Sunday, December 16, 2007

Saint-Pierre & Miquelon / France’s North American territory

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Guest Article by Morgen Jahnke

As a product of the Canadian educational system, I have always been fairly confident in my knowledge of my native country’s geography and history, but I learned something recently that completely surprised me. After watching the French/Canadian film The Widow of Saint-Pierre (La Veuve de Saint-Pierre), which I assumed was set somewhere in the maritime provinces of Canada in the 1800s, I discovered that its actual setting was the island of Saint-Pierre, part of a group of islands controlled by France off and on since 1763.

Other than being nonplussed about my failure to realize that the Saint-Pierre of the film title referred to a real place, what really struck me was the fact that these islands, officially called Saint-Pierre & Miquelon, are still under French control, and their inhabitants are citizens of France. It shocked me to realize that as a Canadian I would need a passport to visit these islands, located less than an hour’s ferry ride from the Canadian province of Newfoundland, and that I would need to stock up on Euros before I got there.

How had I missed this fact in the course of my education? It seemed amazing to me that I didn’t have to travel to Europe to visit France, but could do so closer to home. I also found it fascinating that Mexico, the United States, and Canada were not alone on the North American continent; this corner of France joined the others as its smallest territory. But, although it is small in size, I learned that Saint-Pierre & Miquelon played a major role in the history of its much-larger neighbors.

The Isles Have It
Technically, Saint-Pierre & Miquelon is a collectivité d’outre mer, or overseas community of France. It comprises the islands of Saint-Pierre, where the main port of Saint-Pierre is located, as well as the island of Miquelon, which was once three separate islands (Le Cap, Miquelon, and Langlade) now joined by sand dune land bridges. Saint-Pierre & Miquelon’s population is around 6500, with the majority of inhabitants descended from Breton, Basque, Normand and Acadian settlers who originally came to the islands as fishermen.

Followers of Cod
In the late 1400s, the explorer John Cabot returned to Europe with the news that he had found a rich fishing ground off the coast of North America. Now known as the Grand Banks, this series of underwater plateaus located at the intersection of the warm Gulf Stream and the cold Labrador Current just southeast of Newfoundland was home to immense numbers of fish, including the much-valued Atlantic cod.

Although known earlier to the Portuguese, it was Cabot’s announcement that ignited interest in the commercial potential of the Grand Banks, and there were soon many European countries sending ships to the area, including France, Spain, Portugal, and England. Because of their proximity to the Grand Banks, the islands of Saint-Pierre and Miquelon became the bases of operation for fishing fleets, most particularly those of the French regions of Brittany, Normandy and the Basque Country. By the late 1600s, French settlers had established cod salting and curing facilities on the islands.

However, these settlements were short-lived; because of wars between France and Britain in the early 1700s, France ceded Saint-Pierre & Miquelon to the British as a condition of the Treaty of Utrecht.

Dually Deported
Throughout the 18th Century, the fortunes of Saint-Pierre & Miquelon were decided by the larger conflicts playing out across the eastern part of North America, as Britain and France (along with various groups of Native Americans) grappled for control of the continent. Over the course of two centuries, the French had built up the colonial territory of New France, which at its peak encompassed much of what is now Eastern Canada (the maritime provinces and Québec), as well as a swath of land west of the British colonies on the Atlantic coast, running from the Canadian border to the Gulf of Mexico.

In 1754, a dispute about which country would control the land around the Ohio River led to a larger conflict between Britain and France which came to be known as the French and Indian War. Around the same time, from 1756 to 1763, much of Europe was engaged in the Seven Year’s War, which pitted Britain, Prussia, Ireland, and Hanover against France, Austria, Russia, Sweden, and Saxony, and the conflict in North America became part of this larger war.

With the British gaining the upper hand, and having captured many of the French strongholds, the conflict ended in 1763 when both nations signed the Treaty of Paris, giving Britain control of all of New France, with the sole exception of Saint-Pierre & Miquelon.

However, the British attacked the islands in 1778 because of France’s support of the American Revolutionary War, and deported all of their inhabitants. The French eventually took back the territory in 1783, but lost it to Britain once again in 1793 when France declared war on Britain during the time of the French Revolution. For a second time, Saint-Pierre & Miquelon’s inhabitants were deported from the islands.

Pierre de Resistance
France gained control of Saint-Pierre & Miquelon again in 1816 after the second abdication of Napoleon, and has retained control since that time. The islands continued to play an important role as the base of operations for French cod fishing in the Grand Banks throughout the 19th Century and into the 20th.

