Anticosti Island: Difference between revisions

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Menier's brother Gaston inherited the Island, and sold it, in July 1926, for $6 million dollars, to the [[Wayagamac Pulp and Paper]] company.<ref name=nytimes1926-05-12/><ref name=nytimes1926-07-20/>  In 1958 one reporter described how deer were so plentiful hunters could confidently wait to shoot the largest bucks, and ignore does and less mature males.<ref name=nytimes1958-10-15/>
Menier's brother Gaston inherited the Island, and sold it, in July 1926, for $6 million dollars, to the [[Wayagamac Pulp and Paper]] company.<ref name=nytimes1926-05-12/><ref name=nytimes1926-07-20/>  In 1958 one reporter described how deer were so plentiful hunters could confidently wait to shoot the largest bucks, and ignore does and less mature males.<ref name=nytimes1958-10-15/>


===1938 ownership bid from Nazi Germany===
===Logging operations, 1926-1938, and the German ownership bid===


A consortium of [[German]] companies, backed by the German government, negotiated purchase with the timber company that then owned the island, in late 1937.<ref name=nytimes1938-08-16/>  The proposed purchase triggered opposition, and the Quebec government barred the sale, and the export of forest products, from the island.<ref name=nytimes1938-04-14/>
By 1938 [[Consolidated Paper]] owned the island.<ref name=nytimes1938-08-16/>  They said they had shut down all logging operations in 1929, and had kept paying staff on the island for the past nine years.  According to the ''New York Times'', they claimed $1.5 million would be required ''"to rehabilitate equipment and install new machinery"'', before they would be able to recommence logging operations.
 
A consortium of [[German]] companies, backed by the German government, initiated purchase negotiations with Consolidated, in late 1937.<ref name=nytimes1938-08-16/>  The proposed purchase triggered opposition, and the Quebec government barred the sale, and the export of forest products, from the island.<ref name=nytimes1938-04-14/>
 
Consolidated claimed it had never occurred to them that a sale to German companies, of an island near a key shipping lane, could put Canada's national security at risk.<ref name=nytimes1938-08-16/>


==Geography==
==Geography==

Revision as of 10:40, 7 August 2022

Anticosti Island, seen in the middle of the Gulf of St Lawrence, is slightly smaller than Puerto Rico.[1]

Anticosti Island is a large, but largely unpopulated island in the Gulf of St. Lawrence.[2] It is currently part of the Province of Quebec, although, at times, it was part of Newfoundland. The island is slightly smaller than Puerto Rico.[1]

The shoals surrounding the Island have represented serious navigational dangers, and its coast is lined with lighthouses.

History

Jolliet

The French King gave the explorer Louis Jolliet the seigneurship of the island in 1680 as a reward for discovering the Mississippi.[1][3] However, there is no record he made any efforts to exploit his gift.

1881 famine

The failure of the local fishery, in 1881, resulted in a local famine, that required aid from the Government of Quebec.[4]

Ownership by the Menier family

Henri Menier, a citizen of France, bought the Island, in 1895, for $125,000, with ambitious development plans.[5][1][2] Port Menier, a community of approximately 200 individuals, and the island's only remaining settlement, is named after him.

the New York Times reported Menier built new port facilities, lumber mills, canneries, a fleet of support vessels, and a railroad.[1] They also reported "The Quebec Government gave him cordial support in ejecting the undesirables who had squatted on the island..." Menier, they said, recruited "law-abiding and thrifty French Canadian families" as his new settlers. In its obituary of him, in 1913, the New York Times reported Menier's careful selection of settlers had meant there had been no crime, on the island, and thus no need for Police.

The island had relatively few species of mammals native to it.[2] Menier, in an attempt to turn the island into a destination for hunters, tried to introduce to it species hunters targetted.[1] His attempts to introduce some species, like American Bison were not successful. His introduction of deer, from the mainland, was so successful that, in 1941, the deer population was estimated at 100,000.[6]

Menier's brother Gaston inherited the Island, and sold it, in July 1926, for $6 million dollars, to the Wayagamac Pulp and Paper company.[7][8] In 1958 one reporter described how deer were so plentiful hunters could confidently wait to shoot the largest bucks, and ignore does and less mature males.[9]

Logging operations, 1926-1938, and the German ownership bid

By 1938 Consolidated Paper owned the island.[10] They said they had shut down all logging operations in 1929, and had kept paying staff on the island for the past nine years. According to the New York Times, they claimed $1.5 million would be required "to rehabilitate equipment and install new machinery", before they would be able to recommence logging operations.

A consortium of German companies, backed by the German government, initiated purchase negotiations with Consolidated, in late 1937.[10] The proposed purchase triggered opposition, and the Quebec government barred the sale, and the export of forest products, from the island.[11]

Consolidated claimed it had never occurred to them that a sale to German companies, of an island near a key shipping lane, could put Canada's national security at risk.[10]

Geography

The island's tallest peak is approximately 1000 foot (304.8 m) tall.[2] The island's peaks are part of the Appalachian Mountain chain.

rough work

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 M. Menier's Anticosti experiment, New York Times, 1913-09-10, p. 8. Retrieved on 2022-08-07.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Nelson Bryant. Outdoors: Still Life and Wildlife on Lush Anticosti, New York Times, 1989-11-27, p. C9. Retrieved on 2022-08-07. “Situated in the Gulf of St. Lawrence between Quebec's North Shore and the tip of the Gaspe Peninsula, Anticosti is 140 miles long and 35 miles wide, with a maximum altitude of about 1,000 feet.”
  3. Red Smith. Assault with a deadly flyrod, New York Times, 1967-07-30, p. 15. Retrieved on 2022-08-07.
  4. Famine on Anticosti Island, New York Times, 1881-10-06. Retrieved on 2022-08-07.
  5. ANTICOSTI SOLD TO FRENCHMEN: A Large and Valuable Island of the Quebec Province Syndicated, New York Times, 1895-04-25, p. 5. Retrieved on 2022-08-07.
  6. Raymond R. Camp. Wood, Field and Stream, New York Times, 1941-10-08, p. 33. Retrieved on 2022-08-07.
  7. All of Anticosti sold; French Senator, It Is Said, Will Use Part of Proceeds to Aid Franc, New York Times, 1926-05-12, p. 10. Retrieved on 2022-08-07.
  8. Confirms Anticosti Pulp Deal, New York Times, 1926-07-20. Retrieved on 2022-08-07.
  9. John W. Randoph. Wood, Field and Stream: Horn of Plenty Is Found in Anticosti, but Hunter Wants to Play Hiawatha, New York Times, 1958-10-15, p. 54. Retrieved on 2022-08-07.
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 CANADA ENDS SURVEY OF ANTICOSTI ISLAND; Defense Value Studied as German Option to Buy Is Held Up, New York Times, 1938-08-16, p. 7. Retrieved on 2022-08-07.
  11. BARS PULPWOOD FOR REICH; Quebec Decision Spikes German Plan to Get Anticosti, New York Times, 1938-04-14. Retrieved on 2022-08-07.