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"Province Island was at one time occupied by Martin Adams,
(the pioneer of Newport -1793). He cultivated a field there.
Living on the main land, he and Mrs. Adams would go to the
island daily by boat. She busied herself "with spinning
wool and flax, tending the dinner pot and growing vegetables,
being as industrious as her husband" (Beautiful Waters Vol.
2)
The Indians called it "MEM-TOAG",
and they probably lived there at times. Today this island is
officially named Province Island, after having been called
Zabrieskie Island and Howard Island. It is the largest island in
Lake Memphremagog, being 77 acres, of which 7 acres, are in the
United States. The frontier between the two countries passes
through the south end of the island and we can see where the
International Border is by the 16 foot strip cut through the
woods as the International treaty stipulates.
Bouchette, Surveyor-General of
Canada, indicates the island on his map of 1815, calling it
Province Island. On the 1805 map, he also shows it, but does not
give it a name. In a document addressed to the American
Secretary of War in 1826, the Assistant Civil Engineer De Witt
Clinton, says that the 45th degree passes through a small island
named Province Island. After many years of discussion the
Asburton Treaty was signed in 1842 establishing the frontier as
it was first established by Collins in 1772 a little bit north
of the 45th degree. The Canadians thus loosing some land,
because the line was erroneously traced. La Commission de
Toponymie du Québec places it at 45 degrees, 1 minute, as do
many geographical maps.
Why was the island once called Zabriskie's Island?
According to stories Zabrieskie was a "stowaway" who
at a young age left his native Poland to avoid compulsory
military service and landed in New York.
After his arrival in the United
States he became a "pack peddler" and was very
successful, then he started in the sugar business until he
accumulated considerable wealth and became known as " The
Baron of Sugar". About 1885 he purchased the island from
the estate of either Carlos Pierce or Mr. Oliver Hutchinson. In
the November 30, 1886 issue of the Express & Standard one
finds the following: " N. A. Beach is fully engaged on the
Province Island buildings he is now erecting for A.C. Zabrieskie
of New York. Mr. Beach has a great number of men under his
direction in this enterprise, and when he gets through the
island must shine".
Again on June 23, 1887, the same
journal, describes the work:
A small party of ladies and
gentlemen from this vicinity, on Friday last took a trip to the
Lake, via Reed's Landing, taking row boats from there to
Province Island. The day was fine and the country beautiful in
its verdure and scenery. The first point of interest, of course,
was the new residence of A.C. Zabrieskie, Esq., built for him by
N. A. Beach of Georgeville. The house stands on the highest
point of the island, from which fine views of the lake and
mountain scenery can be had.
The house, built for a summer
residence, is of the Queen Anne style, with broad verandahs or
galleries. The inside is finished in native woods, with hard
wood floors. The general effect is very fine, the finish
bringing out the beauty of the wood in artistic designs,
reflecting great credit upon Mr. Beach, to whose taste the
designing was left by the owner. Most of the rooms have
fire-places so ,that in cool or stormy weather the inmates can
enjoy the comfort of an open fire. The house is evidently
thoroughly built and would be more comfortable in winter than
many quite as pretentious outwardly. We reproduce a few
paragraphs from "Lake Park Items" (The Stanstead
Journal) as accurately describing the house:
One prime attraction just now is
the elegant establishment of Mr. Zabrieskie on Pi, which Mr.
Beach, by permission of Mr. Zabrieskie., takes pride in showing
to appreciative visitors; and he may well be proud of the work
which he has done.
Laboring under the disadvantage
of being upon an island and far from shops and manufactories, he
has nevertheless achieved a success. The windows are of plate
and cathedral glass and the inside finish is entirely of our
native woods wrought in panels, each chamber being finished in a
different kind, which gives to it a distinctive name. The
assembly room with its capacious fire-place and grand stairway,
is particularly attractive. The study adjoining this room, is a
gem, paneled in birds-eye maple, and bears evidence to the skill
of Beach junior, as a fine wood worker. The house is approached
from the dock by a broad graveled drive winding up the hill with
faultless curves and grades. At he north side of the dock a
beautiful yatch house 40 x 60 feet is now nearly completed. Its
architectural design is faultless and its constructions
substantial and permanent. As architect Mr. Beach has done
wonders, hampered as he has been by two serious personal
accidents. His ability is first class and his energy
"immense" Mr. Zabrieskie is to be congratulated on
having such a man to do the work.
