:''This article is about the region in Canada. For other uses, see
Labrador (disambiguation).''
| Labrador |
|---|
 border | |
Flag of Labrador (''de facto'') | |
Motto Latin: ''Munus splendidum mox explebitur'' The splendid task will soon be fulfilled | |
 175 px | |
| Geography | |
|---|---|
| Area: | 269,073.3 km² (103,895.5 sq mi) |
| Water area: | 31,340 km² (12,101 sq mi) (4%) |
| Coastline: | 7,886 km (4,900 mi) |
| Highest Point: | Mount Caubvik (1652 m, 5,420 ft) |
| Longest River: | Churchill River (856 km, 532 mi) |
| Admin HQ: | Happy Valley-Goose Bay |
| Demographics | |
|---|---|
| Population(2001): | 27,864 |
| Largest City: | Happy Valley-Goose Bay[1] 7,572 (2006) |
| Politics | |
|---|---|
Government of Newfoundland & Labrador http://www.gov.nl.ca | |
| Members of the Parliament of Canada: | 1 |
| Members of the Newfoundland and Labrador House of Assembly: | 4 |
'Labrador' (also 'Coast of Labrador') is a region of
Atlantic Canada. Together with the island of
Newfoundland from which it is separated by the
Strait of Belle Isle, it constitutes the
province of
Newfoundland and Labrador. The region is part of the much larger
Labrador Peninsula. The area was known by the
Norse as
Markland.
The population of Labrador is 27,864 (2001 census), including some 30 percent Aboriginal peoples, including
Inuit,
Innu, and
Métis. Labrador’s area (including associated small islands and inland water surfaces) is 294,330 square kilometers (113,641 sq mi))
[2]. It has a land area of
269,073.3 km² (103,895.5 sq mi)
[3], approximately the size of
New Zealand. Its former capital was
Battle Harbour.
The name "Labrador" is one of the oldest names of European origin in Canada, almost as old as the name "Newfoundland". It is named after
Portuguese explorer
João Fernandes Lavrador who, together with
Pêro de Barcelos, first sighted it in
1498.
Most non-Aboriginal settlement of Labrador occurred due to fishing villages, missions, and fur trading outposts; modern settlements have been created as a result of iron ore mining, hydroelectric developments, and military installations. Until modern times, difficult sea travel and lack of general transportation facilities discouraged settlement. In the
1760s,
Moravian missionaries began settling, building missions and often sharing in the
fur trade with the
Hudson's Bay Company, which was the dominant force on the peninsula until
1870. Claims have persisted concerning the
Labrador Peninsula with
Quebec, although they were settled by judicial decision in 1927 by the
Judicial Committee of the Privy Council.
John James Audubon called Labrador "the most extensive and dreariest wilderness I have ever beheld"
[1] (
See Also: 'Creation', ISBN 1-58567-410-9.)
Modern Labrador

Inuit Of Labrador, City of Nain (Photo: André Perron)
Just like its island neighbour Newfoundland, early settlement in Labrador was tied to the sea as demonstrated by the
Montagnais,
Innu and
Inuit, although these peoples also made significant forays throughout the interior as well. European settlement was largely concentrated in coastal communities, particularly those south of
Hamilton Inlet, and are among Canada's oldest European settlements. Extremely poor, both European and First Nations settlements along coastal Labrador came to benefit from cargo and relief vessels that were operated as part of the
Grenfell Mission (see
Sir Wilfred Grenfell). Throughout the
20th century, coastal freighters and ferries operated initially by the
Newfoundland Railway and later
Canadian National Railways/
CN Marine/
Marine Atlantic became a critical lifeline for communities on the coast, which for the majority of that century, did not have any road connection with the rest of North America.
Labrador has played strategic roles in both the
Second World War and the
Cold War. In the early
1940s a German
U-boat crew installed an automated weather station on the northern tip of Labrador near
Cape Chidley, nicknamed
Weather Station Kurt. The station only broadcast weather observations to the German navy for a few days but was not discovered until the 1980s when a historian, working with the
Canadian Coast Guard, identified its location.
