Saturday, February 27th, 1892, dawned unreasonably warm and clear. Rising
early to take advantage of the fine weather, two hundred men and boys from
many Trinity Bay communities left in their small punts to hunt seals on the
icefield that had drifted in close to land overnight. Their hopes for a
successful hunt were dashed, however, when the weather took an unexpected turn
for the worse. By noon a ferocious winter storm and extremely high sea had
arisen, trapping many of the landsmen on the ice and forcing the others to
make their way to shore by rowing into the teeth of a vicious northern gale.
The events that would unfold that day are remembered as the Trinity Bay
Disaster, marking one of the darkest episodes in the history of the area.
Despite the many unbelievably harrowing escapes and daring rescues that
occurred, by day's end many of the fathers, sons, grandfathers and uncles that
left for the ice that morning were still missing and unaccounted for.
The enormity of the storm's devastation would only manifest itself as
the news of the disaster spread around the bay and to the rest of Newfoundland
in the hours and days that followed.