced overnight by Punjabis on minimum wage or less but they're kept on the payrolls to avoid a Newf separation crisis. Canada needs Newfoundland but it does not need Newfoundlanders.
@Simon-nw9bf First off, there is no Newfoundland without Newfoundlanders.
Second. Newfoundland and Nova Scotia aren't allowed to do well... because if they do, the st. Lawrence causeway becomes a much longer and more expensive shipping route. You have more than two-thirds of the voting power of Canada on the St. Lawrence River. What happens when industries moves farther east or closer to the south. 78 seats from Québec 121 in Ontario. Newfoundland 7 Nova Scotia 11. You lose lots of votes/power by pleasing 18 seats. Newfoundlands' entire economy has been deconstructed, disassembled and has become a bureaucratic trickle down economic situation over national insecurity to the US orbit and pleasing our stupid voting system.
If you haven't read "Don't Tell The Newfoundlanders" Thats okay because a six part documentary is coming out on Fibe/Crave soon. And the 75 years of illusions will dissolve.
vimeo.com/223194253
@@xXLileastXx We know what the deal is here. It's always been that way with Newfoundland long before joining.
Those of Irish descent and Roman Catholic religion make up roughly 40 % of the population. Roughly 50% are of English, Welsh and Scottish descent and mostly Protestant. The rest have French and First Nation ancestry. The English-Irish division had caused some conflict in the past that but, with one exception, never resulted in major violence. A 'power sharing' arrangement was reached in the late 1800s that the people in Northern Ireland should have followed.
Lol. Good luck finding a foreigner that will work as hard and tolerate the weather like us. There's more newfies in Alberta than there are Albertans in some places. So mind your lip or we'll fold your clothes with you still in em.
Love that Torngat Mountains got a shout out! It’s my dream destination ❤
Just came from spending 2 weeks in Nova Scotia and Newfoundland. It's quite an interesting place. The northern peninsula of Newfoundland is also sub arctic tundra at the tip and they can get some pretty heavy snowfall, too.
There are some important pivotal actions and decisions that affected the fate of the Dominion of Newfoundland.
1. NLers elected a National Assembly in 1946 to discuss and determine its fate. The Assembly voted on options for inclusion in any referendum. Options they wanted included "Responsible Government while seeking Economic Union with the US" (an option that was widely popular in NL at the time). The UK did not permit this option to appear on the ballot.
2. The UK did work with Canada to, in various ways, put its "thumb on the scale" in favour of Confederation with Canada. This started by even having Confederation on the ballot when there were numerous problems with this sequencing and defining terms of union (problems that would have also existed with a US Economic Union option - meaning the truest legal clarity would have resulted from a "stay with the Commission Govt for x years" vs "return to Responsible Govt" but instead, UK played favourites. They also did this with the phrasing of the Responsible Government; that ballot option read "as existed in 1933" - which for many conjured images of the worst point of time they can remember. NL in 1948 was in much better shape than in 1933.
3. While Smallwood and his supporters often frame Confederation as Canada being some kindly family member taking in a less fortunate cousin, the reality is Canada had immense interest in having NL in Confederation and not pursuing any agreements with the US.
Newfoundland journalist Bren Walsh, in his 1985 book on Confederation ("More than a Poor Majority"), quoted from an official memorandum out of the Canadian Department of
External Affairs from June 13th, 1947:
"Newfoundland's economic union with the United States would greatly
weaken the competitive of the eastern Canadian fishing industry, since
the U.S. tariffs would no longer operate against Newfoundland fishery
products. Under such circumstances, moreover, the Newfoundland [fishing]
industry would undoubtedly attract U.S. capital. American Modernization
of the Newfoundland fishery would jeopardize Canada's position."
Canada, particularly the then-governing Liberal Party of Canada, got heavily involved in the referendum campaigns. The confederates had something like six or seven times the budget of the Responsible Government League or the Economic Union Party. There is even evidence of the advance sale of the six senate seats NL would have should it join Canada (all for fundraising).
4. Smallwood engaged in seriously troubling tactics
A - taking advantage of recent hardships to further "run down" and disparage the capabilities of Newfoundland and Newfoundlanders as too poor and weak to be self-governing. . . calling NL a "third rate municipality" and "Cinderella of Empire." The scars from that campaign persist to this day and are even evident in some statements in this video.
B - lying to the National Assembly and by extension, lying to Newfoundlanders.
Charles F. Bailey, a member of the National Assembly representing Trinity South constituency warned about what confederation would mean for the fishery. He did so on November 25, 1947:
"I Refer here again to British Columbia. On the coast of Vancouver Island in 1935 certain capitalistic concerns got control from the Canadian [federal] government. I was not able to get the whole story; but I found out that these trapmen had gotten control of the waters within the three mile limit and all the handline fishermen were not allowed inside it. I was told that RCMP were patrolling the coast. We [Newfoundland] have full control over our fisheries, something I believe we always had. I know something of the rows between trawlers and handline men. . . Should the people vote for Confederation, I want them to keep this in mind. There should be a clause whereby the federal government will not be able to lease any part of our waters to the detriment of the fishermen. I want our people, in negotiating for Newfoundland, whatever they do, not to turn our fisheries over to remote control. We want to see that the rights we have always fought for are kept for us."
