LIFELINES | Cross Currents | The Cod Rush | Swales and Whales |
Possessions | A Lobster Tale | The Lure of the River | Nova Scotia Motor Fishing Boats



Lifelines: Canada's East Coast Fisheries

The Lure of the River
Sport Fishing in New Brunswick
 
Luxury in the Wilderness
The Lure of the River: Sport Fishing in New Brunswick

 

Louisa Morse

A Female "Sport" on the Tobique River.

Ladies had been coming to New Brunswick rivers since the late nineteenth century, mostly in the company of their husbands or as part of a family. Louisa Morse (nee Spruance) was part of this mould but stayed on through life's changes, attracted by a love of the sport and the river. Born in Wilmington, Delaware, she began visiting the Tobique with her parents in the early 1920s. Her father was a co-founder of the Nictau Fish and Game Club in 1924, and with her mother, all three fished on the river until William Spruance's death in 1935. Thereafter mother and daughter continued to come north and Louisa remained an ardent sport fisher as a single and, later, a married woman. She fished until 1974 when the Nictau club ceased operations, a victim of dams on the Tobique and St. John Rivers.



Wool jacket - 
Central New Brunswick Woodmen's Museum

Grey wool jacket,
with label "Abercrombie & Fitch Co. / New York". This jacket was worn by Mrs. Morse during the 1920s and 30s.
(The Central New Brunswick Woodmen's Museum, Boiestown, New Brunswick, 985.21.1 a)


Leather belt with rod butt attachment - 
Camp Harmony Angling Club

Leather belt with rod butt attachment,
labeled "Edward vom Hofe / New York"
(Camp Harmony Angling Club)



CHINA CABINET | LAUNDRY / PANTRY | WRITING DESK | THE GUIDES
LOUISA MORSE | THE BUSINESSMAN ON THE RIVER


Design

 

 
Menu - Lifelines Menu - The Lure of the River

Back