by
Melvin Baker(c1990)
(Originally published in Newfoundland Studies 6, 2 (1990), 190-209. The article appears here by
permission of Newfoundland Studies).
THE NEWFOUNDLAND POWER COMMISSION, which was created in 1954, was not seen
initially as either an engine of industrial growth or a means of securing public ownership of
electrical generation.(1) Instead, the government of Liberal Premier Joseph Smallwood looked to
the private sector for capital and leadership in hydro development, giving it considerable financial
and natural resources. Until 1958 the Power Commission served the province in - an advisory and
investigative capacity as the government received numerous requests from communities for
electricity; in effect, it was limited by Smallwood to little more than a public relations role.
Between 1958 and 1964 the Commission's main concern was to extend rural electrification where
it was financially feasible and practicable to do so. In 1964, with the financial assistance of the
federal government, the Commission became responsible for the huge hydro development at Bay
d'Espoir and for all new generation of electricity on the island. After the Bay d'Espoir project, the
Commission grew into a big crown corporation and became the central player in the province's
energy field. It also became an instrument of economic expansion for the province through the
creation of an island-wide transmission grid system, bringing electricity to most of the island's
small outports.
Hydro Development in Newfoundland to 1949
In 1924 Canadian businessman Harry Crowe, addressing the Newfoundland Board of
Trade, stated that "water power is today the greatest asset of any country." He proposed a
160,000-horsepower hydroelectric development costing $10 million in the Bay d'Espoir region on
Newfoundland's south coast. With the available power, Crowe planned to establish a paper mill in
the region. The hydro project, which Crowe claimed would be "so great that it would not alone
take care of all the unemployed who may be in Newfoundland, but it would bring back all those
who have left the country in recent years," was not to be.(2) However, his vision of the Bay
d'Espoir power potential loomed in the background of future plans for developing
Newfoundland's natural resources. But harnessing that potential through private sector initiative
remained an elusive goal for local politicians and businessmen until well into the 1960s.
Until the mid-1960s hydroelectric development in Newfoundland was of two kinds, both pursued
exclusively by private companies. First, commencing in 1900, there were small hydro projects
established close to large communities on the Avalon, Bonavista, and Burin peninsulas. The
generating capacity of such small projects was usually between 3,000 and 5,000 horsepower in
installed capacity. Second, there were large-scale hydro developments situated in central and
western sections of the island, built in the early twentieth century to serve the specific industrial
needs of paper mills at Grand Falls and Corner Brook. These systems were far from other urban
centers, especially the St. John's urban region, and until the mid-1960s there was no island-wide
transmission grid system connecting the various hydro systems to one another. Of the island's
total installed turbine capacity in 1949 of approximately 262,050 horsepower, 239,400 was used
by the two paper mills.(3) The estimated hydro potential of the new Canadian province was, in
1949, over five million horsepower, of which only 5% had been developed. The Dominion Bureau
of Statistics reported that on the island of Newfoundland over one million horsepower awaited
development, mainly on the south coast in the Bay d'Espoir area where several large rivers existed
with substantial watersheds in the island's barren and marshy interior.(4)
In 1949, outside the paper towns of Corner Brook and Grand Falls, there were three private
electrical utilities. The smallest, Union Electric Light and Power Company, was located on the
Bonavista Peninsula. It served several small towns in the Bonavista area with approximately 1,300
customers in 1951. Founded in 1916 by William Ford Coaker, the President of the Fishermen's
Protective Union, by 1953 this utility had an installed capacity of 1,250 horsepower.(5) The next
largest utility was the United Towns Electric Company, established in 1902 and serving rural
communities on the Avalon and Burin peninsulas. Owned by St. John's businessman Robert
Murphy, United Towns Electric in 1950 had an installed capacity of 16,710 horsepower from
eight small plants, or less than 1% of the province's total installed turbine capacity. On the west
coast, in the Stephenville and Port aux Basques areas, it operated through a small subsidiary,
West Coast Power Company. The largest utility in the province was the St. John's-based
Newfoundland Light and Power Company, which dated from 1885 and which in 1949 had an
installed capacity of 21,350 horsepower from four plants.(6) From 1924 to 1949 this company was
owned by Montreal businessman Izaak Killam. In 1949 Killam sold most of his common shares in
the Newfoundland utility to the public through a stock issue.
1949-53
In 1931 Joseph Smallwood wrote that "the future possibilities of hydro- electric development in
Newfoundland are great... Newfoundland is out for industrialization and won't be happy until she
gets it."(7) After 1949 Smallwood as premier spent twenty-two years in office determined to
industrialize Newfoundland on the basis of hydro power, while simultaneously trying to bring
electricity to the remote areas of the province. Earlier in the century, Smallwood had seen two of
his political mentors, Liberal Premier Richard Squires and William Coaker, help establish a large
paper mill at Corner Brook based on abundant cheap hydro. Another political hero, Liberal
Premier Robert Bond, had encouraged English capitalists to build a paper mill at Grand Falls in
the early 1900s. Smallwood wanted to leave similar large industrial developments as part of his
political legacy.(8)
To achieve this objective, he faced the daunting task of attracting foreign capital to the province.