Saint-Pierre & Miquelon also briefly became the base of operations for another kind of commerce; during Prohibition in the United States, American gangsters, including Al Capone, used Saint-Pierre & Miquelon as the launching point for their liquor smuggling activities.

Although it was far from the mainland of France, Saint-Pierre & Miquelon could not escape the conflict in Europe during World War II. When the Vichy government was formed in response to the German attack on France, the islands were also governed by the Vichy leaders, However, in 1941 they became part of the French resistance to the Nazis, when Rear-Admiral Muselier of the Free French forces led an attack on the islands, bringing them into the resistance movement spearheaded by Charles de Gaulle.

Cod Lover Ills
Saint-Pierre & Miquelon is currently facing a new challenge to its economy and livelihood. Overfishing in the Grand Banks has led to the closure of the fishing industry by the Canadian government in hopes of restoring these stocks. In response, Saint-Pierre & Miquelon is pursuing other sources of revenue, including agriculture, fish and crab farming, and tourism.

I think they have a great opportunity for drawing tourists to the islands, if only to experience the novelty of visiting a European country without crossing the Atlantic, and to see first-hand these small islands that nevertheless played such an enormous role on the world stage. —Morgen Jahnke

Guest author Morgen Jahnke is a writer living in San Francisco, California.

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Categories: History, Interesting Places

More Information about Saint-Pierre & Miquelon...

Interested in writing an article for Interesting Thing of the Day? See our author information page.

The St-Pierre & Miquelon Tourism Promotion Web site is a great source of information about the history, culture and of course, tourism opportunities of Saint-Pierre & Miquelon.

The DVD of The Widow of Saint-Pierre is available at Amazon.com.

Related Articles from Interesting Thing of the Day

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Saint-Pierre & Miquelon / France’s North American territory

Guest Article by Morgen Jahnke

As a product of the Canadian educational system, I have always been fairly confident in my knowledge of my native country’s geography and history, but I learned something recently that completely surprised me. After watching the French/Canadian film The Widow of Saint-Pierre (La Veuve de Saint-Pierre), which I assumed was set somewhere in the maritime provinces of Canada in the 1800s, I discovered that its actual setting was the island of Saint-Pierre, part of a group of islands controlled by France off and on since 1763.

Other than being nonplussed about my failure to realize that the Saint-Pierre of the film title referred to a real place, what really struck me was the fact that these islands, officially called Saint-Pierre & Miquelon, are still under French control, and their inhabitants are citizens of France. It shocked me to realize that as a Canadian I would need a passport to visit these islands, located less than an hour’s ferry ride from the Canadian province of Newfoundland, and that I would need to stock up on Euros before I got there.

How had I missed this fact in the course of my education? It seemed amazing to me that I didn’t have to travel to Europe to visit France, but could do so closer to home. I also found it fascinating that Mexico, the United States, and Canada were not alone on the North American continent; this corner of France joined the others as its smallest territory. But, although it is small in size, I learned that Saint-Pierre & Miquelon played a major role in the history of its much-larger neighbors.

The Isles Have It
Technically, Saint-Pierre & Miquelon is a collectivité d’outre mer, or overseas community of France. It comprises the islands of Saint-Pierre, where the main port of Saint-Pierre is located, as well as the island of Miquelon, which was once three separate islands (Le Cap, Miquelon, and Langlade) now joined by sand dune land bridges. Saint-Pierre & Miquelon’s population is around 6500, with the majority of inhabitants descended from Breton, Basque, Normand and Acadian settlers who originally came to the islands as fishermen.

Followers of Cod
In the late 1400s, the explorer John Cabot returned to Europe with the news that he had found a rich fishing ground off the coast of North America. Now known as the Grand Banks, this series of underwater plateaus located at the intersection of the warm Gulf Stream and the cold Labrador Current just southeast of Newfoundland was home to immense numbers of fish, including the much-valued Atlantic cod.

Although known earlier to the Portuguese, it was Cabot’s announcement that ignited interest in the commercial potential of the Grand Banks, and there were soon many European countries sending ships to the area, including France, Spain, Portugal, and England. Because of their proximity to the Grand Banks, the islands of Saint-Pierre and Miquelon became the bases of operation for fishing fleets, most particularly those of the French regions of Brittany, Normandy and the Basque Country. By the late 1600s, French settlers had established cod salting and curing facilities on the islands.

However, these settlements were short-lived; because of wars between France and Britain in the early 1700s, France ceded Saint-Pierre & Miquelon to the British as a condition of the Treaty of Utrecht.

