Freshwater (Carbonear)
Local Service District


Carbonear, NL (Nearby: Victoria, Harbour Grace, Bryant's Cove, Salmon Cove (Victoria ), Upper Island Cove)

  • Detail

206 WATER ST
Carbonear, A1Y 1A0


Newfoundland Tourism Region : Avalon


Freshwater-Carbonear: There is a lot of interesting facts about the community of Freshwater-Carbonear, written by Roland Noel, who grew up there with his brother Davis and two sisters Glenys and Gertrude (Gee).

In his introduction he wrote: During my boyhood days growing up in Freshwater I was always interested in the history of the town and its people. Over many years I have managed to accumulate some of its history and it is with pleasure that I share it with you and the world. I invite you to visit this small community with its boundless beauty and deep history, where the past and present meet.

Take a journey along the paths, trails and headlands of my forefathers, tread where they once trod on land whose contours have not changed since time immemorial. Stand where two empires, the French and the English, once fought for the possession of a small island called Carbonear Island.

Take a stroll along the rocky beaches and listen to the swishing of the tide as it ebbs and flows in a slow perpetual motion on a ghostly moonlit night. You too may hear "the hollers on the sound" from the old ghost ship of long ago. Take a day, relax, enjoy and let me know.

While the section that follows is quite lengthy, because it is so full of information it is included in its totality: great A Primer On the History of Freshwater Welcome to one of Canada's oldest settlements, with a history dating back to the 1600s.

Freshwater is a small fishing village on the rockbound coast of Newfoundland, located along the craggy shoreline of Conception Bay in two shallow coves where lofty headlands meet the sky.

Early History & Conflict

A journal kept by Abbe Jean Baudoin, who accompanied Pierre Le Moyne d'Iberville on an expedition to Newfoundland in 1696 and 1697, mentions the town he calls Fraische Quatre and recorded it as having 20 soldiers and two non-military citizens and residents.

During the French and British wars, Freshwater was to play a pivotal role in maintaining an English presence in Newfoundland.

In 1697, 1705 and 1762 the French army attacked many communities along the shores of Conception Bay, plundering and destroying the settlements in their wake. The settlers from Carbonear and the surrounding area moved to the Island of Carbonear.

Legend has it the French never entered the settlement of Freshwater. As a boy growing up in this quaint historic town, I recall the elder residents referring to the road that runs over Freshwater Hill as the "Battery."

It was here on this strategic headland that overlooks Carbonear Island and the entrance to Carbonear Harbour that the invading army was stopped.

We are told that the French were never able to advance into Freshwater as the soldiers and fisher folk of the town who manned the garrison fought them back. The bodies of the soldiers killed in the battles were buried in Freshwater in unmarked graves near the old British fort.

I remember the old cannons in Freshwater. One was located along the coastline between Clowns Cove and Freshwater Cove in Butts' garden.

It has since been moved and put on display at Harbour Rock Hill in Carbonear. The other was stationed on Freshwater Hill where the garrison once stood.

It disappeared within the past 30 years, leaving the history of this small town to pass into obscurity. All that remains is the fading ghost of a time that was.

It was a world whose citizens fought the elements, hardships, disease and the storms of war seeking a better tomorrow. As Clement Noel wrote in 1774, "for it is a rough and thorny road that we are walking in."

Why They Came

Like those of many old Newfoundland communities, the early settlers who came to Freshwater did so to escape oppression and to find a new freedom in a new world.

What they found was a lawless society where drunkenness and disorder reigned. They lost family members to ravaging disease and fought relentless storms to harvest the fruits of the sea.

With sweated brow and bended back they cleared an untamed land to feed their animals and grow their crops. Through it all they prevailed to become a proud and God-fearing people who left their mark on generations to come.

The first settlers of this picturesque village are believed to have came here with the fishing admirals during the summer fishing season and never returned in the autumn as required by English Law at that time in history.

No one knows for certain. We do know that many of the early pioneers came here from the British Isles and the Channel Islands. One such settler was Clement Noel (an ancestor of mine) who came here from the Isle of Jersey sometime in the 1700s. He was one of the earliest Methodist followers in the area.

Laurence Coughlan, the first Methodist missionary to Newfoundland, often visited him in Freshwater and after Coughlan returned to England they continued to correspond, as evidenced by a letter Clement wrote to Mr. Coughlan in 1774.

A Thriving Community

By the latter part of the 1800s and into the 1900s, Freshwater had become a thriving community with a population of about 560 people. It boasted a church, two schools, a postal telegraph office, a railway station and courthouse, several general stores, a photo studio and a number of vessels engaged in the seal hunt.

As the local fishing grounds became crowded, many families went to the Labrador and the French Shore in the summer to fish, returning in the fall.

Most had small gardens they planted in the spring and harvested in the autumn. In winter some men worked in the lumber and mining industries or went off to Canada and the United States to seek employment.

In later years many young people left the fishing industry to become tradesmen, carpenters, plumbers and mechanics, while others went on to higher education and became teachers, doctors, clergymen, lawyers and businessmen.

As the clouds of war rolled across Europe in 1914 and again in 1939, many young men from Freshwater answered the call and marched off to war, back to the lands of their ancestors to defend the freedom those ancestors had sought and won so long ago.

In the changing winds of time you can hear the whispering roll call of the old family names of the past and present: Parsons, Moores, Davis, Pike, Butt, Penney, Whidler, Noel, Pottle, Sweet, Dolby, Cahill, Hammond, Joyce.

Many of the names have long since left with the ebbing tide of life, leaving as the only reminder they were here an entry in an old church record or an inscription on a weather-beaten grave marker in the old church cemetery,by the winding brook that flows onward to the sea from whence they came.

Used with permission from "Uncovering the Origin of 1001 Unique Place Names in Newfoundland and Labrador" 2021 Jennifer Leigh Hill

Address of this page: http://nl.ruralroutes.com/FreshwaterCarbonear



Need driving directions? Enter your location:

Freshwater (Carbonear),

Have something to say about Freshwater (Carbonear)?

Tell us, and we'll tell the world!

Your name:
Your email address:
Your phone number:
(optional)   
Your Review:

Visitors to this page: 1,454     Emails sent through this page: 1     This record last updated: May 30, 2023

Nearby: