Shoal Harbour Methodist Cemetery is located along Shoal Harbour Drive in Shoal Harbour, Clarenville, NL in a former farmer’s field known locally as Don Tilley’s Field. It is surrounded by a wooded area and extends close to the embankment overlooking Random Sound. The site has been assigned Borden Number DbAI-02 as an identifier by the Provincial Archaeology Office. The remnants of a wire fence outline its boundaries. The municipal heritage designation includes that area of cemetery land currently bounded by the remnants of a wire fence plus a buffer of three metres, and that area as far south as the bank just southeast of the burials.
Formal Recognition Type
Municipal Heritage Building, Structure or Land
Heritage Value
Shoal Harbour Methodist Cemetery has been designated a municipal heritage site by the Town of Clarenville due to its historical, spiritual and aesthetic value.
Shoal Harbour Methodist Cemetery has spiritual and historic values as the oldest known cemetery in the Clarenville/Shoal Harbour area and the first cemetery of the community’s Methodist population. The cemetery dates back to at least the latter part of the nineteenth-century. The cemetery is easily recognizable as being a sacred site and demonstrates the importance of spirituality in the lives of the early settlers who established it. The fragmented marble gravemarkers at the site bear both spiritual epitaphs and religious iconography. It is believed that the community’s original Methodist Church (consecrated in 1866 and burned to the ground in 1892) once stood at the front of the site, although this has not been established with certainty.
Shoal Harbour Methodist Cemetery has historic value due to its connection with the area’s earliest, permanent residents, John Tilley (or Tilly) and his family. John Tilley (died 1871), who realized extraordinary accomplishment in both his business life and in his personal life, his wife Elizabeth (died circa 1868), and very likely other family members are also buried there. The Tilleys also built the first Methodist Church in Shoal Harbour. Thomas Godden (or Gadden), a veteran of the Battle of Trafalgar is also laid to rest at Shoal Harbour Methodist Cemetery. The hand-chiselled name “Thos Godden” on a locally made slate stone would have taken considerable effort and likely indicates that he was held in high regard. The marble headstones that once marked the grave sites of John and Elizabeth Tilley and others were likely imported and are indicative of the esteem in which they were held, as imported headstones would have been costly.
Shoal Harbour Methodist Cemetery also has aesthetic value. It is easily recognizable as a burial site and imparts a sense of solitude and reverence. The site is located within a former farm field, close to an embankment overlooking Random Sound. The materials used to construct the currently visible headstones (three of local slate, two of marble, and one of local quartzite), as well as the fence that enclosed the area lends it a definite sense of a time long past. The beauty of the natural environment with moss beds, mature trees, unusual rock groupings and a spectacular view of Random Sound add to the sense of reverence and undisturbed quiet.
Source: Town of Clarenville Regular Council Meeting Motion 08-108 July 22, 2008.
Character Defining Elements
All those elements which relate to the age, historic value, aesthetic value, and function of the site including:
-extant headstones and fragments in slate, quartzite and marble;
-hand-chiselling of extant headstones;
-inscriptions and iconography of extant headstones;
-any other gravemarkers, in-situ or off-site, associated with the site;
-fence remnants and trees used as fence posts, helping to define the perimeter of the site;
-natural elements including buffer trees, mosses, other flora, and rock groupings;
-sense of quiet solitude and reverence, and;
-the unimpeded view of Random Sound.
Notes
Unfortunately, when the Methodist Church was destroyed by fire in 1892 the church records from that time were also lost. However, the headstones located on the site may serve as partial records of those who once lived and died there. John Tilley (or sometimes spelled ‘Tilly’) is one of the most celebrated historic characters of the Clarenville area. According to the Wikipedia entry for “Clarenville, Newfoundland and Labrador”: “John Tilley and his family were the first settlers of Lower Shoal Harbour. They traveled from Hants Harbour in 1848 because of the abundance of timber here. “Scholar John ” many people referred to him as, because he taught himself how to read and write. As a young man he married Elizabeth Bursey of Old Perlican and they had four sons and six daughters. Being one of the earliest Justices of the Peace licensed to perform marriages in Newfoundland, John Tilley performed the marriage of his own daughter. If we were to look in church records today, we would find that Scholar John’s name would appear several times in the late 1830s and 1840s when there was apparently no minister or missionary available.
When the Tilleys first arrived the first thing they had to do was to build a log cottage which would be a temporary structure. They later built a saw mill so they could build a standard size home. Along with the saw mill, the Tilleys became involved with fox farming, gardening, coopering, blacksmithing, fishing and fish canning. John Tilley and Sons were the first to tin salmon in Newfoundland. Shortly after Scholar John tinned his first salmon he learned of a fishery exhibition. He sent a sample to the exhibition and received a prize in the form of a bronze medal with the inscription: ” Warranted to keep free from taint and to retain its purity and nutritious quality, in any climate for many years.” Later, Scholar John, Aaron and Moses Tilley (sons) with help from John’s son-in-law David Palmer, built the first church in Shoal Harbour.”