Hampstead News: Thursday 16th March 1893

“Labrador” On Monday the 13th at the Vestry Hall, Frederick Treves, Esq., F.R.C.S., presided at a lecture entitled “Labrador.” The lecturer, Mr. W. T. Grenfell, gave an account of the origin, nature, and object of his cruise from Yarmouth, England, to that savage and barren coast. It was undertaken last year, and the auspices of the Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen: … (long description of voyage of the Mission Hospital vessel “Albert”) … (description of arrival in St. John’s at time of Great Fire and life there and on the Labrador coast) … Letters were read from Capt. Sir Baldwin Walker, Bart., R.N., late Commodore on the coast of Newfoundland, Sir Robert Pinsent, Judge of the Supreme Court of Newfoundland; Sir Edward Birkbeck, Bart; and Mr. Brodie Hoare, M.P., all expressing sympathy with the objects of the Mission and regretting that they were unable to be present. …


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Referenced

GRO0747 Hennock: Robert John Pinsent: 1834 – 1893 

Evening Mail: Wednesday 15th March 1893

Royal Geographical Society: At the last meeting of the council on Monday, the following were elected fellows of the society: … (list includes) … Sir Robert J. Pinsent, D.C.L. …


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GRO0747 Hennock: Robert John Pinsent: 1834 – 1893 

London Daily News: Tuesday 14th March 1893

Newfoundland:  SIR ROBERT PINSENT has favoured us with a long letter on the French Treaty Question in Newfoundland, which we regret we have, not space to print in full. He declares that the colonists are quite willing to become a party to arbitration, on a reasonable recasting of the proposals of reference made by Her Majesty’s Government. They simply object to any partial arbitration. The territorial question is infinitely more important than any question of fisheries. The French have “made their fishing claims the basis of a territorial claim to a large part of the island which is absolutely without warrant in the treaties. The latter expressly declare that the territory belongs wholly to Great Britain. It follows therefore that such rights of landing to dry fish as the French enjoy must be exercised solely under our jurisdiction. The French may have the right to land for a certain purpose, but, like any other persons enjoying the liberty of trade or manufacture on our soil, they must hold themselves absolutely subject to the local government and administration. If these oppress them, and hinder the exercise of the right, they have a ground of complaint; but they cannot attempt to preclude the possibility of oppression by claiming a territorial mastery. Yet this is what the French do. They claim the power of excluding the Newfoundlanders from the full enjoyment of their own seaboard, and they exercise it in the most rigorous and offensive manner. The arbitration proposed is confined to a comparatively unimportant detail. Until the French resign their claim to prevent British settlement on British ground, the Newfoundland difficulty will remain. All this is unexceptionable, yet we take leave to say that no settlement will be possible without the help of the colonists. They must show a conciliatory disposition, not only towards the mother-country, which has their interests at heart, but towards the French, who enjoy ample powers of refusal in regard to every arrangement proposed. We cannot exactly proceed by ultimatums in negotiation with a great and friendly Power. The colonists should set the French an example of respect for engagements by scrupulously observing their own. The Report of the Joint Committee at St. John’s threatens to block the way.


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Referenced

GRO0747 Hennock: Robert John Pinsent: 1834 – 1893 

Leeds Mercury: Friday 10th March 1893

A report having been published in the Newfoundland Press that Sir Robert Pinsent, Judge of the Supreme Court of Newfoundland, was likely to succeed Sir Ambrose Shea in the Governorship of the Bahamas or be appointed to some similar colonial post. Sir Robert has written from London, where is now staying on leave of absence, stating that he has heard nothing on the subject in England.

[see also Glasgow Herald: Friday 10th March 1893]


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GRO0747 Hennock: Robert John Pinsent: 1834 – 1893 

Colonies and India: Saturday 25th February 1893

Royal Colonial Institute: Annual Meeting: the annual meeting of the Fellows of this Institute was held on February 21st in Northumberland Avenue, Sir Frederick Young occupying the chair … (discussion) … The following papers have been arranged: …  April 11: Sir Robert Pinsent, “Newfoundland up to Date”.