Smallwood responded:
"I must say, the practice of the Department of Fisheries of Canada is this: any regulations they make governing the fisheries . . . all the practical details of the fishery, that is left entirely, completely, and absolutely to the province."
This was incorrect. It's fairly clear Smallwood knew it.
All these things were factors. Given the extremely narrow result in the 2nd referendum, they were likely deciding factors.
This is the best comment in the entire section.
Labradorian here,Newfoundland wasn’t even part of Canada until recently.Labrador was its own separate province,then the government of Canada decided Newfoundland belongs to Canada and should govern Labrador because of its natural resource riches.
Newfoundland used to have its own coinage bearing the effigies of QV, Edward VII, George V & George VI.
Love your videos! Thank you so much !
L’Anse aux Meadows is the name.
The translation is Meadows Cove, yes, but we don’t say the translation. We just say the name in French.
Lahnse Oh Meadows
@@JesusFriedChrist the translation is actually Jellyfish Cove. It was originally called L'Anse aux Méduse
Vinland!
Canadians wanna be French so bad
@@floopydoopy9410 because we were originally colonized by the french, so many people speak french and there is alot of french culture?
Newfoundlanders are French in many places. Many still speak French as they're first language. And France is the closest country physically to Newfoundland (St Pierre and Miquelon) so yes. We are as much french as we are anything else. I have equal ancestry of French, English, Irish and Mi'kmaq. With many of my extended family that are French.
Great video! Only mistake I saw is that the capital city of Newfoundland and Labrador is erroneously spelled with Saint instead of with St. Meaning that the correct spelling is St. John's.
An important distinction because of the need to disambiguate from Saint John, New Brunswick.
The “St.” is very important, less you end up in Saint John New Brunswick by mistake!
Exactly, as this video cleverly points out. th-cam.com/video/TWKHXleEwF8/w-d-xo.htmlfeature=shared
@@AsmodeanEmpire you don’t want to end up in New Brunswick by mistake, that’s for sure
You don't even want to end up in new Brunswick on purpose! Ha!@@AsmodeanEmpire
I've already known the existence of this nation but I didn't discover more about that. Thank you for making this interesting video.
It was then one of the Commonwealth's richest countries, now it's the 10th province of Canada.
When was NFL "one of the Commonwealth's richest countries"?
@@markaxworthy2508 Mineral booms.
@@revinhatol What mineral booms? The two main minerals were iron ore from Wabana on Bell Island and copper from Buchans. Neither was exactly a boom for most of NFL.
@@revinhatol It never was one of the Commonwealth’s richest countries. NEVER.
@@groupewaite Very true. The social indicators in NFL were abysmal and it was for a century a producer of emigrants to the USA and Canada.
Labrador was not independant it was at first part of Quebec, but some englisjh lords who wanted to get their hands on the failing Labrador Mining Company made it independent from Quebec. When they gave it back to Canada, The canadian government, insrtead of returning it to its proper "owner" (Quebec) offereed it to Newfoundland in exchange of them joining Canada.
That's right, thank you!
Don't worry though Quebeckers - You do end up finding *other* ways to fleece us out of our meager wealth.
Found the Quebecer lmfao, Labrador has Been and always will be apart of Newfoundland.
It’s true that a portion of Labrador was owned by Quebec” Quebec at the time was a colony of France at the time as was Newfoundland a colony of Britain” but after the 7 year war concluded with France losing, one of the territories lost was French Labrador being given to Britain which Britain gave to Newfoundland.
The ownership of Labrador has been decided for a long time over blood and law. With both international”UK” and Canadian courts ruling Labrador belongs to Newfoundland.
@@stormyaudio9969 😂😂 j’imagine que c’est la même chose pour les Amérindiens…j’adore l’hypocrisie de ce Dominion Orangiste.😘
@@robin-bq1lz Mon commentaire n’a rien à voir avec la population autochtone… mais à en juger par votre commentaire, je suppose que vous pensez que je ne suis pas autochtone. Pourtant, je le suis. Cela dit, continuez, je suis sûr que vous avez quelque chose de substantiel à dire.
My dad always said that the worst thing that ever happened to the Island was the birth of Traitor Joey Smallwood.
I just posted a comment very similar. Cheers.
He is my uncles uncle.
@@VeggamatticSo?
@@seanl548 You must live quite a life. Trolls are sad.
So, being a small poor, isolated country dominated by others is preferable? Just like Trump is going after Greenland, Newfoundland would be just as vulnerable to being taken over by the United States if it had remained "independent". Canadian overlords are preferable to American ones.
The title is kind of misleading. It didn't "lose its independence" to another power. It voted to join confederation.
Not really as it's suspension of self governance was not held to a public vote, it was just done by the government. It's one of the reasons why it had such a strong independence movement for a while, despite its previous economic hardship. It's initial loss of independence wasn't because of the people
Its also important to remember the first referendum vote was to remain, but the second referendum removed a 3rd option (to join the US). This vote was 52/48 and counted once.