During this week the place will
be open for inspection of visitors. Mr. Beach is building the
hull of a 30-ft steam launch which will do duty until a larger
and faster yacht shall have been completed, when, we suppose the
launch will be used for marketing, etc..." ( The cost
estimated in those days was in excess of $90,000.)
Zabrieskie was an enigmatic person, and his story is near
legend. General Butterfield, who lived not far from Zabrieskie ,
decided one day to meet this eccentric. He went, in his cruiser
"Kittemaug", to Zabriskie's wharf. Once docked, the
General stood up and said: Mr. Zabrieskie, I am General
Butterfield and I have come to make your acquaintance."
Hands behind his back and in a voice without equivocation the
response came rapidly: "Thank you, General Butterfield,
when I wish to make your acquaintance, I will make it known to
you, Goodbye!"
Some say that he brought with
him young men whom he posted like sentinels and when he dressed
in a military uniform he marched and galloped on his horse
shouting orders to them.
One day while accompanied by an
instructor, who was showing him how to operate a new gasoline
launch boat, the motor exploded. Not knowing how to swim the two
men cried: "HELP". They were saved by a young lady who
was on the neighbouring Tea Table island. Zabrieskie married
this lady and they had two children, a boy and a girl. On the
other hand, Austin Hawes, in another report says: "
Recently a story has been circulated that Zabrieskie married a
local woman who saved his life when his naphtha launch burned. I
feel sure that this is not so. He married a lady from New York
and she had a son, came to the island once or twice but
apparently did not like it"
Mrs. Carrie M. Barbour, in a
writing of 1955, tells that: "Zabrieskie was reported to be
a "woman hater" and had all male servants and would
have no woman on the island. This he did alter, for one reason
he did have his mother there. We were none of us welcome on his
island when he was there. One day I was fishing, sitting in my
rowboat and a few feet off the wharf of his island, with my back
to the island, Zabrieskie walked down to the wharf and small
stones began to drop in the water around where I was fishing. I
paid no attention him and soon he left."
A tale came intro being which
claimed the island was haunted" : because on a very black
night with high winds Mrs. Zabrieskie fell ill. Her husband was
away on a trip . She sent his manager to the mainland to find a
doctor. On their return, Mrs Zabrieskie could not be found, and
has never been seen again....except on nights of great storms
when she comes back to haunt the island.
The Island's other owners
The father of Senator Charles B.
Howard bought the island in 1917. They called it Howard's
Island. Mr. Howard, a native of Beebe, had dreamt since his
youth of becoming the owner of this enchanting place. He wanted
it so badly that he gave a duly signed blank cheque to Captain
Bullock of the Lady of the Lake, and told him to buy the island
for him.
And old employee told me that
the first artificial inseminations in Canada were done on the
island, with the herd of Jersey cows which Mr. Howard possessed.
Around 1955 the pheasant hunts
were started. Each spring 300 to 400 young pheasants were
brought from a farm in Oka. They were kept in a barn, for
several months and then were released on the island. About 1960,
the island was sold to the present proprietors: "Province
Island Fish and Game Club Inc" with Mr. Jan Pick, Dr Hector
McDougall, Enest Gilbey, John J. Dunn, well known insurance
broker and The Canadian Ingersoll Rand as shareholders. Since
then Robert J. Dunn and Robert Gagnon owner of l'Auberge Hatley
Inn have replaced some founding shareholders.
They, now, bring in 4000 young
pheasants from May through July, which they feed about 30 tons
of grain . At the beginning of October the pheasant hunt starts,
going on each weekend until the end of November. Not more than 8
guns are used at each hunt. The pheasants become nervous but are
incapable of flying across the lake to the mainland. Hunting
dogs go after any escapees and bring them back. In winter the
foxes and "poachers" cross the ice to pick up any
survivors. During the years l960 to l970 the pheasants came from
the State of New York. They were deposited on the American side
of the island and crossed the border themselves without too many
"customs or immigration" problems.
About 1968, the residence of Mr.
Zabrieskie was completely demolished because it was too
expensive to maintain. The woodwork was sold in the cities of
Quebec, New York and Montreal. The demolition took a year and a
half. The blocks of granite from the foundation are at a place
known as the "sand bar" on the Canadian south west
side of the island not far from the boundary line between the
USA and Canada.