As the historian J.K. Hiller has written with regard to the establishment of the paper mill at Corner
Brook, this was not easy, for in dealing with major foreign capitalists Newfoundland politicians
had little with which to bargain and eventually were forced to settle on terms offered by the
foreigners. The historical alternative for Newfoundland has been little or no development.(9) For
Smallwood, it would be no different. While promoting industrial development, moreover, he also
had to deal with the expectations of the populace for improved public services and a higher
standard of living, in keeping with Newfoundland's new status as a province of Canada.
The challenge for both government and public utilities after 1949 was to get services in general
and electricity in particular into many of the smaller isolated communities, and to find new sources
of power. As Smallwood observed in 1957, the "people are up in arms demanding hydro-electric
development."(10) Since the early years of settlement, much of Newfoundland's population had been
located in tiny fishing communities, often hidden away in remote harbors on the most distant
reaches of peninsulas and headlands jutting far out into the Atlantic as near to the fishing
grounds as possible. The vicissitudes of Newfoundland's geography and the wide dispersion of its
communities proved such an impediment and a challenge that by the time of Newfoundland's
entry into the Canadian confederation in 1949 only 50.4% of households had electrical service.(11)
One way in which Smallwood's government attempted to provide people with electrical power and other services was through the controversial resettlement program which, beginning in 1954, was intended to move people from small outports to larger centers where services could be concentrated. This program obviously would indirectly help with rural electrification by moving residents from the isolated coastlines where the cost of providing government services was prohibitive. At a March, 1956, conference to discuss the social and economic problems of the island's south coast, Smallwood told delegates from that region that the province should eliminate 1,000 of its scattered 1,300 outports so that more people could congregate in fewer settlements and have better lives.(12) Indeed, as late as 1961, 815 of the province's 1,104 communities had fewer than 300 inhabitants.(13) According to Ralph Matthews, many politicians and officials "saw the isolation and dispersion of much of the population as an impediment to economic development... and centralization became a major thrust of Newfoundland's social planning."(14)
During the 1949 provincial election campaign, Smallwood promised voters that a government led
by him would develop local hydro resources, since
cheap power is the foundation of industry. Grand Falls and Corner
Brook would never have amounted to anything without lots of
cheap power. Newfoundland has been blessed with great water-power. Most of it is running to waste. The Liberal Party will
develop it... [There] will be... lots of cheap power for
Newfoundland's present and new industries to-be, and to light
homes and provide power throughout the country. This plentiful
supply of cheap electric power is a basic condition in the
development of this country. We can never grow industrially
without it.(15)
He told the electorate that he was planning to establish a public utility commission along the lines
of Ontario Hydro and was in fact negotiating with Dr. Thomas Hogg, a former chairman of
Ontario Hydro, to set one up. The proposed Newfoundland body would control the generation
and distribution of electricity in the province and issue its own bonds.(16) Although willing to
provide advice, Hogg was not interested in becoming chief executive officer, Smallwood later
explained. The premier took no immediate further action on setting up a public hydro commission
for, as he later wrote Hogg, he had set his "heart on getting [him] to organize and become head of
a commission here."(17)
Smallwood then turned to the private sector for help in developing the island's hydro potential.
His government promoted widely the province's vast hydro resources to attract Canadian and
American investment in Newfoundland, and initiated efforts to have the natural resources of the
new province examined by various experts. For instance, he commissioned studies by Power
Corporation of Montreal into the hydroelectric potential of several of the island's rivers.(18) Power
Corporation's surveys were complete by 1951, when Smallwood called a surprise election. The
surveys, according to Smallwood, showed that in the Bay d'Espoir area "huge amounts of electric
power can be produced... at [a] very reasonable cost."(19) He made similar claims for other regions
of the island. The key to any pending large industrial project, however, appeared to lie with the
European investors and industrialists Smallwood was courting.
From 1950 to 1953 the premier's interest in hydro power and industrial development centered
primarily on the efforts of his Director-General of Economic Development, Alfred Valdmanis, to
attract German technical expertise and capital to the province and develop hydro at Bay d'Espoir
and Grand Le Pierre River on the south coast.(20) Smallwood turned over to Valdmanis nearly total
control of his government's efforts in industrial development, and for Valdmanis this meant
getting the attention of German and other European investors. Because of Valdmanis's interest in
seeking European capital, he recommended to Smallwood that the province turn down a 1950
request from United Towns Electric for financial support. United Towns wanted a government
guarantee on a proposed $1 million bond issue to develop a new 5,000-horsepower site on the
Burin Peninsula, where frequent power shortages hindered the operations of several fish plants
and the fluorspar mines at St. Lawrence, and prevented further general industrial expansion.(21) In
August, 1950, Valdmanis recommended that the government concentrate on efforts by European
industrialists interested in developing south coast hydro power. Some of these industrialists were
thinking of building a third pulp and paper mill at Bay d'Espoir.(22) German investors in 1951 also
had their eye on another large hydro development at Grand Le Pierre River at the head of Fortune
Bay. In September, 1952, the Europeans suggested to Smallwood that a $25 million power
station be developed at Grand Le Pierre River, with a generating capacity of about 100,000
horsepower. The proposed development would include an aluminum industry and the
construction of transmission lines to the Burin, Avalon, and Bonavista peninsulas.(23) This
development proposal, however, was never realized.