Theres a book called “dont tell the Newfoundlanders” that talks about it
@@patches.742 it is a really good book. I don't think we would have joined America and I'm kind of glad that we didn't . The vote was awful tho . Many wanted to have another go at independence but within the empire still . However it's understandable that Britain couldn't afford us and Canada is a loyal member of the empire so we were given to them to look after
If it gave up its independence, it lost it...
No kidding ...guess this BS....was made by an Uneducated American ....SAD!
This is great to learn about. Really hoping you could Do 1 on New Brunswick
Another source of income that could have helped maintain an independent Nfld was trade deals with the USA such as the Bond-Blaine Treaty. It was squashed by the UK privy council due to objections by Canada who competed with Nfld for similar trade with the USA. There were many in Nfld in 1948 who had disliked Canada, recognizing its role in stunting the economic growth of the dominion
I remember my history teacher telling us that Labrador used to be part of Québec.
It never was
@@Nx0-o1i Yes, it was! I had an old map of Canada showing Labrador being a territory part of the province of Quebec before Britain decided to give it to Newfoundland.
@danbon7554 A fake map means nothing you fool the fr0gs have been making fake maps for generations because they can't get over the fact Newfoundland has always owned Labrador which is why Newfoundlands lawyers beat Quebec's lawyers at the highest level of court possible in 1927. Keep crying about it though I love it.
@@danbon7554 it never was. Quebec just claims it was. and to this day their maps of canada still show a majority of MY province as part of THEIRS
@@ShadowDragon246 "the majority of MY province as part of THEIRS"
Where did you learn that? You must have been having a nightmare. And yes Labrador has been part of Quebec for some time during the Dominion, it has changed various times in history. Originally Newfoundland, as a colony, only had the east coast of Labrador. Labrador has been a separate territory at times, and even part of the North-West Territories at other times. What Quebec was claiming is that the southern border should be as originally decided, meaning following the river instead of cutting straight south of the river as the Privy Council decided later.
Do your research!
Holy cow the first person I have literally heard pronounce Beothuk correctly. Well done!
Bro, the Labrador name comes from a Portuguese explorer.
Plus Basque Fishermen were all over that area.
There is a place in New Foundland called Channel-Port aux Basques.
Newfoundlander here! I’m gonna do a check list of sorts on topics from this video, first off our province is pronounced NEW-FIN-LAND not “new-finland”. Our winters are far from “mild”, we tend to get winter for around 7 months of the year but with that being said our weather is very bipolar and if you aren’t lucky could see sun, rain, hail, and snow all in one day. It’s rare for us to see or hear of any bears being on the island but in the winter there’s a chance of a polar bear who wandered over the ice sheet from Labrador. Also moose aren’t native to Newfoundland they were brought over from Nova Scotia and thought to help with the eco system but since they have no natural predators here they run rampant and cause car accidents. You pronounced Beothuk wrong it’s “BEE-OTH-ICK”. Good job on the video and thanks for taking the time to represent my province!
I agree. The mispronunciations were unbearable.
@kparkz47 A suggestion: if you're going to try to write words phonetically to assist the reader with pronunciation, please write only the syllable(s) which are emphasized in capital letters, not the entire word. Newfoundland, for example, is pronounced "NOOF-end-land" (with the last syllable being pronounced as in Disneyland, not "-lind").
@@carolmurphy7572I think new-fin-LAND is more common. Though I suppose ive put the emphasis on the first syllable from time to time
"Meadows Cove" and not L'Anse aux Meadows also got me.
@@hancocki same
"Canada is 6 little countries in a trenchcoat pretending to be one big country".
I mean you can say that about just about any country- the US, Russia, China, India, the UK
It’s true. I live in Saskatchewan and the only provinces we share anything in common with is Alberta and Manitoba. BC seems like a lefty drug infested dump, Ontario seems like a bunch of Liberal snobs, Quebec is too self-absorbed in itself and wants to be like France without calling themselves France, and the Maritimes and Newfoundland all seem the same: just a bunch of strange people with funny accents.
Not saying this is necessarily true, that’s just how we view the rest of Canada. Canada is very diverse. And no, there definitely is no single Canadian accent. In the Prairie Provinces we sound more like Americans from the Midwest with either a slight German or Ukrainian touch, depending on what town or area you’re from. I can tell people who are not from the Prairie Provinces the second they open their mouths.
@@oilersridersbluejays Thé Québécois have absolutely no loyalty to France as they were abandoned by them years ago. The culture most similar to Quebec is English Canada. Regarding diversity, as someone pointed out, it is found in every nation state. Using France as an example as you don’t seem to aware of that country, Paris/Île de France is extremely different from Bretagne, Normandie, or Provence. Regarding the States, Texas has very little in common with the New England states. In the U.K. Shetland Islands or Aberdeen are quite a contrast to London, Surrey or Sussex. Kerala is quite different from Punjab or the Bengal State, one can go on and on….
This is so true.
You're right! Canada thinks it is a great world country or power....Just listen to the CBC..