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GRO0747 Hennock: Robert John Pinsent: 1834 – 1893 

Anglo-American Times: Saturday 21st January 1893

THE meeting of the Behring Sea arbitrators in Paris on February 23rd will be purely informal, for the intention is to adjourn till May or June, when the arbitration will be commenced. The new Government at Washington will then have been inaugurated. Sir Robert J. Pensent, Puisne Judge of the Supreme Court of Newfoundland, has been interviewed. He fails to comprehend, if International Law has any practical meaning, how the claim of the United States can be justified or sustained, and he adds, that the “tacking and filling” by the American side of the Salisbury-Blaine correspondence shows the hollowness of the contention that the Behring Sea differs in any respect from the great waters of any kind anywhere on the globe.


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GRO0747 Hennock: Robert John Pinsent: 1834 – 1893 

York Herald: Saturday 14th January 1893

THE BEHRING SEA V. NEWFOUNDLAND FISHERIES QUESTIONS: INTERVIEW WITH A NEWFOUNDLAND JUDGE. (Special Telegram from our own correspondent.) Sir Robert J. Pinsent, puisne judge of the Supreme Court of Newfoundland, who is at present on a visit to this country, was interviewed yester-day by our representative on the subject of the fisheries disputes. Sir Robert is perhaps one of the best living authorities on these questions. He has long been familiar with them in all their phases both in a judicial and in a legislative capacity. The articles contributed by him to leading British newspapers and reviews gave to the controversy a popular interest in England and imparted to the British public a decree of knowledge upon the subject which they never had before. Sir Robert’s judgment in the historic case of Baird v. Sir Baldwin Walker upon which there was an appeal to the Privy Council was confirmed the other day. Speaking of the French claims to the Newfoundland fisheries, Sir Robert said: ‘ I can claim to be as high an authority as anybody upon the fisheries question which so gravely concerns the interests and destinies of Newfoundland, and which is a very much more important subject than the Behring Sea question, having regard to the extent and value of British rights of property affected by it. The modus vivendi between France and Great Britain in reference to the rights of lobster fishing and canning will shortly expire with the statute which gives it legal force, and intimation has been given that since the local legislature of Newfoundland declines to pass the permanent Act, which contemplated arbitration, the Imperial Parliament will shortly be asked to adopt one. I regret to say that this branch of the difficulty standing alone is fast becoming, if it has not already become, one of little importance, and hardly calling for so formal and costly an adjustment.” The lobster industry is rapidly dying out, and ceasing to be remunerative, by reason of the depletion of the breeding grounds. On that part of the coast where the French possess treaty rights this branch of the Newfoundland fisheries is subject to no control by the Fisheries Commission, or by the Legislature of Newfoundland, or of France, and consequently, as in the case of the fur-bearing seals of Behring Sea. It would seem much more desirable that an agreement for the preservation of the lobster and the resuscitation of the industry should be arrived at in the interests of all parties than that a long diplomatic fight should take place over it. Legislation and diplomacy should be seriously directed to the final solution of a situation which mars the well-being of an important British colony. The time must be rapidly approaching when the French treaty question will again come on the tapis.” Sir Robert then proceeded to deal with the Behring Sea dispute with regard to which he said: “In Newfoundland we have no direct concern in the Behring Sea controversy. Of course we sympathise with the claims of our fellow subjects in Canada, particularly with such of our people— there is quite a number of them —as have migrated to British Columbia and there engaged in the seal fishery of the North Pacific. Moreover, abounding in great and wide and deep bays, as the Island of Newfoundland does, we cannot but feel a deep interest in the ultimate issue of this controversy as a matter of principle. As a question of internal law, if there be any practical meaning in the term, I fail to comprehend by what perversion or violation of its general principles the claim of the United States can be justified or sustained. The Salisbury- Blaine correspondence, in which the “tacking and filling on the American side disgusted even its own respectable press, has only to be read to convince the rational reader of the hollowness of the connection. It is manifest that the unregulated use of Behring Sea for the capture of seals must lead to the destruction and extinction of a valuable public property, and will be especially damaging to the commercial interests of the United States in their legitimate territories and rights of property in and around that sea. Even in regard to the North Atlantic seal fishery, mainly prosecuted from Newfoundland, it has been found expedient to establish legal restrictions upon the times and methods of its prosecution, so as to prevent reckless destruction and possible extinction” There of course, the seal is of a different character, and is mainly valuable for its oil, and for its skins as leather, not as a very valuable fur as the Pacific seal is, and the number, moreover, is immense and not measurably exhaustible. With the North Pacific seal this is not so, and early extinction must follow the uncontrolled pursuit of the industry which attends its capture.”