Mr. Leopold Pruneau, of
Shebrooke, lived on Province island form 1945 to 1970. After Mr.
Howard death, the island became the property of his son, Charles
B. Howard, who treated Mr. Pruneau like and adopted father.
(Charles B. Howard was the Federal Liberal Deputy from 1925 to
1940, Mayor of Sherbrooke from 1950 to 1952, and named a senator
in 1940. Domaine Howard or "Howardene" in Sherbrooke
was, also, his property.
Island Trivia
In November 1986 I found a wreck
of a boat east of the island. Mr Pruneau believes that it is a
boat named: "The Lady of the Lake" property of Senator
Howard which exploded about 1945 with Mr. Belisle aboard. He was
the caretaker of the island before Mr. Pruneau (Mr. Belisle
suffered only burns in this accident). It also could be the boat
belonging to Zabrieskie that exploded? Who knows?
Another incident reported by the
manager of the island, Mr. Doyon, show that animals sense more
danger than man. One night, in early winter, the widow of Mr.
Benjamin Howard telephoned to have Mr. Doyon pick her up at
Cedarville. Mr. Doyon harnessed the horses to a sleigh. At mid
point they stopped short. The ice was not very thick, so Mr.
Doyon returned and made some reins about 100 feet long and head
back across the ice towards Cedarville. Again the horses
stopped. He yelled at them and the horses advanced. The ice gave
way and the horses and sleigh were lost.
Deer sometime swim across to the
island and some caretaker are surprised to find the garden
ravaged. Before the arrival of Mr. Pruneau, the local farmers
brought their cattle across in the spring to pasture for the
summer. In the fall they swam them back to the mainland.
One of the old caretakers told
me that to control mosquitoes Zabrieskie had imported bats on
the island. He said: "With the years there were so many
bats that we had difficulty seeing the moon on a night of the
full moon....!!!"
The island has had many out of
the ordinary owners and occupations. It always has and probably
will always be a much talked curiosity of Lake Memphremagog. Nevertheless
" Even "Memphré" have been sighted
near this beautiful island a few times.
A last note on Zabrieskie before
closing. In 1915 he has given to the Goodrich Memorial Library
of Newport a collection of rare books concerning the history of
our region and many times I was able to tell you stories of Lake
Memphremagog coming from his archives funds. He real name is:
Andrew Christian Zabriskie.
Note from the author: In order
to write these articles, archives are of the greatest importance
to us and we count on your generosity to send us: photographs,
documents, books, newspaper clippings, postal cards. Please do
not hesitate to contact us at: La société d'histoire du Lac
Memphrémagog, 446 Main West, Magog, J1X 2A9 or call at: (819)
843-9936
Illustrated History of the
Memphremagog house from its axe-hewn frame, 1838, to its
destruction by fire May 15, 1907 written by doctor Jogn McNab
Currier of Newport in 1916.
"By an act of the Vermont
legislature on October 30, 1816, the name of Duncansboro was
changed to Newport; and on the same day that part of Salem
situated west of lake Memphremagog and "Coventry Leg"
were detached from their respected owns and annexed to Newport.
In 1845 S.B. Rider, an elder in the Baptist denomination, who
had been trying many years to get elected representative to the
legislature was successful, and was duly elected; and to show
his ability as a statesman, had a bill introduced into that
august body to have that part of Province island, that lies in
the waters of the United States annexed to the town of Newport.
The bill went through after the elder's sanctimonious address,
and immediately became a law. There was just enough dry land on
which to build a log house south of Province Line; the rest of
the newly acquired territory was a boggy sand beach bearing
swale grass and swamp shrubs, a home for frogs in spring time.
The writer was informed by one of the early settlers of the town
that in that rustic log house lived a Frenchman and his wife
with seventeen children. In the early part of the following
winter this numerous family were attacked with some kind of an
epidemic disease which hung about them all winter. They soon
became a charge upon the town and Old Duncansboro now bearing
the more modern maritime name of Newport had to foot the bills.
On November 28, 1894, a bill was approved for the annexation of
Coventry Gore to the town of Newport."
(article courtesy of Mr. Jacques
Boisvert, President, La Société d'Histoire du Lac
Memphrémagog, ©-Jan 1988)
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