On the advice of Valdmanis, Smallwood also put on hold a proposal for developing Bay d'Espoir
power that had come from Newfoundland Light and Power. In mid-August, 1952, the company's
general manager, Herbert Forbes-Roberts, discussed the matter with Smallwood, who was about
to leave for Europe in pursuit of foreign investors. The premier told Forbes- Roberts that some
industrialists were interested in establishing an aluminum plant on the south coast if adequate
hydro power was available there. According to Forbes-Roberts, Smallwood preferred that
Newfoundland Light and Power rather than government provide the necessary hydro in the Bay
d'Espoir region. Newfoundland Light and Power was willing to finance and develop this power if
a market were found. Smallwood offered to pursue the matter upon his return from Europe.(24)
Later that month Smallwood, Attorney General Leslie Curtis, and Valdmanis travelled to London
and appeared before the Fleet Street press to announce that Newfoundland was open to
development by British investors. The approach was ultimately successful. Following interviews
with British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and financier Edmund Rothschild, Smallwood
returned to Newfoundland with Rothschild's promise to form a consortium of business interests
to develop Newfoundland's natural resources. This consortium was later to be called the British
Newfoundland Corporation or, simply, Brinco. It included N.M. Rothschild and Sons, the English
Electric Company, Bowater Paper Corporation, Anglo- Newfoundland Development Company,
Rio Tinto-Zinc Corporation Ltd., Anglo-American Corporation of South Africa, and Frobisher
Limited.(25) In 1953 Brinco received from the province extensive land and water rights in the Bay
d'Espoir area.
Smallwood envisioned Brinco as an ideal partner in his efforts to industrialize the province, but
industrial users had to be found before Brinco would undertake the costly development of Bay
d'Espoir power. After 1953 he continued to try and attract foreign capital to the Bay d'Espoir
region for instance, to build industries that consumed large amounts of power, such as a paper
mill or an aluminium smelter. These efforts were without success.
Large-scale hydro development at Bay d'Espoir, he thought, would make it possible for the
government to extend electrical service to the island's outports. Rural electrification was a matter
in which he had taken "personally... a very close and intimate interest," and he resented any
suggestions, in public or in private, that he had to be "pushed or hustled" on the issue. As he
wrote to a Gambo resident in 1954, "I am the one who is doing the pushing. And I am the one
who knows all the facts of the case."(26)
Creation of the Newfoundland Power Commission, 1954
In 1953 Smallwood, who was also Minister of Economic Development, pursued rural
electrification with increased vigor. In February of that year he received a telegram from Nova
Scotia Premier Angus Macdonald, requesting information on Newfoundland's rural electrification
program. Macdonald was conducting a nation-wide inquiry into the matter. Smallwood replied to
the effect that Newfoundland had no program of financial assistance for rural electrification, and
he then sent Oliver Vardy, the Director of the Tourist Development Division in the Department of
Economic Development, to Halifax to examine information collected by the Nova Scotian
government.(27) In May, 1953, Vardy, a close adviser and friend of Smallwood's, informed the
premier that no extensive rural electrification for Newfoundland was possible without a
transmission network connecting all the province's towns with the power supply. Vardy outlined
two alternatives for the government. It could undertake power development projects itself in areas
to be serviced, or it could concentrate its efforts on areas which already had transmission
networks available, but which had not been serviced by public utilities because such service was
uneconomical. In discussing the second alternative, Vardy noted that in Nova Scotia the
provincial government subsidized the public utilities, through the Nova Scotia Power
Commission, to provide electrical service based on the number of customers per mile in a given
area. From 1937 to 1952 Nova Scotia had in fact spent over two million dollars on this approach
to rural electrification, but the "scheme had failed completely in its original aim to bring economic
development to the rural areas. [It] had brought the comforts which power provides in remote
areas." Officials at the Nova Scotia Power Commission advised Vardy that if the Newfoundland
government was not prepared to consider public ownership of electrical generation, then the
province should at least establish a public body to coordinate all efforts at power development in
Newfoundland and thereby avoid any possible duplication of costs and services. In conclusion,
Vardy wrote that
any program of rural electrification based upon the Nova Scotia
program would be an expensive one for Newfoundland. Most of
Nova Scotia's capital expenditures were made prior to the present
increase in costs of labour and material. Because of the remoteness
of certain areas and the limited customer potential the provision of
power is likely to be a costly undertaking. On the other hand, the
situation is not hopeless and an energetic program of investigation
might disclose many unanticipated advantages.
One such advantage, Vardy told Smallwood, was political public ownership of hydro
development "will have to come sooner or later and... the party that goes to the electorate on that
platform will sweep the country."(28) This last piece of advice would not have been lost on
Smallwood.
