Book Launch: Sable Island in Black and White

Jill Martin • April 26, 2016

Tuesday, April 26 at 7:00 pm
Book Launch: Sable Island in Black and White 
by Jill Martin Bouteillier

Maritime Museum of the Atlantic
1675 Lower Water Street Halifax, Nova Scotia
Nimbus Publishing

The newest addition to Nimbus’s popular Images of Our Past series, Sable Island in Black and White is a fascinating look at day-to-day life on Nova Scotia’s most secluded outpost. Travel back in time to 1884 when author Jill Martin Bouteillier’s great aunt, Trixie, was growing up on this isolated spit of sand 160 kilometres from the North American mainland. Trixie’s father, Robert Jarvis (R. J.) Bouteillier, was Sable Island’s superintendent, acting on behalf of the Nova Scotia government as lawmaker, doctor, dispenser of stores, and, most importantly, head of lifesaving.

This narrative history—accented by more than 100 black and white family photographs of the island’s famous shipwrecks, wild horses, and visitors—tells the incredible true story of a stalwart group of ordinary people who called Sable Island home.
For additional information:
Richard MacMichael
902-424-8897

Events

December 8, 2023
October 17, 2023
December 31, 2021
From Thistles to Cowpies - YouTube
December 31, 2021
The Memory Box
December 31, 2021
A Capitol Loss
By Jill Martin November 9, 2019
Jill Martin writes with authority about Sable Island. Her family connections to the island served as inspiration for her first novel, Return to Sable (2015) and her award winning, Sable Island in Black and White, (Nimbus 2016) which chronicle the communication challenges of this minute crescent of sand rising, at its highest, a mere 70 metres above the surrounding sea. Both a navigational hazard and a place of succour to those unfortunate souls hoodwinked by its shifting sands, Sable Island has unequivocally earned the nickname, Graveyard of the Atlantic. As part of the research for her writing, she consulted the logs of the island’s superintendents’ held in the NS Archives; the Marconi records held in the National Archives in Ottawa and the Bodleian Library, Oxford University, as well as personal letters and artefacts in her possession. This research unearthed a wealth of information on the history of communication on and to the island: lighthouses, fog alarms, cannons, pigeons, telephone, and wireless. She connected with family members descended from two of the early wireless engineers who worked call sign, SD (Sable Island) and who went on to shape the direction of radio in Canada and the United States. Just out of wireless school, these intrepid young men landed on the spit of sand and went about their work in three piece suits, jaunty hats and riding boots. Join Jill at the third bi-annual Sable Island Conference, Shifting Sands, November 9 8:30-3pm at the Halifax Convention Centre in Halifax Nova Scotia.
Show More
Share by: