Pêcheurs, Pâturages, et petit jardins: a nineteenth-century gardien homestead in the Petit Nord, Newfoundland

Gardiens were anglophone settlers hired by the French fishermen in Newfoundland's Petit Nord to protect their supplies and fishing structures overwinter, and as such guard their interests in a valuable resource base. Excavations at Genille (EgAw-07) focused on the nineteenth-century homestead o...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jones, Jennifer K.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Memorial University of Newfoundland 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.library.mun.ca/9232/
https://research.library.mun.ca/9232/1/Jones_JenniferK.pdf
Description
Summary:Gardiens were anglophone settlers hired by the French fishermen in Newfoundland's Petit Nord to protect their supplies and fishing structures overwinter, and as such guard their interests in a valuable resource base. Excavations at Genille (EgAw-07) focused on the nineteenth-century homestead of an Irish Catholic gardien, Patrick Kearney, as well as the shared use of the surrounding landscape by both the Irish-Newfoundland settlers and the French fishermen. This study has three objectives: to examine the interactions between French fishermen and gardiens by looking at how negotiations of power and social relations between the two groups are manifest in the material culture and historical documents; to determine changes in landscape use over time during the transition of Genille from seasonal resource base to permanent settlement; and finally to determine the archaeological signature for an anglophone settler house in the Petit Nord.