The premier had seen in Brinco the potential solution to the rural electrification problem. During
legislative debate in April, 1953, on the bill giving Brinco its land and water rights, he
optimistically expressed the hope that the large English Electric Company, through its partnership
in Brinco,
or the electric people in Brinco will establish here in Newfoundland
what has been done in many other Provinces of Canada. They have
their various hydro- electric commissions, in Nova Scotia, in New
Brunswick, in Quebec, Ontario and other Provinces of Canada and
in place of a Newfoundland Hydro-Electric Commission providing
rural electrification to our remote farm areas and to our logging
settlements we will benefit by the coming of the English Electric
company to this Province... My own personal ambition is that
English Electric will come here to the Island and will establish a
great transmission network to bring electric light to the tens of
thousands and hundreds of thousands of those of our people
scattered about the Island providing rural electrification to our
remote farm areas and to our fishing settlements. That is my hope
that of course I cannot guarantee, I can only hope.(29)
In February, 1954, Brinco's general manager, Bill Southam, wrote Smallwood that his company
was not ready to undertake any hydro development until more engineering and financial studies
were completed.(30) Thus Brinco was not (and would not be later) the panacea for the problem,
since the company was primarily interested in large-scale hydro development in Labrador and at
Bay d'Espoir and not in hydro development at sites generating under 10,000 horsepower.(31)
Besides needing new sources of power for the new industries envisioned for the province, by
1953 Newfoundland required additional electrical generation on the Avalon, Burin, and Bonavista
peninsulas for ordinary users. Only one of the three public utilities, Newfoundland Light and
Power, was strong enough financially to provide the extra power needed in its service area. Early
in 1953 the company considered developing a hydro site on Piper's Hole River, 115 miles from
St. John's. The proposed development would be at the point where the river flowed into Placentia
Bay at the junction of the Avalon and Burin peninsulas. Although the proposed $16 million
development could generate 30,000 horsepower and approximately double the company's
generating capacity, Newfoundland Light and Power abandoned the idea in September, 1953,
because engineering studies indicated there was less power potential than the company originally
thought and the development cost would be higher than projected.(32) Instead, it decided to meet
further load demand in the St. John's area through construction in the capital city of a steam plant
of 13,300 horsepower, which was put in service in 1956.(33)
The other two power companies Union Electric and United Towns Electric were ready and
willing to meet power demands in their respective areas, but lacked sufficient capital to develop
new hydro sites which both had under consideration. Before giving the necessary financial
assistance to either utility, Smallwood in mid-1953 approached Ontario Hydro for engineering
consultants to examine the financial operations of both companies. Gordon Kribs and Richard
Thomas Jeffery were sent from Ontario Hydro to undertake this work. Both men preferred that
the government establish its own power company to generate and distribute electricity, rather than
rely on the private utility companies. If the province was not prepared to take this course of
action, Jeffery suggested the creation of a public body to coordinate the activities of the existing
private utilities and to encourage them in an active rural electrification program. This body would
be able to provide the expert engineering advice the government needed to make decisions about
both present and future power needs.(34)
Smallwood also had the benefit of a new and more detailed study of rural electrification in various
provinces of Canada that Oliver Vardy did in late 1953. In that report, Vardy told Smallwood that
an approximate cost for the electrification of almost all the island's outports would be $20 million.
He said the province had three options. The first was to encourage the establishment of one large
private utility company which would purchase the two small companies presently serving rural
areas, this larger company to assume responsibility for rural extensions. The second was to set up
a public power commission which would generate its own power, and distribute and sell it to rural
customers. (This alternative had the disadvantage of creating a large and expensive technical and
administrative bureaucracy for work which could be done more economically by the staffs of the
private utilities.) The third option for the government to consider was the creation of a "control or
advisory board." Vardy strongly recommended this third option.(35)
In late January, 1954, Smallwood was undecided over his next course of action on electrical
matters. He told the press that planning was urgently required; the Ontario Hydro engineers had
warned that power shortages could be expected soon if new sources were not quickly developed.
He said the province could establish its own hydroelectric commission or ensure that control of
electricity in eastern Newfoundland was held by one large private utility, namely Newfoundland
Light and Power.(36)
In 1949 he had proposed establishing a hydroelectric commission having control over the
production and wholesale of electricity; but now, in 1954, Smallwood, armed with his various
reports, told the House of Assembly during debate on legislation to establish a Power Commission
that
we are not so sure that it is a hydro-electric commission we want...
as they [have] in the other Provinces of Canada. But we are quite
sure that we have to do something to take control and take the right
to regulate hydro-electric matters.(37)
Part of the projected Commission's mandate would be to investigate new sources of electrical
energy, examine all electrical development proposals submitted to the government, and contract
to supply electricity to any part of Newfoundland. With government approval, it could construct
and operate its own electrical developments as well.(38) But Smallwood was in no hurry to create
another government bureaucracy. In fact, the Commission was not effectively established until
1956 because the man he had in mind for the chairmanship, George Desbarats, was not available.
He had another commitment: to be the supervisory engineer on the construction of a hydro
development for Union Electric.(39)
In any case, the utility companies, as Smallwood had hoped, were moving ahead with new hydro
development and, where profitable, extension of their lines into rural areas. With government
backing of a $1 million company bond issue, Union Electric in 1956 put in service at Lockston,
Trinity Bay, a 2,000-horsepower hydro development that provided a more reliable supply and
made it possible for communities from Clarenville to Bonavista to be added to the utility's system.
On the west coast, Newfoundland Light and Power, which had purchased the electrical
distribution system previously operated in Corner Brook by the Bowater paper company, in 1954
began' constructing rural lines in the Corner Brook area. Two years later the company moved into
Grand Falls, taking over the distribution system previously owned and operated by the Anglo-Newfoundland Development Company. As part of its takeover of this system, the utility company
developed a new source of power, putting a 7,500-horsepower hydro station into service in 1958
at Rattling Brook, about twenty miles east of Grand Falls. This new power development enabled
service to be provided forty miles eastward from Rattling Brook to Gander, which prior to 1958
had been dependent upon a limited diesel power supply operated by the federal government for
the international airport, and to several other small communities along the line to Gander. As for
United Towns Electric, a change in ownership in May, 1954, brought new capital investment into
its electrical system, and improvements and additions to service in Conception and Trinity bays,
including the construction of a 5,000-horsepower hydro station at New Chelsea. The new owners
of this utility were Power Corporation of Canada and the investment house W.C. Pitfield
Company, both Montreal-based. The completion of these hydro projects enabled the three
utilities, after 1954, to extend lines and service at their own expense. But within these new service
areas it was still not financially feasible for the companies to provide electricity to every
community. Thus there was further public pressure on the government for action. In late 1955,
the government suggested it might be willing to provide financial assistance to the utilities to
enable them to extend electrical service to communities still without power.