As a Newfoundlander, you have done a great job with our history. Just a couple of corrections: The First Nations of Newfoundland were the Beothuks, but it is pronounced “BEE-OTH-UUK” and the first European settlement in North America was by the Vikings, however, the area is not “Meadow Cove”. The area is L'Anse aux Meadows, part of the “French Shore” and the community name is in French. We have a strong French heritage in many parts of Newfoundland and Labrador and we maintain the original French names and do not translate them into English.
I live in St John's Newfoundland. Thanks for the video. It's very informative. I encourage everybody to come visit our little paradise.
All are welcome.
Welcome to *visit* . Please do not emigrate here unless you enjoy competing with infinite "new Canadians" for an ever-shrinking job pool.
@@gdunne315 visit sure. Another 500,000 third world immigrants? No thanks.
My family is newfies and my great grandfather was in the royal newfoundland regiment during ww1. My grandma told stories of him rip grandma. I lived in nfld from age 12 to like early 20s. Beautiful place to be scenery wise, and the people are the nicest around. Its just not a good place for job opportunity which is why so many newfies have been leaving "the rock" and coming back here to ontario or alberta. They government is very poor and doesnt have funds to pave and patch roads so there are alot of potholes on the toads to damage your car. Add that with not many jobs so you have to drive a city or two away (30 mins to 1 hr as the cities are mostly spaced out between forest/hills). So it really is only a great place after you retire. But the hunting for moose is the best, you have had a burger until you had a moose burger
It was far more complex than "Gave up its Independence". The Book "Don't tell the Newfoundlanders" and its TH-cam video will put it right into perspective of the Criminal Act the occurred. It is laughable to see it now when you fill in the blanks of when it was agreed, when it was planned and how it was pulled off- of what was already agreed before any "Referendums"- of which they had to have 3 and which the last would be considered legally dubious today. Say "Understand" and then Newfoundland and it is the correct pronunciation.
I would recommend reading "Don't tell the Newfoundlanders" by Greg Malone. It details the conspiracies between England, Canada and the United States to determine NL's fate after WW I.
It’s not a conspiracy when it’s true. Secret Documents the British and Canadians released are in the nations archives
A great presentation Geoff. It's just a pity that you used several Mercator projection maps which don't really work at these latitudes. Canada's northern islands and Greenland re nowhere near as bigger as that projection suggests and the length and direction of the great circle route to Europe is distorted.
A couple books to read about Newfoundland history if you're interested: More Than a Poor Majority by Bren Power and Come Near at Your Peril by Patrick O'Flaherty.
I appreciate the level of research. One note: you’re pronouncing the name of the province oddly. It’s New-fun-land. An easy way to remember is “understand-Newfoundland.” You’re pronouncing it like New-Finland…is there an Old-Finland? 😁 Enjoyed watching!
@@ODDentitypod Kyllä. Vanha Suomi on Euroopassa.
Sure, but at least he's not saying it like NewFOUNDland, as we so often hear people say it.
Often it is Sin Jan's (St John's) to give it the West Country England/Irish pronunciation.
@@MrJayehawk it’s more accurate. That’s what John Cabot called it. The new found land.
I would love a Northwest Territory and Yukon and Nunavut video
Thanks for making this video on the topic! However, I would not say it is “firmly Canadian” today. Many people still identify as Newfoundlanders first. There was no mention of Canada’s mismanagement and decimation of the fishing industry or the immense level of outmigration from Newfoundland since. NFLD’s position in Canada is far from ideal
Yeah most people go by Newfoundlanders first , Canadians second
I agree, not only Newfoundlanders but it seems that each region is identifyingwith thier region and not the country as a whole . I am all for regional affiliations but we are all also Canadian
@@peterrussell3470 I almost have a stronger affiliation with Britain and the old patriotic ways now than I do with modern Canada
@@Hsalf904 And its attempt at being an independent nation-state was far worse.
@@groupewaite not according to the Newfounlanders!
Always wondered where the name Labrador originated from. Well, from Portuguese explorer Joao Fernandes Lavrador who was the first European who sailed the Labrador coast. At some point it was changed from Lavrador to Labrador. Lavrador means farmer in Portuguese. Oh and the breed of dog which bares its name also originated from this area. Very interesting.
Lavrador was Joāo fernandes’ title not surname. It means “Azorean land-holder”. And the name probably comes from Joāo’s title even though like Cabot and Newfoundland it’s not for sure he ever saw Labrador or just Greenland.
@@cmhealy14 Voce fala Portugues?
The "Labrador Retriever" was originally known as the "Lesser Newfoundland", while the "Newfoundland Dog" was known as the "Greater Newfoundland".
Nice video! Two things to add: Ktaqmkuk (The Island of Newfoundland) is also the home of the Mi'kmaq people, and the Quebec provincial government still doesn't recognize the official Labrador border!
Some have made a comparison between Newfoundland and Iceland. Both are islands in the north atlantic and both were colonies of European nations until the 20th century. Geography and resources should have favoured Newfoundland as an independent country, yet it's Iceland that became successful at being a nation. This has always puzzled me. Perhaps being colonized by Denmark (Iceland) was more advantageous than being a colony of the UK (Newfoundland).
