Freshwater
Carbonear Newfoundland Canada
School
And Community Reunion
August 4th, 2000
Roland
L. Noel 08/26/2000
On
Friday, August 4th, 2000, as the sun was rising over Conception Bay,
the citizens of a small scenic community on the rock-bound coast of Newfoundland
met dawn’s first light with exuberance and fanfare. It was the first day of
the Freshwater School and Community Reunion 2000; a day we had all been looking
forward to for over a year. It was a day of remembrance for those of us who left
our homes many tides ago and now had returned for the momentous event.
Many
a sun had risen and many shadows of evening had faded since some of us had last
seen each other and now we were given this opportunity to see, talk, and
walk with one other once again. It was a time as the poet once said to -
"Turn backward, turn Backward, O' Time in its flight and make me a boy
again just for tonight." Turn backward is just what we did, back to the
days of our childhood, back to the memories of a time past when we played
Hopscotch, Kick the Stone, Wheel the Hoop, Whip the Top, swam, rode our bikes,
played ball and went to school. It
was here on winter evenings we went nansarying sliding, skating, played hockey,
and walked the streets with our girl- and boyfriends, when the only sounds to be
heard were the tolling of the bell buoy near Carbonear Island, warning the
mariners of treacherous shoals, and the scrunching of the frozen snow beneath
our feet. We all remembered the Christmases of our youth when we went partying,
dancing and Janneying. These were the memories we all relived in a space of a three-day period in this
small picturesque historic
community.
The
celebrations began with registration at the church school hall where we were
entertained by local community bands throughout the day. At the Orange Lodge a
Museum was set up. A display was
arranged of old pictures of Freshwater, Flatrock, Blow Me Down and Otterbury and
many interesting relics of a gone by era. The local craftsmen proudly presented
their model boats and houses and others told their stories of what life was like
growing up in this community seventy or eighty years ago. It was a time to
listen and a time to remember, for it will soon be our time to pass those
stories on to our children and to our children’s children, for there can be no
future without a past and there can be no past without a future.
As
that first day faded into evening, we were served hot delicious homemade soup
followed by the opening ceremonies where we were presented a colour guard made
up of the Canadian, United States and Newfoundland flags. Local singers sang the
national anthems: O Canada, Star Spangler Banner and the Ode to Newfoundland.
Two citations were presented to the town from the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts: one from the Governor, which reads in part, TO
THE TOWN OF FRESHWATER CARBONEAR
NEWFOUNDLAND - In recognition of your
history and altruistic contributions to the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.;
and a second from the House of Representatives along with a state flag which
reads in part, TO
THE TOWN OF FRESHWATER CARBONEAR NEWFOUNDLAND - In
recognition of the strength and heart of the community in this outstanding town,
and its extended and enduring relationship with the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts. This is the
first time in recorded Newfoundland history that a Citation was received from
the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and presented to the citizens of a town in the
Province of Newfoundland and Labrador. Local community bands, concerts and
comedies followed late into the night.
Saturday
morning, as the sun shone brightly on this quaint seacoast community, many of us
were back in the church hall being served a Fish and Brewis breakfast. Mmm, Mmm,
was it ever good. The rest of the day was much like Friday. We listened to local
community bands and a variety of entertainment and much time was spent
conversing with old and new friends. Early Saturday evening we were served a hot
roast beef dinner and later in the evening, on Clowns Cove Beach where an
estimated fifteen hundred people had gathered, we were presented with a night to
remember. It was Dance Time.
We danced all night as the bands played on into the wee hours of the
morning. It was a night when the forties, fifties, sixties, seventies all the
way to the millennium came alive in the cool night air. If you were standing,
you were dancing. The beach was electrified with the sound of music as it
ricocheted off the surrounding hills and echoed across the waters.
The Jannies were there, the local community bands, singers and comedians
and jokers were there along with the Mr. and Mrs. Freshwater Pageant. The young
and the old, the locals and the visitors alike enjoyed sound and sights that
night on Clowns Cove Beach. Just hours before the dawn we departed to our places
of rest.
As
Saturdays cool dark night faded into the warmth of a Sunday morning sunrise, we
rose early finding our selves once again in the church hall, this time being
served a hot breakfast of bacon eggs, tea, coffee and toast. After breakfast the
church bell rang out its call to the people to come and worship. It was like a
time past as three hundred or more filled the church pews and when the
congregation rose to sing, one could only think back to the time when our
forefathers sang their praises. It was like an answer to the echo from their
songs of long ago and one could only be moved when the choir sang
- “My eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord – He is
trampling out the vintage where the grapes of wrath are stored.” I can still
hear the low flowing music and the soft synchronized voices of the choir and the
muffled thump, thump foot beat of the congregation, as they sang with feeling
far beyond description. In the
afternoon we gathered at the Freshwater Cemetery on McCanister’s Hills, one of
Newfoundland’s best-manicured cemeteries, where we paid our respects to those
who had gone before. The members of the Royal Canadian Legion were in attendance
and performed a remembrance ceremonial. Wreaths were laid in memory of the
Freshwater servicemen who paid the supreme sacrifice in time of war. When the
bugler played the last post we stood in silence for a moment of reverence and
reflection. As its lingering notes echoed in the hills we parted ways once
again. We said our goodbyes and we all agreed a good time was had by all.
Sometime down life’s road may we all meet again?
We
know that fifty years from now, Saturday, August 6, 2050, there will be another
gathering at the Freshwater Cemetery on McCanister’s Hills; it will be for
recovery of the time capsule that was placed there during the School and
Community Reunion 2000.
To
those who will be in attendance fifty years from now I ask you to never forget
the past. In that capsule are many items of historical and personal reflection.
This information has been placed there so you may pass it on to your
children and your children’s children. For all of us who have walked these
hills and down these valleys - strolled along these beaches in the cool night
air and watched the sunrise as a new day dawns – we can feel the bonds of our
birth to – A Place Called Home
– Freshwater Carbonear.