[see also Sheffield Independent: Saturday 14th January 189 and Birmingham Daily Post: Saturday 14th January 1893]


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Referenced

GRO0254 Hennock: Emily Hetty Sabine Homfray: 1845 – 1922
GRO0747 Hennock: Robert John Pinsent: 1834 – 1893

Faversham Times and Mercury and North-East Kent Journal: Saturday 14th January 1893

Sir Robert Pinsent, Chief Justice of Newfoundland, who with Lady Pinsent, is at present on a visit to this country is, according to the Morning Leader, undoubtedly the best living authority on the Fisheries question. Nor is that surprising. The subject has been much to the fore in recent years, and the Chief Justice has had it forced upon his attention, whether he liked it or not. But Sir Robert Pinsent has both studied and mastered it and written several valuable commentaries upon it. Sir Robert is a native of the colony in which he now occupies so high a legal position, his father having been a judge in the Court of Labrador. Called to the Bar in 1856, Sir Robert soon drifted into politics, became Solicitor-General and subsequently Attorney-General, and was raised to the judicial Bench 1890. He is in his 59th year.


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Referenced

GRO0254 Hennock: Emily Hetty Sabine Homfray: 1845 – 1922
GRO0747 Hennock: Robert John Pinsent: 1834 – 1893

Birmingham Daily Post: Saturday 14th January 1893

The Behring Sea and Newfoundland Fisheries Question: Interview with a Newfoundland Judge: [Reuters Special Services]: Sir Robert J. Pinsent, Puisne judge of the Supreme Court of Newfoundland, who is at present on a visit to this country, was interviewed yesterday by a representative of Reuter’s Agency on the subject of the Fisheries dispute. Sir Robert is perhaps one of the best living authorities on these questions. He has long been familiar with them in all their phases, both in a judicial and in a legislative capacity. The articles contributed by him to the leading British newspapers and reviews gave to the controversy a popular interest in England and imparted to the British public a degree of knowledge upon the subject which they had never had before. Sir Robert’s judgment in the historic case of Baird v. Sir Baldwin Walker, upon which there was an appeal to the Privy Council, was confirmed the other day. Speaking of the French claims to the Newfoundland fisheries, Sir Robert said, “I can claim to be as high an authority as anybody upon the Fisheries question, which so gravely concerns; the interests and destinies of Newfoundland, and which is a very much more important subject than the Behring Sea question, having regard to the extent and value of British rights and prosperity affected by it. The Modus Vivendi between France and Great Britain in reference to the rights of lobster fishing and canning will shortly expire with the statute which gives it legal force; and an intimation has been given that since the local Legislature of Newfoundland declines to pass the permanent Act which contemplates arbitration, the Imperial Parliament will shortly be asked to adopt one. I regret to say that this branch of the difficulty, standing alone, is fast becoming, if it has not already become, one of little importance, and hardly calling for so formal and costly an adjustment. The lobster industry is rapidly dying out and ceasing to be remunerative, by reason of the depletion of the breeding-grounds. On that part of the coast where the French Possess treaty rights this branch of the Newfoundland fisheries is subject to no control by the Fisheries Commission or by the Legislature of Newfoundland or France, and consequently, as in the case of the fur-bearing seals of the Behrjng Sea, it would seem much more desirable that an agreement for the preservation of the lobster and the resuscitation of the industry should be arrived at in the interests of all parties than that a prolonged diplomatic fight should take place over it. What legislation and diplomacy should be directed to is the final solution of a situation which mars the wellbeing of an important British colony. The time must be rapidly approaching when the French treaty question will again come on the tapis.” Sir Robert then proceeded to deal with the Behring Sea dispute, with regard to which he said, “In Newfoundland we have no direct