We went into a massive amount of debt (tbh we’re still in debt)
I took the opportunity in 1998 to drive across Canada from Alberta to pick up my son who with government program called Katimivik volunteered in Guelph, La Mal Baie and on Bell Isle in Conception Bay. When I get another opportunity I'd focus on a province or two and train or fly to them. Its a long drive and I didn't have nearly enough time.
Funny just recently I was wondering why Labrador was never part of Quebec, still don't know.
A big thanks to you for making this video. Really interesting, my grandfather on my dads side was Canadian but took my father and English grandmother to UK just before WW2. He ended up joining the British army getting killed in Tunisia in May 1943. I sadly know little ese about him and I have never been to Canada. However, little bits of information on excellent videos like fill in some of the history about Canada.
I visited the Canadian memorial at Vimy Ridge and the Newfoundland memorial at Beaumont Hamel, were Newfoundlanders considered to be British or Canadian troops in WW1 and WW2 as the CWGC website doesn't have a search option for Newfoundland when in the "Country Served" section?
Get there! It's a beautiful country!
Newfoundlanders were Newfoundlanders and not Canadians in WWI. They fought beside them but no different than fighting beside other allies like the French and Australians. In fact Newfoundland fought in gallipoli along the ANZACs while Canadians did not. Vimy Ridge was built in honour of the Canadians (not including Newfoundland) who found and won at vimy ridge for the first time as a Canadian unit (and not just as part of a large British force) thus it is one of the early unifying moments for the then young nation. British troops and others failed to take the ridge but Canadians won and as Canadians, not just part of a bigger British empire group. Beaumont Hamel was where the Newfoundland regiment (basically the army raised to fight for the empire by the independent nation of Newfoundland) suffered its worse defeat on July 1st 1916 on the first day of the battle of the Somme. Of over 800 men to start the day, only 68 made roll call the following. As the country only had about 240,000 people, this was a devastating loss. Also, Newfoundland didn’t send its destitute to war. Most were the sons of the elites and leading families. The loss of these men, many not even in their 20s yet, was like a huge brain drain to the country which likely played a huge role in its collapse less than 20 years later when if not for the war many of them would have been its leaders and captains of industry. The Newfoundland government couldn’t afford a big fancy war memorial like other allied powers so it instead bought a piece of land where many of its people died and for the most part left it as it was. Hence while other nations have beautiful monuments, the Newfoundland memorial instead gives you a look of what the land probably looked like when those that fought, died there.
Cool. Never knew this. Wow. 😊
I am currently watching a segment on Newfoundland,and noticed that your map featured on Around the World with Geoff replaces Newtoundland with a geograghically misplaced Baffin Island.
As a Newfoundlander I’m sadden to see the misinformation on your video. Please read the book “don’t tell the Newfoundlanders”.
What misinformation?
@@davidlynch4852 The offical name "Newfoundland and Labrador" was adopted on Dec 6th 2001 not in 1949.
@@brianbee I remember that. It was just called Newfoundland before then.
@@brianbeeI remember that, before then it was just called Newfoundland when I learned this in the 80's.
@@davidlynch4852 All of it.
I also saw in another video a while back, that another major reason they wanted to settle Newfoundland and Labrador's status issue is because during WW2, lots of US military personnel and families moved to the island and slowly integrating in with the locals and making the economy better, so then there was a small Pro-US statehood movement growing, so the UK and Canadian governments wanted to move fast and pushed a referendum to not lose more land to the US.
They also kept the option of joining the U.S. off the ballot to completely remove that possibility
@@bg1052 Correct👍
I was told that when the Americans built their bases in Newfoundland they had to agree to pay the locals less than what they wanted to originally as the Brits and their local leaders didn’t want the locals to know how terrible they treated them. If the yanks pay them too much they might stop slaving away for the merchants
While important US bases and military personnel hardly equaled the influence of the connections with Canada, especially Cape Breton Island in Nova Scotia. Entire Communities in NS are populated with Newfoundland people. Port Hawkesbury in NS grew from a village into a substantial town with one of the last influxes of Newfoundland people circa 1961. Revisionist history at times forgets the Alphabet Fleet and the Ferry System beginning with the SS Bruce. Newfoundlanders took trips to Cape Breton to celebrate Dominion Day long before 1949 and long before US bases.
I believe the name Newfoundland and Labrador was only adopted as the official name of the province in December 2001
because he's actually saying New Finland
Newfoundland and Labrador, the easternmost province of Canada, is composed of the island of Newfoundland and the mainland Labrador Peninsula. Its diverse geography includes rugged coastlines, vast forests, and towering mountains. The province is famous for its maritime climate, which brings cooler temperatures and heavy rainfall. The map of Newfoundland and Labrador highlights its unique position, separated by the Strait of Belle Isle, with Newfoundland on the island to the south and Labrador on the mainland to the north. This region is rich in natural resources and a hub for outdoor exploration.
From the opening scene, the Mercator projection map super-exaggerates the Arctic islands, particularly Ellesmere. It is less than a ⅓ the size of Alberta.
