'Anticosti Island' (
French, ''ÃŽle d'Anticosti'') is an
island at the outlet of the
Saint Lawrence River into the
Gulf of Saint Lawrence, in
Quebec, between 49° and 50° N., and between 61° 40' and 64° 30' W. At 7,892.52 square kilometres (3,047.3 sq mi) in size, it is the
90th largest island in the world and
20th largest island in Canada. Anticosti Island is separated on the north from the
Côte-Nord region of Quebec (the
Labrador Peninsula) by the
Jacques Cartier Strait and on the south from the
Gaspé Peninsula by the
Honguedo Strait.
It is very large (217 km or 135 mi long and 16-48 km or 10-30 mi wide — larger than the province of
Prince Edward Island), but very sparsely populated (266 people in 2001), mostly in the village of
Port-Menier on the western tip of the island, consisting chiefly of the keepers of the numerous lighthouses erected by the Canadian government. The coast is rocky and dangerous, and has only two safe harbours, Ellis Bay and Fox Bay. The largest lake on the island is
Lake Wickenden, which feeds the Jupiter River.
History
For thousands of years, Anticosti Island was the territory of the
indigenous peoples who lived on the mainland and used it as a hunting ground. The
Innu called it Notiskuan, translated as "where bears are hunted" and the
Mi'kmaq called it Natigostec, meaning "forward land". The
French explorer
Jacques Cartier sailed along its shore in the summer of 1534. He called the place Assomption and provided its first written description. By the early 1600s
France had officially seized the island and made it part of its
colonial empire. Its first settlers arrived when in 1680
King Louis XIV gifted to
Louis Jolliet the
Seigneury of the
Mingan Archipelago and Anticosti Island. Equal to one-quarter the size of the country of
Belgium, Anticosti thus became the largest island in the world to ever be privately owned. Louis Jolliet erected a fort on Anticosti and in the spring of 1681 settled there with his wife, four children and six servants. His fort was captured and occupied during the winter of 1690 by some of the
Massachusetts troops of
William Phips during their retreat after an unsuccessful attempt to capture
Quebec City. The Jolliet family retained ownership until 1763 when it became part of the
British Empire under the terms of the
Treaty of Paris that ended the
Seven Years' War. In the ensuing years the island property changed hands several times, its owners generally using it for the harvesting of timber.
In 1895 Anticosti was sold to
French chocolate maker Henri Menier who also leased the shore fisheries rights. Menier converted the island into a personal game preserve and named the Island's 70 metre high
Vauréal Falls after the town of
Vauréal in France where he owned a home.
Henri Menier constructed the entire village of
Port-Menier, built a cannery for packing
fish and
lobsters, and attempted to develop its resources of lumber,
peat, and minerals. Many of the original houses still stand today. Menier also introduced a herd of 220
deer to the island. Without natural predators such as wolves, the deer thrived and today the population exceeds 100,000 while the island's moose population is about 1,000.
Henri Menier died in 1913 and his brother
Gaston became the owner of Anticosti Island. He used and maintained it for a time but eventually decided it was not an economically viable proposition and sold it to the Wayagamack Pulp and Paper Company in 1926.
In 1974, the government of Quebec purchased the island. With its 24 rivers and streams bountiful with
salmon and
trout, it is now a paradise for
paleontologists,
bird watchers,
hikers, and a major draw for
anglers and
hunters, particularly those from the
United States.
References
★ Logan, ''Geological Survey of Canada, Report of Progress from its Commencement to 1863'' (Montreal, 1863-1865)
★ E. Billings, ''Geological Survey of Canada: Catalogue of the Silurian Fossils of Anticosti'' (Montreal, 1866)
★ J. Schmitt, ''Anticosti'' (Paris, 1904).
★
Community Profile: L'Île-d'Anticosti Municipalité, Minganie-Basse-Côte-Nord, Québec; Statistics Canada
★ Charlie McCormick. ''Anticosti''. (1996) Éditions JCL ISBN 2-89431-152-4
★ Donald MacKay. ''Anticosti, The Untamed Island''. (1979)
McGraw-Hill Ryerson ISBN 0-07-082933-0
★ Henri Menier. ''Anticosti, 1905''. (Paris? 1905?). 30 original photographs by Henri Menier. Autographed presentation copy to Lord Grey. Collection of University of Saskatchewan Library, Saskatoon, Canada.