One-man Power Commission, 1956-8
Smallwood typically made his own announcements concerning his government's proposed
activities for industrial development.(40) By late 1955 he had decided that 1956 would be an
election year. In 1951 he had been accused of calling a "sneak attack election," but now he
prepared voters for one in grand style. A television interview with broadcaster Don Jamieson on
December 22, 1955, gave him the opportunity to say that 1956 would see a major thrust in rural
electrification, and that consulting engineer George Desbarats had been appointed Chairman of
the Power Commission and would be taking up his duties early in the new year.(41) In February,
1956, the government announced that the province would be spending a lot of money to help the
utility companies provide electricity in areas which, for economic reasons, had not been
serviced.(42) Desbarats' appointment muted public demands, in the months leading up to the
provincial election held on October 2, 1956, for government action to provide power to
communities without power. For example, in response to a petition for electricity from one
community, the premier in February stated that one of Desbarats' first duties was to draw up a list
of places requiring the government's immediate attention, so as to enable funds to be voted at the
upcoming session of the legislature for rural electrification.(43) Smallwood assured voters that
substantial efforts at rural electrification would soon commence and that the needs of ten or
twelve communities pressing for electrical service would shortly be addressed.(44)
Desbarats assumed his duties as Commission Chairman on March 1, 1956, continuing essentially
the same work for the province that he had been doing for the previous nine years as its
occasional hydro consultant. An Ottawa native and an electrical engineering graduate of McGill
University, Desbarats during World War Two had been an officer with the Royal Canadian Navy
and had served for one year as an assistant chief engineer at St. John's. In 1947 he had returned to
Newfoundland when the Commission of Government hired him to conduct a water power survey
of Newfoundland and Labrador.(45) In the early 1950s Desbarats operated his own hydro
engineering consulting and construction businesses from an office- residence he called the "Hydro
House" at Mount Pearl, near St. John's. He did consulting work for the Newfoundland
government, the local utility companies, and municipalities. In the early 1950s Desbarats had been
urging Smallwood to create a public hydroelectric commission, offering to provide advice on how
it should be formed and what role it would play in making electric power more available in the
outports.(46)
Desbarats brought to the chairmanship a wealth of experience and information. He also had
proposals for hydro development of the province's many small rivers. Smallwood, who initially
allowed the Commission only an advisory and investigative role, wanted him to identify
communities requiring immediate attention so that funding could be made available in 1956. In
August, 1956, Desbarats presented the premier with a detailed program of action for the
Commission. Part of his work involved examining how electricity could be provided in
communities not within easy reach of the existing distribution systems. For ten such communities,
Desbarats proposed that the Commission immediately proceed with small hydro developments of
1,000 horsepower generating capacity. In addition, he had under consideration with the three
utility companies plans for electrical expansion in their respective service areas.(47) But Smallwood
and Desbarats differed as to the role of the Power Commission in the generation and distribution
of electricity. Smallwood, with an eye to the larger potential represented by Brinco's plans for
hydroelectricity in Labrador and at Bay d'Espoir, did not consider the Commission's proposals for
small hydro projects a serious alternative, despite occasional public musings to the contrary.(48) For
political reasons and also because of the substantial cost of new hydro developments he
preferred that the utilities and not the government be responsible for generating and distributing
electricity, and for imposing and collecting electricity rates.
Desbarats urged the government to allow the Power Commission to develop and operate small
hydroelectric systems itself. He argued that the distribution of electricity should be by one large
utility, in order to create a more economical service. In rural communities where small hydro
development was not possible, Desbarats's recommendation to government was to install diesel-electric units, with the Power Commission owning and operating the distribution systems.(49)
Despite his pre-election promises of more government involvement in rural electrification,
Smallwood after 1956 proceeded cautiously. In fact, after the election the Power Commission
served the premier well as a means of delaying government action and expenditure in meeting
demands for electricity from the isolated outports, which also often had no adequate road
connections. When communities asked for electricity, the premier sent Desbarats to investigate
their requirements. At the end of October, 1956, Desbarats was still unaware of what plans the
government had for the Commission in electrical generation and distribution.(50) Over the next two
years he visited communities to determine how electricity could be provided and at what cost. The
arrival of Desbarats, who was the Commission's only professional staff, served to assure residents
of a community that the coming of electricity was imminent.
