Codroy Valley
{{Short description|Valley in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada}}
{{Location map|Newfoundland|lat=47.84|long=-59.19|caption =Location of the Codroy Valley on Newfoundland|label=Codroy Valley|position=right}}
The Codroy Valley is a valley in the southwestern part of the island of Newfoundland in the Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador.{{cite journal|last=Munden|first=Carl|title=Mailed from The Rock: The Codroy|journal=PHSC Journal|publisher=Postal History Society of Canada|volume=134|issue=June 2008}}
The Codroy Valley is a glacial valley formed in the Anguille Mountains, a sub-range of the Long Range Mountains which run along Newfoundland's west coast fronting the Gulf of St. Lawrence. The valley runs inland at a perpendicular angle from the coast along a bearing of 45° (northeast), carrying the Codroy River and its tributaries to the gulf.
The mouth of the Codroy Valley at the coast is extremely windy and is the location of Wreckhouse, so-named by employees of the historic Newfoundland Railway for the wind's ability to blow railway cars off the tracks.
The area was settled families of French, Irish, Mi'kmaq, English, and Scots. The Scots were Highlanders who arrived between the 1840s and 1860s, most of them secondary migrants who had been living on Cape Breton Island in Inverness County, Nova Scotia.{{Cite web|url=http://www.heritage.nf.ca/articles/society/scottish-settlement.php|title=Scottish Settlement Patterns in NL}} Of the roughly 171 households at Codroy Valley in the 1880s, 67 (38%) belonged to people of Scottish descent.Ommer 1973 The Scottish Gaelic language was once commonly spoken here, with some families continuing to speak Gaelic at home until the 1960s.{{Cite thesis|url=http://research.library.mun.ca/1319/|title=Some aspects of the Scottish Gaelic traditions of the Codroy Valley, Newfoundland|year=1975|publisher=Memorial University of Newfoundland|type=masters|last1=Bennett|first1=Margaret}}
See also
- Stormy Point, the headland just north of the valley's mouth
Further reading
- Margaret Bennett, The Last Stronghold: Scottish Gaelic Traditions in Newfoundland (Canada's Atlantic Folklore-folklife series). Canongate Books Ltd, Breakwater Books Ltd, 1989 / {{ISBN|0-86241-197-1}} - {{ISBN|978-0-86241-197-8}}, {{ISBN|0-920911-38-2}} - {{ISBN|978-0-920911-38-9}}
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- [http://www.communityaccounts.ca/CommunityAccounts/OnlineData/acct_selection.asp?menucomval=ccs4a&comval=ccs4a&whichacct=wellbeing&printval=1 Community Accounts - Codroy Valley - Well-Being Account]{{dead link|date=August 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
{{coord missing|Newfoundland and Labrador}}
{{authority control}}
Category:Valleys of Newfoundland and Labrador
Category:European-Canadian culture in Newfoundland and Labrador
Category:First Nations in Atlantic Canada
Category:Scottish diaspora in Canada
{{Newfoundland-geo-stub}}