The Canadian government built a major air force base at Goose Bay, at the head of
Lake Melville during the
Second World War, a site selected because of its topography, access to the sea, defensible location, and minimal fog. During the Second World War and the Cold War, the base was also home to American, British, and later German, Netherlands, and Italian detachments. Today,
CFB Goose Bay is the largest employer for the community of
Happy Valley-Goose Bay.
Additionally, both the
United States Air Force and
Royal Canadian Air Force built and operated a number of radar stations along coastal Labrador as part of the
Pinetree Line,
Mid-Canada Line and
DEW Line systems. Today the remaining stations are automated as part of the
North Warning System, however the military settlements during the early part of the
Cold War surrounding these stations have largely continued as local Innu and Inuit populations have clustered near their port and airfield facilities.
During the first half of the
20th century, some of the largest
iron ore deposits in the world were discovered in the western part of Labrador and adjacent areas of Quebec. Deposits at
Mont Wright,
Schefferville,
Labrador City, and
Wabush drove industrial development and human settlement in the area during the post-
war years.
The present community of
Labrador West is entirely a result of the iron ore mining activities in the region. The
Iron Ore Company of Canada operates the
Quebec, North Shore, and Labrador Railway to transport ore concentrate 500 miles south to the port of
Sept Iles, Quebec for shipment to steel mills in North America and elsewhere.
During the
1960s, the
Churchill River was diverted at
Churchill Falls which resulted in the flooding of an enormous area — today named the
Smallwood Reservoir. Both a hydroelectric generating station and a transmission line were built in the neighbouring province of Quebec.
In the
1970s-
2000s the
Trans-Labrador Highway was built in stages to connect various inland communities with the North American highway network at
Mont Wright, Quebec (which in turn is connected by a highway running north from
Baie-Comeau, Quebec). A southern extension of this highway has opened in stages during the early
2000s and is resulting in significant changes to the coastal ferry system in the
Strait of Belle Isle and southeastern Labrador. It is worth noting that these "highways" are called so only because of their importance to the region; they would be better described as roads, and are not completely paved.
A study on a
fixed link to Newfoundland, in 2004, recommended that a tunnel under the Strait of Belle Isle, being a single railway that would carry cars, buses and trucks, was technologically the best option for such a link. However, the study also concluded that a fixed link was not economically viable. Conceivably, if built with federal aid, the
1949 terms of union would be amended to remove ferry service from
Nova Scotia to
Port-aux-Basques across the Cabot Strait.
Although a
highway link will soon (2006 or 2007) be complete across Labrador, this route is somewhat longer than a proposed
Quebec North Shore highway that presently does not exist. Part of the "highway",
Route 389, starting approximately 212 km (132 mi) from Baie Comeau to 482 km (299 mi) is of an inferior alignment, and from there to 570 km (354 mi), the provincial border, is an accident-prone section notorious for its poor surface and sharp curves. Local citizens are urging realignment of this road, a vital work if it were to be the routing to the fixed link to Newfoundland.
Route 389 and the Trans-Labrador Highway were added to Canada's National Highway System in September 2005.
The Labrador boundary dispute

Line A: the boundary decided by the Privy Council; the current legal boundary. Line B: the boundary as it is sometimes portrayed by Quebec today.
The tortuous border between Labrador and Canada was set
March 2,
1927, after a five-year trial. In
1809 Labrador had been transferred from
Lower Canada to Newfoundland, but the landward boundary of Labrador had never been precisely stated. Newfoundland argued it extended to the height of land, but Canada, stressing the historical use of the term "Coasts of Labrador", argued the boundary was one
statute mile (1.6 km) inland from the high-tide mark. As Canada and Newfoundland were separate countries, but both members of the
British Empire, the matter was referred to the
Judicial Committee of the Privy Council (in
London), which set the Labrador boundary mostly along the coastal watershed. One of Newfoundland's conditions for joining
Confederation in
1949 was that this boundary be entrenched in the Canadian constitution. While this border has not been formally accepted by the
Quebec government, the Henri Dorion
[2] Commission (Commission d'étude sur l'intégrité du territoire du Québec) concluded in the early 1970s that Quebec no longer has a legal claim to Labrador. Still, Quebec government publications sometimes ignore or modify the Labrador boundary, especially the southern segment.