Rural Electrification Program, 1958
During the 1957 federal election, won by the Progressive Conservative party led by John
Diefenbaker, the P.C.S promised to lend money at low interest rates to the governments of the
Maritime Provinces to build thermal generating stations and extend transmission lines into areas
having no electricity. In late 1957 the new federal government offered the same assistance to
Newfoundland, thereby making it possible for the province to borrow money on behalf of the
Power Commission for rural electrification. Now that the federal government was showing
interest, Smallwood himself seized the initiative. In November, 1957, he asked Brinco and the
Newfoundland utility companies for their views on rural electrification. At a meeting on
November 29 with Claude Howse of Brinco and Gordon Pushie, the province's new Director-General of Economic Development, the premier stated, according to Howse, that Newfoundland
had no intention of getting
involved in the retail distribution of electricity. It is hoped that the
Government will be able to supply blocks of power to private
groups at rates that will warrant distribution by these groups on a
commercial basis.
He also told Howse that the province was considering asking Brinco to relinquish some of its
existing water rights on the island to the Power Commission, which would develop its own
power. Brinco's future hydro plans were also examined. Brinco at this time was updating
engineering studies on the Bay d'Espoir region in preparation for construction once the company
had secured demand for 70,000 horsepower of electricity, the minimum power requirement for
the development to go ahead.(51)
In January, 1958, Pushie met in Montreal with Denis Stairs and Vivian Ainsworth of
Newfoundland Light and Power, and Bill Southam and Claude Howse of Brinco. The President of
Newfoundland Light and Power and a major shareholder in that company, Stairs was a highly
regarded hydro engineer; he was also Vice-President of the Montreal Engineering Company,
management and engineering consultants to Newfoundland Light and Power.(52) Those attending
the meeting discussed a memo Stairs had prepared in December, 1957, on rural electrification for
Newfoundland. In it he suggested that government assistance be given to the private utility
companies for service extensions to outports that could be reached from existing electric systems.
There was general agreement at the meeting that the Prince Edward Island model of rural
electrification could be adopted in Newfoundland. In that province the government had signed an
agreement in 1954 with the privately owned Maritime Electric Company, in which it agreed to
subsidize the building of uneconomical lines in rural areas. Maritime Electric had formerly been
controlled by Canadian businessman Izaak Killam and used the same engineering consulting
company as Newfoundland Light and Power, i.e., Montreal Engineering. It was agreed at the
meeting that power could be provided by diesel generation to those Newfoundland communities
where hydroelectricity was not practical. In January, 1958, Ainsworth gave Pushie a copy of
Stairs's proposal, which was subsequently handed to Smallwood.
The Atlantic Provinces Power Development Act was passed by Parliament in January, 1958.
Under this Act, federal assistance was made available only to publicly owned thermal power
projects. In Newfoundland all electrical developments were in private hands. Smallwood failed to
persuade the Diefenbaker government to change this assistance program to include small hydro
developments, which the premier considered, on the strength of Desbarats' examinations and
surveys of the island's electrical needs, to be best suited to isolated outports. Smallwood also
wanted the federal assistance program amended to allow help to be given for the construction of
distribution lines to the outports. On the Avalon Peninsula it was feasible to build lines to
outports, but off the Avalon geography made this enormously expensive.(53) Newfoundland was
served exclusively by private electrical utilities; as for nationalization of these companies, as
Smallwood wrote Diefenbaker in August, 1958, it was "beyond the financial resources of the
Provincial Government to acquire the existing private utilities at this time." Any program of rural
electrification, he added, "will require heavy financing in order that the cost of electricity per
family may be kept down to a reasonable level in isolated areas.(54)
Smallwood then launched his own comprehensive rural electrification scheme. In the midst of
another federal election campaign, he announced on March 19, 1958, on a province-wide radio
broadcast, a rural electrification program that would cost more than $5 million over several years.
It was a program, he said, for which "we are paying the full cost ourselves. Should the present
federal scheme be changed or improved, then we will always be able to make application to come
under it and thereby save the Newfoundland Treasury at least part of the present cost."(55)
Smallwood was able to announce proposed new rural extensions in the operating areas of each of
the three utilities. Under the program 800 miles of new transmission lines would be built.
Electricity for the 5,000 additional households to be supplied would be distributed by the utility
companies. The Newfoundland Power Commission would subsidize a utility company to
construct a transmission line. The utility company would then sell the power to rural customers
whose rates were to be subsidized by government. The government through the Power
Commission would decide when and where the extensions were to be made. Where it was not
practical to build such lines from the central stations of one of the utilities, the government would
assist municipalities through the purchase of diesel electric plants. The March 19 announcement
also included the government's plans to provide electricity in the Labrador town of Happy Valley,
where feasibility studies had been completed by Desbarats.(56)
In September, 1958, Smallwood announced the details of the rural electrification contracts the
province would sign with Newfoundland Light and Power (signed on September 12, 1958),
United Towns Electric (signed on November 4, 1958), and Union Electric (October 9, 1959). He
also announced personnel changes in the administration of the Power Commission. On November
1, 1958, John Ryan, an experienced thermal engineer with the Montreal Engineering Company,
replaced Desbarats as Chairman.(57) Desbarats had resigned the chairmanship in September to
devote more time to his construction and hydro consulting business.(58) The 33-year old Ryan had
previously supervised the construction of the steam plant at St. John's for Newfoundland Light
and Power. Ryan was assisted by Ernie Dickinson, who was appointed the Commission's Chief
Engineer. A former employee of Montreal Engineering as well, Dickinson since 1946 had been
Chief Engineer for United Towns Electric and was well experienced in rural electrification efforts
from his work in western Canada prior to 1939.(59) Over the next few years the permanent staff of
the Power Commission grew slowly with the addition of both engineering and clerical staff so that
by March 31, 1961, it consisted of twelve members.(60)
Between 1958 and 1964 the Commission was responsible for providing additional electrical
service to 9,966 new customers, building 611 miles of transmission lines, and installing fourteen
diesel plants.(61) In some instances, new lines were constructed by the utility companies, while in
others the Commission itself hired construction staff to carry out the work. Where it was not
practical to construct lines from central power stations, the Commission provided the capital for
the installation of diesel plants. Local residents, through their elected councils, then levied rates
for maintaining the system. By March 31, 1964, the province had spent over $4 million on capital
expenditure for rural electrification. After 1963 the province benefited greatly from a federal-municipal assistance program which enabled town councils to operate their own diesel electric
distribution systems. These were installed and maintained by Commission personnel.
