Breakwater Wharf Encasement Hant’s Harbour, Newfoundland

Hant’s Harbour, a small fishing community located on the southeast side of Trinity Bay on the Bay de Verde Peninsula, was settled by four English families in the 16th century to harvest the abundant codfish on the nearby rich fishing grounds. During the 17th and 18th centuries, because of the abunda...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Downey, Jamie Arthur
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Memorial University of Newfoundland 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.library.mun.ca/index.php/prototype/article/view/492
Description
Summary:Hant’s Harbour, a small fishing community located on the southeast side of Trinity Bay on the Bay de Verde Peninsula, was settled by four English families in the 16th century to harvest the abundant codfish on the nearby rich fishing grounds. During the 17th and 18th centuries, because of the abundance of codfish, Hant’s Harbour’s population continued to grow as other English settlers and families sailed across the Atlantic and established their fishing plantations around the sheltered shoreline of the harbour. In 1929, the Janes family, a well-known family in the community, established the first commercial small fish processing operation on the northeast side of the harbour, near the entrance and partially sheltered from the strong northerly and north easterly winds that blew directly into the harbour. As fishing activities expanded and a variety of species were being harvested, a larger processing facility and harbour structure was needed to accommodate larger fishing vessels and additional fishing enterprises. As a result, more protection and a larger sheltered berthage area became necessary and thus the need to construct a breakwater structure near the entrance to the harbour to protect the fishing boats and those involved in the fishing industry. As the fishing industry continued to expand and the protection of the harbour improved, flotillas of tourists and fishermen traveling within the Trinity Bay area also began using the port for overnight accommodations and as a safe haven during stormy and inclement weather. In the late 1990’s and early 2000, the first breakwater structure was built near the entrance to the harbour. However, due to destructive wave action caused by large storms, the breakwater soon needed repairs and upgrades. In 2008, with funding assistance from Federal Fisheries and Oceans Canada, a Small Craft Harbour Funding Project was approved and work began on the upgrade of the breakwater and repairs to the existing infrastructure around the wharf to increase the protected berthage and to ...