We're sorry. An error has occurred
Please cancel or retry.
Cantwells’ Way
Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
Couldn't load pickup availability
-
11 June 2014

In Cantwells’ Way, James E. Candow examines the relationship between people, place and technology at the Cape Spear Lightstation in Newfoundland and Labrador. Modern lighthouses and fog alarms were products of the new understandings of light and sound that emerged from the Scientific Revolution, so lightkeepers and their families were therefore in the vanguard of technological change in their communities. Despite this, they continued to practise traditional activities such as gardening and berry picking, which were part of the informal economy of rural Newfoundland. Life at the Cape Spear Lightstation reflected the underlying duality of Newfoundland society in the period.
— Don Johnson, author of Smoke and Mirrors: A Look at Reflectors in Lighthouses
: Preface
: Introduction: Let There Be Light
: Quite A Peculiar Branch of Business
: A Man of Parts: The Lightkeeper’s Duties to 1914
: The Dying of the Light
: Of Lightstations and Flower Petals
: Epilogue: They Lifted Up the Sun
: Appendices
: Notes
: References
: Index