By the mid-1960s Newfoundland once more had a power shortage and its existing electrical
developments were overextended. Some industries, a provincial Royal Commission on the
economy noted in 1967, had curtailed production because of the power shortage.(62) The province
did not have many alternatives to meet future power requirements. It could continue the past
practice of creating small hydro developments supplemented by thermal plants; or it could
develop the relatively low cost power of Bay d'Espoir. Newfoundland still had a number of
unconnected power systems, so that if one area of the province was short of water, there was no
way of feeding into it power from another which had an abundant supply. The Corner Brook-Deer Lake area, moreover, operated on a 50-cycle frequency, as did the paper mill at Grand Falls,
while the rest of Newfoundland used the standard North American 60-cycle frequency.
Developing power from Bay d'Espoir would not only provide the island with a large source of
power; it would also lead to the creation of an integrated provincial grid system and the expansion
of provincial rural electrification.
A $20 million grant from the Atlantic Development Board was made available for Bay d'Espoir in
1963 by a new federal Liberal government in Ottawa, but the grant was available only for use by
publicly owned bodies. Thus Brinco was excluded. The province therefore reacquired from
Brinco the water rights in the Bay d'Espoir area and gave the Power Commission responsibility
for the massive development. It cost the Commission about $150 million to complete the project
in 1970; an initial supply of 300,000 horsepower from the project became available to consumers
in the late 1960s.(63) Bay d'Espoir power led to the creation of a trans-island transmission grid by
the Commission and made possible certain of the huge industrial projects which Smallwood had
long sought. In 1968, for instance, a $40 million phosphorous complex built by English capitalists
went into production at Long Harbour, and in 1973 an oil refinery at Come By Chance, Placentia
Bay, was developed by American businessman John Shaheen. As for the three private utilities,
they amalgamated in September, 1966, to form the Newfoundland Light & Power Co. Limited.
Baker, Melvin, J. Miller Pitt, and R. D. W. Pitt. The Illustrated History of Newfoundland Light &
Power. St. John's: Creative Publishers, 1990.
Bassler, Gerhard P. "'Develop or Perish'. Joseph R. Smallwood and Newfoundland's Quest for
German Industry, 1949-1953." Acadiensis 15, 2 (1986): 93-119.
Browne, W.J. And Now... Eighty-seven Years A Newfoundlander: Memoirs. Vol. 2 (1949-65). St.
John's: The Author, 1984.
Bursey, Brian "A Half Century of Progress? A History of Economic Growth and Development in
Newfoundland during the Modern Period, 1930-1980." Ms, Centre for Newfoundland Studies
(CNS), Memorial Univ. of Newfoundland, 1980.
The Canada Year Book. 1950-65.
Debates. House of Commons, Canada. 1957-8.
Department of External Affairs, Canada. Papers. MS RG 25, National Archives of Canada,
Ottawa.
Hiller, James K. "The Politics of Newsprint: The Newfoundland Pulp and Paper Industry, 1915-1919." Acadiensis 14, 2 (1990): 3-39.
Gwyn, Richard. Smallwood: The Unlikely Revolutionary. Toronto: McClelland and Stewart,
1968
Interview of Honourable J. R. Smallwood Premier of Newfoundland by Donald Jamieson
Esquire News Commentator on CJON Television... December 22, 1955. St. John's: n.p., 1955.
(CNS)
Jamieson, Donald. No Place for Fools: The Political Memoirs of Don Jamieson. Vol. l. Ed.
Carmelita McGrath. St. John's: Breakwater Books, 1989.
Jeffery, R. T. "Report of October 19, 1953, with regard to the matter of Electric Power Supply
and Distribution [prepared for J. R. Smallwood]." Newfoundland Light & Power Archives, file
"Pre-Amalgamation Reports: UTE and Subsidiaries."
McAllister, R.I. ed. Newfoundland and Labrador: The First Fifteen Years of Confederation. St.
John's: Dicks & Co. Ltd., [1966].
Matthews, Ralph. The Creation of Regional Dependency. Toronto: University of Toronto Press,
1983.
Paine, Robert. "The Mastery of Smallwood and Interlocutory Rhetoric," Newfoundland Studies 2,
2 (1986): 191-211.
Pottle, Herbert L. Newfoundland, Dawn Without Light: Politics, Power & People in the
Smallwood Era. St. John's: Breakwater, 1979.
Proceedings of the General Assembly of Newfoundland. 1950-59.
Report of the Royal Commission on the Economic State and Prospects of Newfoundland and
Labrador. St. John's, Queen's Printer, 1967.