Interesting video, but only complaint is that the music conflicts too much with your voice and makes it hard for me to understand. Thank you for listening.
No mention of St. Pierre and Miquelon. As a Geography centric channel,.. That was an opportunity missed.
Signed - West Coast Canadian that knows his countries own geography. Cheers
France not Canada.
@@DonKnight-qi4tu yes, but France is the 3rd closest country to Canada, after the land borders with the United States and Denmark.
@@DonKnight-qi4tu What's your point? Obviously it's France. That's what would have made highlighting that fact more intriguing and added to the depth of the video.
@@BC-X The video is about Newfoundland and Labrador. The only thing St. Pierre and Miquelon was known for was as a supply depot for Al Capone during prohibition. Don't drink, don't care and really don't care about France.
How is St Pierre relevant to the story of the Dominion of Newfoundland ending its independence? Did St Pierre influence that process in any way? (It didn’t)
Better research and substance than other videos recently so good job
Anytime you say Newfoundland, the subtitles say "New Finland".
Yeah the pronunciation was jarring to me each time I heard it.
@@Cleaver152really? Is it not the locally correct pronunciation?
@@jimlawton4184 not quite, Newfoundland rhymes with understand, the -land part is pronounced as it’s written, new-fn-land, not new-fin-lind
AI speech.
His pronunciation is not bad.Ive heard way worse from most people.
Excellent video. I’m Canadian and never quite understood about Labrador
Fascinating story.
Thank you for telling it.
☮
Newfoundland & Labrador was an automonous dominion within the British Empire but was basically a colony. A lot of Irish immigrated to Newfoundland & developed a distinct dialect of the Irish language on the island 🇬🇧🇨🇦🇮🇪 Canada is still part of the British Commonwealth but the British government doesn't have direct jurisdiction over Canada. I've spoken with some Canadians from different provinces & several of them said that they want their country to be an independent republic.
Unfortunately for those that may want to toss the English crown aside, Justin’s dad Pierre made that almost impossible in the constitution they adopted in 1980.
Irish
100 years ago
Let's leave one poor island with bad weather to go to another poor island with worse weather 😂
@@joebloe4374 Ireland is a beautiful land, the Emerald Isle 🍀🇮🇪💚
@@bjdon99 my Canadian history is a bit hazy, but is that from the Constitution Act of 1982, where Canada could amend its own constitution without approval from the UK?
Yes. Any change to the status of the monarchy in Canada needs to be approved by both Houses of Parliament and all 10 provincial legislatures. It is hard to see that ever happening.
I remember old maps in grade school having NewFoundland and Labrador in diff colors from Canada
My (Newfoundlander) grandparents had a Rand-McNally globe that had all of Canada in pink...except for Labrador in orange. Took me years to consider that maybe they marked it as a contested territory, as it was contested by Newfoundland & Quebec.
Very good video
There are some errors in the history. Newfoundland became a dominion (a colony which is completely internally self-governing, whilst Britain remains responsible for external affairs and defence) in 1907 - exactly 40 years after Canada achieved the same status, in 1867. Along with Canada (and Australia, NZ, Ireland and South Africa), Newfoundland became completely independent in 1931. In 1934, it voluntarily relinquished both internal and external independence and ceased to be a dominion (it did not become a dominion, per the video, that year). It was administered directly from Westminster as a crown colony until it joined the Dominion of Canada in 1949.
Totally terrific.
Love your geography, but recommend you show maps of large areas on a spherical projection. Canada’s Arctic doesn’t have an enormous northern extent as appears in the flat protection
It would be interesting if Nova Scotia 🇨🇦, Tasmania 🇳🇿, and Newfoundland 🇫🇷 gained independence like taiwan 🇹🇼
Amazing 👏👏
Love stumbling upon videos about home!
13:32 - "and Labrador" was added in 2001, not 1949.
As an Irishman living in Canada for 20 years...
I've never felt more 'at home' than than my time spent in NFLD.
When I was a kid I thought new found land was such a cool name. Still do
"God guard thee Newfoundland
God guard thee, God guard thee
God guard thee Newfoundland."
Even Newfoundland's anthem song sounds cool, too!
As a Newfoundlander I really enjoyed the video:)
The Lake Melville area of Labrador is something to marvel at, as people there have their gardens planted before June, summers that can go past 40C, salmon rivers thrive, people grow things like corn and tomatoes, and its more akin to northern Ontario. Be aware, the way you showed the Inuit & Innu of Labrador gives the implication of relation, they are not. Inuit are their own people from Siberia to Greenland (including Nunatsiavut in Northern Labrador), whereas the Innu are 'First Nations' (or 'indian' as some used to refer to them as). There are two reservations but there is zero innu presences on Labrador's south coast (thats more southern Inuit who call themselves Nunatukavut) but there are Innu further down on the Quebec North Shore. but the Innu do not use Igloos or actual dog teams or the komatik, that is all Inuit. They live in proximity to each other (the 'border' is Northwest River which is over 50% Inuit and Sheshatshiu Innu First Nation Reserve across the river from it and formerly a part of NWR til 1976). The Inuit of Nunatsiavut live in their land claim negotiated by their treaty, a special administrative district called Nunatsiavut.
