PEI

How this P.E.I. man's collection is keeping the history of his community alive

The hobby has Eddie Doucette looking for anything of historical value, most of it having to do with the community he lives in and of what he calls the "lost settlement" known as Frog Pond.

'You just never know what you're going to find' says Eddie Doucette of Skinners Pond

Eddie Doucette says his collection of artifacts from the Skinners Pond area is a tribute to his community's history. (Nicole Williams/CBC)

"It's fun," says Eddie Doucette of his decades-long hobby of collecting local artifacts.

Doucette lives in Skinners Pond, P.E.I., and for the last 30 years or so he's been scouring his local beach with a metal detector to find treasures — at least, to him.

"There's lots of times you don't find anything but there's quite a few times you do — majority of it is right after storms," he said.

Doucette looks for anything unique or with historical value, most of it coming from the community he lives in and from what he calls the "lost settlement" known as Frog Pond.

"It's not on the maps so no one really has heard of it much anymore," Doucette said.

Doucette has been collecting items from the local beach and abandoned barns for more than 30 years. (Nicole Williams/CBC)
Several antique locks hang on the walls of Doucette's shed which he's dubbed the Frog Pond Museum. (Nicole Williams/CBC)

Doucette said many of the buildings that made up Frog Pond have been repurposed or hauled away to become what is now Skinners Pond.

That's why around the side of Doucette's home is a shed that he's dubbed the Frog Pond Museum.

Over the years, Doucette has found hundreds of items from the Skinners Pond beach using a metal detector. (Nicole Williams/CBC)
Doucette says these are toy guns that children used to play with. (Nicole Williams/CBC)

Inside are hundreds of artifacts he has uncovered by combing the beach or looking through abandoned barns in the area: everything from old P.E.I. coins, Chinese currency, antique locks, fishing equipment and dolls that he said date back to the 1800s.

"You just never know what you're going to find. There's no two days going to the beach that are alike."

'Trying to fill in the gaps'

In part, the hobby is inspired by Doucette's love of history. But he said it's also an attempt to connect with his grandfather, who once ran a now-defunct lobster factory in the area.

Doucette has found dozens of old metal fishing jigs in the shape of cod. (Nicole Williams/CBC)
Among Doucette's more regular finds are coins, including some East Asian currency. (Nicole Williams/CBC)

"Never got to meet him. Just trying to fill in gaps."

At this point, Doucette estimates he's picked up 45 kilograms of lead from the beach. If he finds a metal object that he's sure has no historical value, he melts it down and makes it into art.

Doucette has also discovered many religious artifacts. He says anyone who wants to come visit can get in touch with him by looking him up in the phone book. (Nicole Williams/CBC)

Doucette said his hope is to see an official museum built in the area to which he could donate his findings, to preserve the community's history.

Until then, he said, "It'll be hobby till I die, that's for sure."

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Nicole Williams is a journalist for CBC News based in Ottawa. She has also worked in P.E.I. and Toronto. She is part of the team that won a 2021 Canadian Association of Journalists national award for investigative journalism. Write in confidence to [email protected].