Dually Deported
Throughout the 18th Century, the fortunes of Saint-Pierre & Miquelon were decided by the larger conflicts playing out across the eastern part of North America, as Britain and France (along with various groups of Native Americans) grappled for control of the continent. Over the course of two centuries, the French had built up the colonial territory of New France, which at its peak encompassed much of what is now Eastern Canada (the maritime provinces and Québec), as well as a swath of land west of the British colonies on the Atlantic coast, running from the Canadian border to the Gulf of Mexico.

In 1754, a dispute about which country would control the land around the Ohio River led to a larger conflict between Britain and France which came to be known as the French and Indian War. Around the same time, from 1756 to 1763, much of Europe was engaged in the Seven Year’s War, which pitted Britain, Prussia, Ireland, and Hanover against France, Austria, Russia, Sweden, and Saxony, and the conflict in North America became part of this larger war.

With the British gaining the upper hand, and having captured many of the French strongholds, the conflict ended in 1763 when both nations signed the Treaty of Paris, giving Britain control of all of New France, with the sole exception of Saint-Pierre & Miquelon.

However, the British attacked the islands in 1778 because of France’s support of the American Revolutionary War, and deported all of their inhabitants. The French eventually took back the territory in 1783, but lost it to Britain once again in 1793 when France declared war on Britain during the time of the French Revolution. For a second time, Saint-Pierre & Miquelon’s inhabitants were deported from the islands.

Pierre de Resistance
France gained control of Saint-Pierre & Miquelon again in 1816 after the second abdication of Napoleon, and has retained control since that time. The islands continued to play an important role as the base of operations for French cod fishing in the Grand Banks throughout the 19th Century and into the 20th.

Saint-Pierre & Miquelon also briefly became the base of operations for another kind of commerce; during Prohibition in the United States, American gangsters, including Al Capone, used Saint-Pierre & Miquelon as the launching point for their liquor smuggling activities.

Although it was far from the mainland of France, Saint-Pierre & Miquelon could not escape the conflict in Europe during World War II. When the Vichy government was formed in response to the German attack on France, the islands were also governed by the Vichy leaders, However, in 1941 they became part of the French resistance to the Nazis, when Rear-Admiral Muselier of the Free French forces led an attack on the islands, bringing them into the resistance movement spearheaded by Charles de Gaulle.

Cod Lover Ills
Saint-Pierre & Miquelon is currently facing a new challenge to its economy and livelihood. Overfishing in the Grand Banks has led to the closure of the fishing industry by the Canadian government in hopes of restoring these stocks. In response, Saint-Pierre & Miquelon is pursuing other sources of revenue, including agriculture, fish and crab farming, and tourism.

I think they have a great opportunity for drawing tourists to the islands, if only to experience the novelty of visiting a European country without crossing the Atlantic, and to see first-hand these small islands that nevertheless played such an enormous role on the world stage. —Morgen Jahnke

Guest author Morgen Jahnke is a writer living in San Francisco, California.

Permalink • Email this Article • Bookmark at del.icio.us

Categories: History, Interesting Places

More Information about Saint-Pierre & Miquelon...

Interested in writing an article for Interesting Thing of the Day? See our author information page.

The St-Pierre & Miquelon Tourism Promotion Web site is a great source of information about the history, culture and of course, tourism opportunities of Saint-Pierre & Miquelon.

The DVD of The Widow of Saint-Pierre is available at Amazon.com.

Related Articles from Interesting Thing of the Day

Virtual Tip Jar

Did you find this article interesting, entertaining, or useful? If so, please consider donating a few dollars to the author to support the ongoing development of Interesting Thing of the Day.  [Donate via: Amazon.com Honor System | Other/More Information]

>> full story

Bubble 2.0?

Somewhat outside the education networking zone, I spent last Monday evening surrounded by entrepreneurs, CTOs and investors at a Mobile Monday London event. All discussing the imminent (or otherwise) collapse of the web technology bubble. There’s a review on Tom Hume’s site and full podcast soon to arrive.

Coming from the BETT show last week it was a bit of a culture shock. I was about to post on the dearth of mobile technologies at BETT. Apart from us and Handheld Learning (oh and lots of laptops around Tomorrow’s Learners Today with Prof Heppell) it was all about bolting computers down and point’n'click teaching solutions (whatever that means it doesn’t sound like facilitating enquiring learners).

Click'n'teach Back at Momo London, Sam Sethi got the prize for the first mention during the evening of Web3.0 and an audience member cited MySpace as a marketing strategy. My personal take-home was a recurring theme around skills and ambition.

