Home | WebMail |

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

NL

Fiery anti-Confederation sentiments of brothers highlighted in historic O'Brien Farm exhibit

The OBrien farm in St. Johns has a new exhibit about the anti-Confederation beliefs of the three OBrien brothers, including the fiery diary entries that documented the path to Newfoundland and Labrador joining Canada.

Aly OBriens diary is available for people to read

Two older woman, one in a blue sweater and the other in a striped green shirt, standing and smiling. Behind them is a table with a red box
Maura Mannion, left, and Rose Smart say Aly O'Brien's diary, which he kept around the years leading up to Confederation, make for a fascinating read. (Heather Barrett/CBC)

Take a step back in time to the mid-20th century, when debates about Newfoundland joining Confederation reigned.

One farmer's fiery words of warning about joining Canada throw the reader right back into history and they're now on display atthe 200-year-old O'Brien Farm, tucked away in the hills of St. John's.

The diary is part ofa new exhibitonthe anti-Confederation sentiments of the O'Brien brothers.

"They could not have been more opposed to it. All three brothers, unanimous, said 'no' no question about it," said Maura Mannion, who is on the farm's interpretation committee and was a long-time friend of the brothers.

The brothers believed that Commission of Government, put in place in 1934, was only supposed to be temporary and Newfoundlandwould revert to self-governance when its financial affairs were sorted, said Mannion.

A white two-story home with green trim. There is a large tree in front of the house.
The exhibit is on display at the O'Brien Farm in St. John's. (Heather Barrett/CBC)

She made a copy of O'Brien's diary, now on display, and said it made for some interesting reading.

In one entry, O'Brien recounted thatBritish Prime Minister Clement Attlee had announced that in the spring of 1946 the people of Newfoundland would select representatives to form a National Assembly. It was part of a process to determine whether the people wanted representative government, commission or confederation.

LISTEN| CBC's Heather Barrett chats withMaura Mannion and Rose Smart on a new exhibit that focuses on Aly O'Brien's anti-Confederation writings:
A display exploring the anti-Confederation stance of the O'Brien brothers is on display at the O'Brien Farm in St. John's

O'Brien wrote about his reaction to that announcement with scathing words.

"This seems merely a sugarcoated promise of democratic rights. It is clearly a negation of the promise that our parliamentary government was to be restored," he wrote.

He worried people would trade democratic rule for a promise of financial stability.

A close up of a box painted red but it's chipped away over time. On the table is a stack of voting ballot cards.
The O'Brien brothers were set against Newfoundland becoming a Canadian province. Their farm was a polling station, and the historic ballot box is now on display as part of an ongoing exhibit. (Heather Barrett/CBC)

In another entry, made on July 21, 1948, O'Brien described a toxic campaign for Confederation.

"Treachery, intrigue, bigotry, prejudice, class hatred, all the instincts of man's lower nature have been appealed to in this vicious campaign waged by the Confederates to deprive our country of its right to full dominion status. To satisfy British imperialistic designs, the best interests of the people of this country are being placed on the auction block," he wrote.

Mannion remembered O'Brien telling a reporter that he had flown a black flag after Newfoundland joined Canada.

"But as we approached our pension time, we went a little easier on that," he wrote.

Cast a ballot

Rose Smart, who also sits on the farm's interpretation committee, said the diarydemonstrates O'Brien's skillas a writer.

"He was very eloquent. He was very passionate. And so it's like the characters come off the page, like all the different personalities," said Smart.

"And his language was just so dramatic and passionate and he did not mince words. So it's really fun to read."

O'Brien's diaries are the "heart of the exhibit," but there are other items on display, Smart said.

"The O'Brien farm was a polling station and the site of active campaigning. So we have the original table, their kitchen table, which was a polling station through all the votes. And we have an original ballot box, which is pretty cool too."

Visitors will also be given ballots so they can cast votes on Confederation and if enough people participate, she said they will reveal the results overFacebook.

Smart said O'Brien would have some thoughts for how polarized politics is becoming in present times.

"He does refer to the deliberate populism of appealing to people's worst instincts to divide and separate and make people dislike the other faction as much as possible. So I would think he would notice that's still going on."

Mannion added that the diaries show the O'Brien brothers, while opposed to joining Canada, would not have minded a different union with another neighbouring country.

"They would have been quite happy to join the U.S. at the time," said Mannion. "They would have been quite in favour of that, which might not have been such a good result given recent events."

Download our free CBC News app to sign up for push alerts for CBC Newfoundland and Labrador. Click here to visit our landing page.

With files from Weekend AM

Add some good to your morning and evening.

Subscribe to our daily newsletter for the top stories in Newfoundland and Labrador.

...

The next issue of CBC Newfoundland and Labrador newsletter will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in theSubscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.