Labrador never even got it's own MP til the 1980s, before then sharing one with Green Bay, an area in Central Newfoundland. Also of note, there is a lot of regional disparity between Labrador and Newfoundland as there is a history of Newfoundland exploiting Labrador's resources from mining to silviculture to fishing to hydroelectricity.
also 14:12 that's not Labrador, that's Corner Brook/Curling/Bay Of Islands on Newfoundland's west coast (before Corner Brook existed, the pic was taken in Curling which to this day operates as a fishing town, now a part of the City Of Corner Brook).
Thank you for using meters instead of feet in this video
I like your video's but being from newfoundland I got to let you know that the name is said the way it's spelled New-found-land.
Keep up the good videos!
OMG! as a Canadian I had no idea it wasnt till 1939 that NL&L became a province in Canada. like i know about the flame with all the creasts and dates but i guess i didnt look close enough. I also had no idea about the wars in NL&L.
I wasnt taught any of this in school.
As always, great presentation... How bout a video on another maritime province, Nova Scotia comes to mind
Nicely done and a good reminder of history. Your pronunciations are off however - particularly Newfoundland, Beothuk and Bonavista.
Some maps show that parts of the border between Labrador and Quebec are disputed in some areas and undefined in another area. Although Canada abandoned its territorial claim when Newfoundland joined confederation the Province of Quebec maintains its claim to some of the Labrador territory. I hope that both provinces can come to a mutually beneficial agreement on a definitive and permanent border.
“Some maps”. The only maps that show this are ones made by Quebec.
Incredibly beautiful land. Love from your brother in Alberta.
The French haven’t completely left. You forgot to mention St. Pierre et Miquelon which is a 1.5 hour ferry ride that belongs to France to this day.
Back then, NL was a British territory at the time. Weird why they became part of Canada.
Why? Both are former British dominions, both were and are monarchies with the same head of state. Seems pretty natural to me.
@@groupewaite, Canada became the first Dominion of the British Empire becoming independent on July 1, 1867. Originally, it consists of Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia as they build a railway between Windsor in Ontario and Halifax and Cape Breton in Nova Scotia. As Canada expands, the railway goes north of Lakes Huron and Superior and through the Prairies and then it makes it to Vancouver. Dominions formed their own government, but kept the monarch as their head of state.
@@CrystalClearWith8BEYes, i know that! Why is that weird that Newfoundland joined the Canadian confederation???
It took two referendums. Independence won the first but as it didn’t get 51% they had a second one with the third option (remain a colony) removed in which confed won 52 to 48%. Many question its validity and wonder if England may have weighted the scales. 1940s Newfoundland got a taste of American prosperity after centuries of British austerity. And these were saviours of the free world Americans whose image wasn’t yet tainted by Vietnam and other Cold War ventures. I doubt an independent Newfoundland would have survived long but next time it fell it may have been Uncle Sam offering a bail out instead of mother England and the dominion may have then become either a US territory like Puerto Rico or quite possibly a state (remember in 1949, both Alaska and Hawaii were also territories and unlike those two distant lands, Newfoundlanders were pretty much just cold water Bostonians).
Newfoundland had no choice in the end. The referendums were the Newfs being dragged kicking and screaming into the Canadian Confederation . But the Brits were shedding the empire and the idea of the US taking over was not going to fly either.
My dad was stationed at a US Air Force post at the northern top of Labrador in the late 1940's early 50's. It made a profound I impact on him throughout his life.
My dad was stationed there too at that time. Met and married my mom at Fort Pepperrell, St. John's. Mom passed in 2017 and never lost her voice accent.
I enjoyed the video. Thanks. So when Canada becomes our 51st state will Labrador and Newfoundland remain a distinct entity?
You don't want the whole country, trust me.... leave Quebec to themselves.... haha
Good video... FYI, Québec still doesn't recognize the ownership of Labrador by Newfoundland. :)
Well... c'est la vie!
*southern Labrador
@@revinhatol *inland Labrador
The podcast clearly states that in 1927 that two soverign nations at the time, Canada and Newfoundland, with England's agreement, agreed to whom Labrador belonged to. Quebec (their interests were Canada's responsibility) was and is a province of Canada, so I do not think there is a legal case to refute the boundry in my opinion. The vote to join Confederation was close, only 52%.
@@raymondfranke154There isn’t, you’re right. But that’s not stopping Quebec from currently drawing their maps like they own Labrador though apparently.
The province was called Newfoundland upon joining in 1949. It was only at the end of 2001 that it formally became "Newfoundland and Labrador".
I am living in Newfoundland, I can confirm that this the most depressive and windy place in the world due to weather
*I am living on the Avalon*
Lots of cheap electricity if ypu want ot then 😊
I wouldn’t characterize it as “depressive.” That’s a little much. When I was growing up, we just accepted the weather as it was and moved on with our lives. Not much you can do about it. 🤷 Except move.. 😅
The west coast and central are amazing. A lot of the east is too. It's just St John's is notorious for it's weather and everyone moves there. Oh well it weeds out the good ones for us
@@ODDentitypodAlmost everyone I know suffers from seasonal depression and everyone is miserable in April as the winter has dragged on now for 6 months, and we are still getting wet, slushy snowstorms while we see the rest of the country get close to 20° days.
