Douglas Walbourne-Gough's poetic Crow Gulch reclaims the humanity of a 'forgotten' Corner Brook community
'It lit a fire under me as I needed to do something about this'
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Douglas Walbourne-Gough is a poet and mixed/adopted member of the Mi'kmaq from Newfoundland. Crow Gulch is his first poetry collection. It takes us to a place and a time, and to a people pushed far away from the so-called mainstream and conveniently left out of history.
Crow Gulch was a community in Newfoundland that was built around a pulp and paper mill. Many of the residents were of Indigenous and non-Indigenous ancestry. Some of the residents included Walbourne-Gough's great-grandmother and her daughter.
But in the 1970s, Crow Gulch was abandoned. Walbourne-Gough spoke with Shelagh Rogers on location at the Writers at Woody Point in Newfoundland about capturing the history and legacy of the community through poetry with Crow Gulch.
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Revisiting the past
"I was inspired by re-reading House of Hate by Percy Janes, which was originally published in 1970. It's a difficult book to read on a personal level, but it's also a very well-written book. For anybody who lives in, is from or wants to understand what it's like to be from Corner Brook, House of Hate gets to the root — or at least reflects on the roots — of a lot of the social, class, religious and racial divisions that existed.
I don't have an authoritative correction to offer, but I do have a kind of a counter-narrative which serves to re-humanize these human beings.
"In reading that book for the second time as an adult, there are a dozen or so very unkind depictions of Crow Gulch, mostly the women and the children. I took some personal issue with that because that's where my grandmother, aunts, uncles and my dad are from. It lit a fire under me as I needed to do something about this.
"I don't have an authoritative correction to offer, but I do have a kind of a counter-narrative, which serves to re-humanize these human beings."
Family dreams
"My grandfather didn't come from Crow Gulch. He was working as a woodworker with the mill and met my grandmother. They fell in love. I've always been taken by that story and I didn't know most of the details until I was an adult.
The more I thought about my family and tried to write this collection, I looked at photographs and I began to get dream visits from my grandfather.
"The more I thought about my family and tried to write this collection, I looked at photographs and I began to get dream visits from my grandfather. I've only had one such dream where my nana visited me, but she passed away when I was eight, so I can't even remember her voice.
"But I also have faith that if I keep going like this, she too will be able to come to me like that."
Douglas Walbourne-Gough's comments have been edited for length and clarity.