Our Goals
As Friends of Safe Harbour, our goal is
to help ensure that the old outport home will not be forgotten. Through this web site,
we revisit Safe Harbour by way of
stories and photographs, old and new. We want to look back at the
Safe Harbour many of us knew. Though life was harder
in many ways, Safe Harbour is home to many cherished memories. We would like this web
site to be a way of bringing Safe Harbour people together and we encourage them
to share their family histories, and their stories about the life and times
of the Safe Harbour residents.
Restoration in 2004
The second part of our goal is to
promote Safe Harbour as a tourist destination. We saw that our first task
would be to free the old roads from their impassable burden of brush and
alders, and turn them into walking trails. We wanted to cut the brush in
the two United Church cemeteries, making them accessible again.
There were bridges, causeways, a wharf and an information center to build.
The Friends of Safe Harbour committee
made a start on that goal in the Fall of 2004. After over a year of
waiting, our application for an ACOA grant was approved, and the 10 week
project got under way on September 23, 2004.
We are very pleased to report that the
main road has been cleared of brush, and sturdy bridges built wherever
needed. It is now a pleasant walk from where the church stood, all the way
over to Attwood's Island. A new causeway has been built to connect Safe Hr
to Attwood's Island. The rocks from the original causeway had been taken
away some years ago and used on the Pools Island causeway
.
The damaged causeway in Burtons Cove had undergone major repairs. The two
cemeteries have been completely cleared of brush and alders, and are now
easily accessible. A new, 31 foot long wharf has been built on Dykes Point
at the location of the old whale factory, and an information center was
built close to the wharf.
This project was under the full time
supervision of our committee president, Sam King, who directed the work
force, consisting of 3 men and 12 women.
We want to express our thanks to each one of the crew for the great job they
did.
Check out our photo section to see
pictures of the work, as it progressed. |