[3]
The province's name change to Newfoundland and Labrador was meant to emphasize its claim to Labrador, as well as Labrador's unique culture and contributions to the province. (See
Newfoundland and Labrador for more details.)
Separation from Newfoundland
A Royal Commission in
2002 determined that there is a certain amount of public pressure from Labradorians to break off from Newfoundland and become a separate province or territory. Some of the Innu nation would have the area become a homeland for them, much as
Nunavut is for the Inuit; a 1999 resolution of the
Assembly of First Nations claimed Labrador as a homeland for the Innu and demanded recognition in any further constitutional negotiations regarding the region.
[4] The Inuit self-government region of
Nunatsiavut was recently created through agreements with the provincial and federal governments.
Timeline
★ 11
th century : Probable visit by
Leif Ericson. See
Markland.
★
1498: Sighted by
João Fernandes Lavrador
★
1498: Visited by
John Cabot
★
1500: Visited by
Gaspar Corte-Real
★
1534: Visited by
Jacques Cartier
★
1763: Labrador is transferred from the
French colony
Canada to the
British colony
Newfoundland as per the
Treaty of Paris.
★
1774: Labrador is transferred (along with
Anticosti Island and the
Magdalen Islands) to
Quebec.
★
1791: Labrador becomes part of Lower Canada when Quebec is divided into two colonies.
★
1809: Labrador (from
Cape Chidley to the mouth of the Saint-Jean River) is transferred back to Newfoundland.
★
1825: The north shore of the
Gulf of St. Lawrence west of
Blanc-Sablon and south of 52° north is separated from Labrador and transferred back to
Lower Canada.
★
1927: The Labrador boundary dispute is settled.
★
1941: Canada builds the air base at Goose Bay.
★
1949: Labrador becomes part of
Canada when
Newfoundland joins
Confederation.
★
2001: The province changes its name to
Newfoundland and Labrador.
★
2007: The province and Federal Government of Canada sign an agreement to establish
Nunatsiavut
Demographics
Demographic Factors (2001 Census)| Factor | Labrador | Canada |
|---|
| Male/Female Split | 50.6/49.4 | 49.0/51.0 |
| Median Age | 32.6 | 37.6 |
| Immigrant (born outside Canada) Pop. | 1.5% | 18.4% |
| Aboriginal Pop. | 34.9% | 3.3% |
| Religion - Catholic | 28.4% | 43.6% |
| Religion - Protestant | 67.4% | 29.2% |
| Religion - Other | 0.8% | 10.6% |
| No Religion | 3.4% | 16.5% |
| Median Income (age 15+) | $19,229 | $22,120 |
| Unemployment Rate | 19.1% | 7.4% |
See also
★
Landsat Island
References
1. 2006 Census
2. NL Government website: Areas
3. Stats Canada LAbrador information
★ ''The Lure of the Labrador Wild'', by Dillon Wallace (ISBN 1-4043-1537-3; July 2002)
★ ''Labrador by Choice'', by Benjamin W. Powell Sr. C.M. 1979
★ ''The Story of Labrador'', by B. Rompkey (2005)
★ ''Labrador,'' by Robert Stewart (1977)
★
Community Profile: Labrador: Division No. 10, Newfoundland and Labrador; Statistics Canada
External links
★
Project Gutenberg e-text of Dillon Wallace's ''
The Lure of the Labrador Wild''
★
Labrador information page
★
Newfoundland and Labrador Defense League - Advocacy Group