St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador

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172,918 Template:Ref label|

 Population Density=222.4|
 scArea=(city)446.04|
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(metro)804.63 Template:Ref label km²| City Mayor=Andy Wells| MPs=Norman Doyle, Loyola Hearn| MLAs=Ed Byrne, Jack Byrne, Dave Denine, Kathy Dunderdale, Terry French, Jack Harris, Harvey Hodder, Elizabeth Marshall, Sheila Osborne, Tom Osborne, John Ottenheimer, Bob Ridgley, Shawn Skinner, Loyola Sullivan, Dianne Whalen| Governing Body=St. John's City Council| website=St. John's website| Census Year=2001| Footnotes=|

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The Canadian city of St. John's (2001 census population 99,512, metropolitan population 172,918), is the provincial capital and largest city of Newfoundland and Labrador. St. John's is also a sister city with Waterford, Ireland.

Contents

Geography

The city is located on the northeast coast of the Avalon Peninsula in southeastern Newfoundland, and on the Atlantic Ocean. It is the most easterly city in North America, as well as the second largest city in Atlantic Canada (after Halifax, Nova Scotia). The downtown area exists to the north of St. John's Harbour and the rest of the city expands uphill to the west, north, and east.

St. John's is the largest city in Division No. 1.

History

Image:Logo stjohns.jpg St. John's has a long history. The Italian navigator John Cabot, who sailed under English flag, was the first European to sail into the harbour, on June 24 1497 — the feast day of Saint John the Baptist. A series of expeditions to St. John's by Portuguese in the Azores followed in the early 16th century, and by 1540 French, Basques and Portuguese crossed the Atlantic annually to fish the waters off the Avalon Peninsula.

The earliest record of the city appears as San Johem on a Portuguese map by Rienel in 1519. When John Rut visited St. John's in 1527 he found Norman, Breton and Portuguese ships. St. Jehan is shown on Nicholas Desliens world map of 1541 and San Joham in João Freire's Atlas of 1546. In 1583, when Sir Humphrey Gilbert formally claimed the area for England, he found 16 English ships with 20 French and Portuguese vessels using the harbour. There was no permanent population, however and Gilbert was lost at sea during his return voyage, thereby ending any plans of settlement. By 1620 the fishermen of England's West Country had excluded other nations from most of the east coast.

In 1627, St. John's was "the principal prime and chief lot in all the whole country". The resident population grew slowly in the 17th century, but St. John's was by far the largest settlement in Newfoundland when British naval officers began to take censuses around 1675. Every summer the population swelled with the arrival of migratory fishermen. In 1680, fishing ships (mostly from South Devon) set up fishing rooms at St. John's, bringing hundreds of Irish men into the port to operate inshore fishing boats.

The town's first significant defences were probably erected by commercial interests, following the temporary seizure of St. John's by the Dutch admiral Michiel de Ruyter in June, 1665. At any rate, the inhabitants were able to fend off a second Dutch attack in 1673. The British government began to plan fortifications around 1689, and were constructed following the retaking of St. John's after the French admiral Pierre Le Moyne d'Iberville captured and destroyed the town late in 1696. The French attacked St. John's again in 1705 and 1708, and twice more devastated civilian structures with fire. The harbour remained fortified through most of the 18th and 19th century.

The 18th century saw major changes in Newfoundland: population growth, beginnings of government, establishment of churches, reinforcement of commercial ties with North America and development of the seal, salmon and banks fisheries. St. John's grew slowly and although it was still primarily a fishing station, it was also a garrison, a centre of government and, increasingly, a commercial hub.

Facts

Image:George street st. john's 2.jpg

  • Tradition declares that the city earned its name when explorer John Cabot became the first European to sail into the harbour, on June 24, 1497 — the feast day of Saint John the Baptist.
  • Many of the earliest settlers of St. John's came from the southeast of Ireland, primarily Waterford, Wexford and Kilkenny. This would explain the similarity between accents from that part of Ireland and some regions of newfoundland, including St. John's.
  • The final battle of the Seven Years' War in North America was fought in 1762 in St. John's at the Battle of Signal Hill, in which the French surrendered St. John's to the British under the command of Colonel William Amherst.
  • It was at St. John's that the first known letter was sent from North America. On August 3, 1527, John Rut had written a letter to King Henry on his findings of his voyage to North America.
  • It was at St. John's that Guglielmo Marconi received the first transatlantic wireless message, and it was from there that the first nonstop transatlantic flight was made in 1919 by Alcock and Brown.

Image:Water street st. john's2.jpg

  • Of all major cities of Canada, St John's is the cloudiest (only 1497 hours of sunshine a year), foggiest (124 days a year), windiest (24.3km/h average), snowiest (359cm), and wettest (1514mm). St. John's also has the greatest population for its weather.
  • The majority of the population descends from both Ireland and England.
  • The city is the centre of business, education, and government for the province.

Image:Stjohn's harbour.jpg

Media

Radio

St. John's is currently the only Canadian city served by radio stations whose call letters do not begin with the letter C. The ITU prefix VO was assigned to the Dominion of Newfoundland before the province joined Canadian Confederation in 1949, and three AM stations kept their existing call letters. However, other commercial radio stations in St. John's which went to air after 1949 use the same range of prefixes (CFCK) currently in use elsewhere in Canada, with the exception of VOCM-FM, which was permitted to adopt the VOCM callsign because of its corporate association with the AM station that already bore that callsign. VO also remains in use in amateur radio.

Image:Cabottowernf.jpg Image:Peterpan.jpg

Television

  • Channel 4 — CBFJ, SRC
  • Channel 6 — CJON, independent station which airs a mix of Global and CTV programming; station is advertised as NTV
  • Channel 8 — CBNT, CBC

Print

Demographics

  • According to the Canada 2001 Census:
    • Dwellings: 64830
    • Area (km²): 446.04
    • Density (persons per km²): 222.4

Racial make-up

  • White: 97.3% (Major ethnic groups: Irish, English)
  • All others: 2.7%

Religious make-up

St. John's should not be confused with Saint John, New Brunswick.

Sister cities

Mayors of St. John's

See List of mayors of St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador.

See also

List of cities in Canada
List of communities in Newfoundland and Labrador

External links

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North: Torbay, Logy Bay-Middle Cove-Outer Cove, and Flatrock, and Pouch Cove
West: Portugal Cove-St. Philip's, Paradise, Mount Pearl, Conception Bay South St. John's East: Petty Harbour-Maddox Cove,
South: Division No. 1, Subd. D, Bay Bulls

Template:St. John's landmarks Template:NLtemplate Template:Canada capitalsde:Saint John's (Kanada) es:San Juan de Terranova fi:St. John's (Kanada) fr:Saint-Jean (Terre-Neuve-et-Labrador) id:St. John's, Newfoundland dan Labrador pt:St. John's simple:St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador sv:St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador zh-min-nan:St. John's (Newfoundland kap Labrador)