From almost anywhere, reaching Fogo, a remote island off the northeast coast of Newfoundland, Canada, is a long journey. But when I got to the little village of Tilting – after disembarking the ferry from “mainland” Newfoundland and driving to the east side of the island – I might have thought I skipped the entire North American continent to get to the other side of the North Atlantic.
Tilting, on an overhang east of Fogo Island, looks across the ocean to Ireland. But when you enter the town there is Ireland too.
A sign on the side of the road announces “Fáilte go Tilting” (“Welcome to Tilting”, in Irish) and shamrocks adorn buildings and flagpoles. However, nothing prepares you for the accent .
When I entered Cafe Sexton’s, I was immediately struck by the conversation between the other customers at the store. Their voices sounded familiar but unexpected. Were they Irish? I thought. Tilting is Irish, I was told.
“It is predominantly an Irish settlement,” Maureen Foley, a local resident, later remarked to me. “The Irish came here before the famine, in the early to mid-18th century, following the fishing, and they decided to stay.”
Foley pointed out the Old Irish Burial Ground, believed to be the oldest of its kind in Canada, with its Celtic crosses and headstones inscribed with birthplaces such as Youghal and Dungarvan, illustrating the site’s deep Irish heritage.
Thanks to the isolation of this remote village – which barely had roads in the mid-20th century – its descendants such as the Foleys, McGrath, Dwyer and Murphy, who have their homes here, have preserved perfectly their accents.
The accents of these villagers is so pure that it causes confusion in their ancestral homeland. Often times when they visit Ireland, Foley said, “everyone asks, ‘What part of Ireland do you come from?’ And we have to explain.”
Known as “ Talamh an Éisc ”(Land of Fish) for many of the Irish who came to its shores in the 18th century, Newfoundland is the only place outside of Europe that has a name in Irish.
“Outside of Ireland itself,” wrote historian Tim Pat Coogan in Wherever Green is Worn (“Wherever they wear green”), “ There is probably no more Irish place in the world than Newfoundland. ”
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However, Fogo Island could have the most Irish place in the whole province: Tilting, which the author Anne Enright described in a newspaper article Irish Times as “pure Irish… go Landés on the rocks ”.
Tilting sits on a windswept sub-arctic rock coastline covered in seaweed. The weather is often wild, but on the morning I arrived, the water in Tilting Bay was so calm that it clearly reflected the redwood stilt buildings and the wobbly drying and salting platforms clustered around the shore.
Under a storm-swept sky, Tilting seemed frozen in time, as if she had been photographed at the precise moment before the old time-battered buildings finally collapsed. in the water.
But the precariousness with which the buildings cling to the rocky shore hides the strength and resistance of the people who built them.
Winters are long on Fogo Island and the farming season is short. It may seem inhospitable, but for centuries Tilting provided excellent access to the cod-rich waters off its shores.
Before the arrival of Europeans, The Beothuk people fished here , although they are not believed to have built permanent settlements.
The French began to arrive attracted by cod at the beginning of the 16th century, but they did not stay either. At the beginning of the 18th century, the English and Irish began to colonize the island and by the end of the century, Tilting had become an exclusively Irish community.
It was a Tough place to live, but the fishermen endured the harsh conditions and made their living going out to sea in their small wooden boats.
But in the mid-1960, overfishing with powerful ships led to the collapse of the industry and, for 1992, the once plentiful stocks became so near extinction that the federal government declared a moratorium on fishing for North Atlantic cod (today, quotas are still in effect).
In turn, many lives also collapsed. With the loss of livelihood, many of the islanders left Tilting and Fogo in search of work elsewhere. As the population declined, the Newfoundland government began forcing and even forcing people to leave their small and remote communities.
The islanders de Fogo were subject to resettlement , but they put up resistance. “They told us, ‘burn your boats, sink them or swim,’” Carol Penton, editor of a local newspaper, later said in an interview. “So we decided to swim.”
Their homes and centuries of deep heritage were worth fighting for.
Fogo Island became internationally famous when the luxury hotel Fogo Island Inn opened in 2013.
Zita Cobb, a native of the island, returned with a fortune she made in the fiber optic industry and established the Shorefast Foundation, through the which hotel profits are reinvested in local programs that benefit the community.
Another Shorefast initiative, Fogo Island Arts, houses artists in four studios: small structures specifically built contemporaries that are scattered across the island.
However, while Shorefast was setting After Fogo Island on the travelers’ map, Tilting had already quietly started working in a similar company.
“Many of the visitors who come to Fogo Island believe there was nothing to do before, ”Jim McGrath, president of the Tilting Culture and Recreation Society (TRACS), told me. English). “But some of us were already active 15 years before Shorefast started. ”