After the Basques - The Whaling Stations of Newfoundland and Labrador - Anthony B. Dickinson & Chesley W. Sanger

Part Number:75167
You need to be a registered customer to order this product. Please Login to your account or click here to Register.

From about 1530 to the early 1600s, Basque whalers from France and Spain annually visited Labrador to hunt right and bowhead whales. Their station at Red Bay, the whaling capital of the time, was proclaimed a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2013.

Following small-scale traditional hunts by American and local crews, modern whaling arrived in Newfoundland  and Labrador in 1898 with the establishment of a processing plant in Snook’s Arm, Notre Dame Bay, and ended at South Dildo and Williamsport in 1972 when the government of Canada placed a moratorium on the non-indigenous hunt.

During that period, twenty-seven companies supported by some sixty vessels sporadically operated from twenty-one stations to catch almost 20.000 whales in local waters.

 After the Basques: The Whaling Stations of Newfoundland and Labrador offers readers a comprehensive account of the stations, vessels, companies, and personnel involved.

Anthony Dickinson and Chesley Sanger have put together a well illustrated, very readable, and highly informative book which is a must for anyone interested in the history of Newfoundland and Labrador.