Interestingly-well at least to me- Nfld has the same population as another former British settler island colony-Tasmania
Wonderful. My mom and I will be traveling from Alberta to Newfoundland in August and after viewing a remarkably small variety of geographic type videos I thought I would just prefer to start at the start. I did learn that at jobs was the first place of North America. Makes sense……..English, Irish, Scottish immigrants flooded west as it expanded, with bits of Italians, Germans, Dutch, polish and wee bit of Chinese and middle eastern immigrants. I heard recently that many who now immigrate hear that prairie people, with their ancestral “baggage” aren’t overly welcoming and Toronto is the geographical barrier to further immigrate west.
Nonetheless I have travelled very little and I want to learn about where I am going so I can make a more informed decision on where I want to go and what I want to do when I get there, instead of relying on anyone else to convince me how to spend my money and my time. Though it does not take much to learn about it about a place so you might find marvelous conversations with people that your will meet. Those who’ve been there for a few generations. We are only 150 years old. The (surprise) baby of the global human family.
History, language, I just can’t get enough of these topics, so I am delighted to watch this excellently presented trip through history. Thank you kindly my friend
Good! - but a couple things: the only time population is mentioned in its contemporary pop - knowing its population size in earlier periods would have been useful. Also, the use of Mercator projections is highly misleading - it makes the Arctic archipelago many many time larger than it actually is.
Oh wow! I never knew Newfoundland And Labrador was its own country! I learned something new today!
I sort of knew this but didn't understand why. I visited the Newfoundland memorial at Beaumont Hamel and the Canadian memorial at Vimy Ridge so this does explain some reasons why they were considered separate back then.
It was its own country for about 25 years. Until 1934 when it couldn't afford to be independent and went back to being a colony of England. In the late 1940s England didn't want to continue with Newfoundland as a colony so Newfoundland had to choose either becoming an independent country again, join Canada, or join the US. Couldn't afford to be independent country, didn't want to be Americans, so joined Canada.
Could you do a video on Greenland or Iceland?
I've only got two territories and one province left to visit in Canada, and that province is Newfie-land. If anyone has travel tips lemme know!
Unless you LOVE driving, you should pick & choose what you want to see. The tourism videos always show Gros Morne, The Viking Settlement at L'Anse aux Meadows, & St. Johns in the same commercial, but they are almost as far from each other as you can get while staying on the island (that is bigger than Ireland).
@@arizonajoe6813 tip number 1... Don't pronounce it Newfie land.... We love a good joke at our expense but we don't like the mispronunciation of Newf in LAND. BTW... you'll love it... Best time weather wise is late June through end of August. George Street festival in St. john's, whale watching, Gros Morne National park etc etc ..
Why no mention of Basque fishing settlement?
The Basque whalers
Joey yup the first and worst! Might want to visit his resting place on James lane in st.johns. I can’t think of a better place on the island to relieve yourself ,that pure feeling of happiness will overcome you!!!
Is there any other example of an independent State basically declaring bankruptcy and going out off business?
Scotland
@@milenpenchev Right, the Drien Scheme disaster, 1707.
Darien Scheme
Portugal, Ireland, Greece, and Spain just about 16 years ago. And pretty much most of South America at one time or other. Fortunately for them the IMF existed (or for some South Americans, teddy Roosevelt and his love for the Monroe doctrine did). And Newfoundland didn’t declare bankruptcy. It wanted to but the UK wouldn’t let it (probably because they were the ones who the money was owed to). So instead to cover its debts it was forced to give up its independence. And to think, the Greeks thought the Germans and the EU gave them a hard bargain in 2008. Maybe it’s a cruel comparison but the closest to Nfld giving up independence to UK rule would probably be the German Annexation of Austria in 1938.
I believe Jamaica back in the 1700s
Hey Geoff I'm from Western nfld you should speak for central or Eastern nfld cause Western nfld doesn't have a mild climate we get winter below freezing as low as -40 c summers are nice but winter I'd argue what you laid down I've seen snow completely covering houses too an add in fact I only lived on the island for 20 years Eastern nfld is far more mild from what I've seen and heard tho
What is with the background music?
Great video highlighting the history of the province. One thing though.. it’s not pronounced Newfin-lind. It’s -land.. Newfoundland rhymes with understand.
we were ther for 10 days a few years ago. wwe're going back for longer.
Dude, there is so much you missed regarding French and Mi’kmaq relationships and how the Mi’kmaq ended up moving to NL in more numbers. Joey Smallwood did not claim having Indigenous people on the land when they joined Canada which has serious implications and troubles for the Mi’kmaq people today.
Newfoundland still has a border dispute with Quebec over Labrador
Labrador is quebec
@@cypriano8763 Ya not! Labrador is Labrador!
No it does not it's been settled since 1927 and Labrador has always been Newfoundland soil lol
@@cypriano8763Cope and seethe frog
@@Nx0-o1i nope its quebecs