concern in this controversy. Of course, we sympathize with the claims of our fellow subjects in Canada, particularly with such of our people – and there is quite a number of them – who have migrated to British Columbia and there engaged ill the seal-fishery of the North Pacific. Moreover, abounding in great, and wide, and deep bays as the Island of Newfoundland does, we cannot but feel a deep interest in the ultimate issue of this controversy as a matter of principle. As a question of international law, if there be any practical meaning in the term, I fail to comprehend by what perversion or violation of its general principles the claim of the United States can be justified or sustained. The Salisbury-Blaine correspondence, in which the ‘tacking and filling’ on the American side disgusted even its own respectable press, has only to be read to convince the rational reader of the hollowness of the contention that the Behring Sea differs in any respect from other great public waters of the same kind, or that different principles are capable of being applied to is. That Mr. Blaine, with characteristic industry, expended infinite pains upon his correspondence, and taxed his ingenuity to the utmost to make out a case, there can be no doubt; but his exuberant verbosity utterly failed to explain away the position of which the United States had in other cases been the champion, not only in contests with Great Britain but with Russia herself upon the question of this very Behring Sea and its seal fishery. From another point of view and upon the assumption of common international rights there can be no doubt that the manner of using this great sea for the prosecution of the industries affords us a very fit subject for either agreement or settlement by arbitration, to the award of which all the nations interested should be bound. It is manliest that the unregulated use of Behring Sea for the ‘capture of seals must lead to the destruction and extinction of a valuable public property and will be especially damaging to the commercial interests of the United States in their legitimate territories and rights of property in and around that sea. Even in regard to the North Atlantic seal fishery, mainly prosecuted from Newfoundland, it has been found expedient to establish legal restrictions upon the times and methods of its prosecution so as to prevent reckless destruction and possible extinction. There, of course, the seal is of a different character and is mainly valuable for its oil and for its skins as leather, not as a very valuable fur as the Pacific seal is, and the number, moreover, is immense, and not measurably exhaustible. With the North Pacific seal this is not so, and early extinction must follow the uncontrolled pursuit of the industry which attends its capture.” WASHINGTON, January 13: – A definite agreement has been arrived at between the parties interested in the Behring Sea question. The meeting of arbitrators on February 23 next will be of a purely informal character, and an adjournment will be made until some date in May or June, when the arbitration will be proceeded with.


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Referenced

GRO0747 Hennock: Robert John Pinsent: 1834 – 1893 

Coleshill Chronicle: Saturday 14th January 1893

Sir Robert Pinsent, Chief Justice of Newfoundland, who, with Lady Pinsent, is at present on a visit to this country, is according to the Morning Leader, undoubtedly the best living authority on the Fisheries question. Nor is that surprising. The subject has been to the fore in recent years and the Chief Justice has had it forced upon his attention, whether he liked it or not. But Sir Robert Pinsent has both studied and mastered it and written several valuable commentaries upon it. Sir Robert is a native of the colony in which he now occupies so high a legal position. His father having been a judge in the Court of Labrador. Called to the Bar in 1856, Sir Robert soon drifted into politics, became solicitor-General and subsequently Attorney-General and was raised to the judicial Bench in 1880. He is in his 59th year.

[see also Kenilworth Advertiser: Saturday 14th January 1893]


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Referenced

GRO0254 Hennock: Emily Hetty Sabine Homfray: 1845 – 1922
GRO0747 Hennock: Robert John Pinsent: 1834 – 1893