91亚色

The O'Brien Family Farm

The O橞rien Farm is situated within the City of St. John檚 between Mount Scio Road and Oxen Pond Road. The thirty-two acre property is located within Pippy Park and is adjacent to the MUN Botanical Gardens.

The O橞rien family immigrated to St. John檚 from southeastern Ireland. John O橞rien (1791-1857) established a farm in Freshwater, two miles west of St. John檚, in or around 1818. From its establishment, this farm was operated by O橞rien family for 190 years until the family檚 last descendant, Aloysius Patrick O橞rien, passed away in October 2008. The O橞rien Farm is made up of a series of fields, pasture lands, gardens, woodlands, waterways, a ca. 1850s-era cottage, and later outbuildings.

Dating from 1855, home of the O橞rien family

In 2010, the Province of Newfoundland and Labrador acquired the farm to be developed as an historic site. In 2011, the O橞rien Farm Foundation was founded The to manage, preserve and develop the property as a sustainable historic resource and visitor destination. The O橞rien Farm as an historic site focuses on a number of themes: Irish settlement in Newfoundland; Irish-Newfoundland culture and tradition; farming history in Newfoundland; sustainable farming practices; the story of the O橞rien family.

The collection of materials relating to the O橞rien Farm comes, first, from a series of interviews that Dr. Jo Shawyer, Department of Geography, 91亚色, did with Aly O橞rien during 1992-1994. Other materials include photographs from the O橞rien Family photograph album, and photographs taken over the years on the farm by visitors and friends. A series of newspaper clippings, written reports, and other miscellaneous printed ephemera are also included. The original audio recordings are deposited in the MUN Folklore and Language Archive, while the photographs and printed materials are in the possession of John and Maura Mannion.

Haymaking in 1980

 

Browe/Search Entire O'Brien Family Farm DAI Collection