The expressed view of the evening’s panel was that a rounded team (preferably with previous experience) was much better than a really cool idea and flash business plan but no experience. It is also notable that although the panel comprised several successful entrepreneurs and investors, it was their failures and subsequent bounce-back that was valued in discussion. Where in our formal school system do we encourage failure, and how to handle it, as a learning process?

Outside my formal activities with Futurelab I’m an adviser to a Young Enterprise group. They’re discovering the hard way that running a small start up business is incredibly hard work (they’ve just discovered VAT and Corporation Tax)! They’re also having great fun making their products, advertising them on their company website, selling to anyone who goes near their stall at trade events, and working as a team. They’ve imported raw materials from overseas, dabbled with e-commerce, balanced the quantity vs. quality problem and are making money. They’ve even had to consider investor relations as they’ve been selling ordinary shares in their company to teachers and parents. What a preparation for being an entrepreneur!

Azeem Azhar (Reuters), Madhuban Kumar (Doughty Hanson Technology Ventures) and Sam Sethi (Vecosys) all talked about the falling cost of starting up a profitable new business. Open Source and the many software tools that now exist mean you can build a virtual product very quickly and cheaply, but of course so can everyone else. Unless you’re investing in deep technology innovation then the loose consensus was that real revenue (cash flow, not Adsense or hoping to get bought by Google) and a ’sorted consumer experience’ (to paraphrase Jan Kuczynski, Wireless World Forum) could deliver an experienced team significant business opportunity without the huge investments of the VC community (leaving more or all of the equity for the founders).

Well no one’s forcing people to buy stock from AccessorMe (they’ve quickly saturated the sibling, parent and teacher market), so they’ve got a consumer experience that’s delivering positive revenue. They’re beginning to come up against problems around scalability and sustainability but they’ve lasted longer than many businesses.

Although I and the other business advisers are on hand to guide them out of danger (e-commerce and Paypal is a recurring issue), we don’t give them ’solutions’ or tell them what to do next. They own the company, they’re deciding what to do next and identifying what know they don’t know, we’re really there to help with the bits they don’t know they don’t know (to borrow from D Rumsfeld - found on wikiquote).

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Monday, December 10, 2007

Chinese auto exports take off

Reports: China Auto Exports Soar

China’s auto exports soared in the first 10 months of the year, according to Commerce Ministry figures, but revenues from passenger car sales overseas are lagging due to falling prices, reports said Wednesday....

Read the full post from Associated Press business headlines via GoUpstate.com

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Chinese auto exports take off

Chinese auto exports take off

Filed under: International markets, Press releases, Products and services, Competitive strategy, Marketing and advertising, China During the first 10 months of this year, China's auto sales, including cars, buses and trucks, rose by 64% from the previous year to 413,500. According to a report from t...

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Balancing Security and Commerce at L.A. Port

The recent NIE on Iran

The following is a compilation of two posts at The Jacksonian Party on the NIE on Iran that was recently released. The NIE on Iran's Nuclear Intentions and Capabilities The Office of the Director of National Intelligence has released its 2007 summary of Iran's Nuclear Intentions and Capabilities wit...

Read the full post from Dumb Looks Still Free

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And now a word from their sponsors

And now a word from their sponsors

By David Roberts If you want to get some sense of what Lieberman-Warner -- or any piece of climate legislation -- is in for when it hits the floor of the Senate, have a look at what its opponents are saying. Below are three letters to the Senate Environment Committee, from the Chamber of Commerce, t...

Read the full post from Gristmill

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Balancing Security and Commerce at L.A. Port

Balancing Security and Commerce at L.A. Port

The port complex of Los Angeles and Long Beach is the largest importation point for goods coming into the United States from overseas. It's also an inviting terrorist target. NPR's Scott Simon investigates just how well the port is equipped for thwarting a terror assault and what might be the econom...

Read the full post from NPR Topics: Nation

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This and That: A Little California Perspective (Open Thread)

Balancing Security and Commerce at L.A. Port

The port complex of Los Angeles and Long Beach is the largest importation point for goods coming into the United States from overseas. It's also an inviting terrorist target. NPR's Scott Simon investigates just how well the port is equipped for thwarting a terror assault and what might be the econom...

Read the full post from NPR Programs: Weekend Edition Saturday

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This and That: A Little California Perspective (Open Thread)

This and That: A Little California Perspective (Open Thread)

It's been raining in San Diego this weekend(!), so time to search the web for the "California-related" stories and perspectives! Here we go: ~~~~~ * Some in Congress learned of waterboarding in '02; CIA gave leaders private briefings about techniques. (San Francisco Chronicle) In September 2002, fou...

Read the full post from Pam's House Blend - Front Page

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