Rowe, Frederick W. The Smallwood Era. Toronto: McGraw-Hill Ryerson, 1985.
Smallwood, J.R. I Chose Canada. Toronto:
Macmillan, 1973.
-- The New Newfoundland. New York: Macmillan, 1931.
-- Smallwood Papers, CNS Archives, Memorial Univ. of Newfoundland.
Smith, Philip. Brinco: The Story of Churchill Falls. Toronto: McClelland and Stewart, 1975.
Statutes of Canada. 1957-8.
[Vardy, O.L.] "Rural Electrification in Canada." Report, Department of Economic Development,
Govt. of Newfoundland, March, 1954. (CNS)
Wells, Robert. Report on Resettlement in Newfoundland. St. John's: Government of
Newfoundland, 1960.
1. This paper explores in greater detail developments discussed in Baker, Pitt, and Pitt 257-63. I
want to thank Patrick O'Flaherty and Richard Buehler for their help in preparing the paper.
2. Weekly Advocate March 5, 1924.
3. The Canada Year Book 1951 554.
4. The Canada Year Book 1950, 583.
5. On private power development in Newfoundland, see Baker, Pitt, and Pitt 17-256.
6. The Canada Year Book 1951 554.
7. Smallwood, The Newfoundland 94, 224.
8. Rowe 22.
9. See Hiller 3-39.
10. Proceedings of First Session Thirty-First General Assembly of Newfoundland 1957 1: 447.
11. Bursey 180.
12. Evening Telegram March 14, 1956; Daily News March 14, 1956.
13. Matthews 118-36. See also Wells.
14. Matthews 172.
15. Evening Telegram May 16, 1949.
16. Evening Telegram May 16, June 2, 1949; and Proceedings of Fourth Session Thirtieth
General Assembly of Newfoundland 1954 2: 2043. Hogg in 1953 became a director of Brinco.
17. Centre for Newfoundland Studies (CNS) Archives, Queen Elizabeth II Library, Memorial
University, Coll-75, file 3.23.041, Joseph R. Smallwood to Thomas Hogg, March 6, 1952.
18. CNS Archives, Coll-75, file 3.23.045, J.S.H. Wurtele to Smallwood, March 17, 1950, June 5,
1951.
19. Manifesto of the Liberal Party for the 1951 election (copy in CNS).
20. Valdmanis in 1938-9 had served as Minister of Finance, Trade, and Commerce for the
independent republic of Latvia; he had immigrated to Canada in 1948. From October, 1939, to
June, 1940, he had been in charge of his country's public electrification commission and shared
Smallwood's view that hydro-electricity was the key to industrial growth. On the career of
Valdmanis, see Bassler.
21. Provincial Archives of Newfoundland and Labrador (PANL), Box l3/2A, Box 201, file 122,
Robert Murphy to Leslie Curtis, December 1, 1950; and CNS Archives, Coll-75, file 3.23.036,
Robert Murphy to Smallwood, June 22, 1950.
22. Valdmanis told Smallwood that "the new hydro-power shall be considerably cheaper than any
power available... [from United Towns Electric] and transmission lines built from Bay d'Espoir
should easily reach Gander or Buchans [in central Newfoundland], and also connect with the
present Burin and Avalon Peninsulas." CNS Archives, Coll-75, file 3.23.039, Alfred Valdmanis to
Smallwood, August 25, 1950.
23. CNS Archives, Coll-75, file 3.23.040, O. Uitting, Senior Engineer, Siemens- Schuckertwerke
Atkiengesellschaft, to Alfred Valdmanis, November 1, 1951, and to Smallwood, September 1,
1952.
24. Baker, Pitt, and Pitt 148-9, 258-9.
25. Other companies later joined the original seven, including C.T. Bowring and Company and the
Montreal investment house of W.C. Pitfield and Company.
26. CNS Archives, Coll-75, file 3.23.033, Smallwood to Joseph M. Curran, Jr., March 1, 1954.
27. CNS Archives, Coll-75, file 3.23.033, telegram, Angus Macdonald to Smallwood, February
25, 1953, with attached note by Smallwood.
28. CNS Archives, Coll-75, file 3.23.033 Oliver L. Vardy to Smallwood, May 26, 1953.
29. Proceedings of Third Session Thirtieth General Assembly of Newfoundland l953 671.
30. CNS Archives, Coll-75, file 3.08.046, A.W. Southam to Smallwood, December 8, 1953, and
file 3.23.033, Southam to Smallwood February 24, 1954, and Southam to Joseph Curran, March
1, 1954.
31. See Smith 3-250, for Brinco's efforts at developing hydro power at Hamilton Falls (later
known as Churchill Falls) in Labrador. See also CNS Archives, Coll-75, file 3.23.032, George
Desbarats to Edgar McNeill, April 16, 1957.
32. Baker, Pitt, and Pitt 148-9.
33. The Canada Year Book 1956 557. In 1959 a second turbo-generator was put in service at the
steam plant, increasing its total generating capacity to 39,900 horsepower.
34. R.T. Jeffery, "Report of October 19, 1953 with regard to the matter of Electric Power Supply
and Distribution" Part II, 4; and Proceedings of Fourth Session Thirtieth General Assembly of
Newfoundland 1954 2: 2042-3.
35. [O.L. Vardy], "Rural Electrification in Canada."
36. Fishermen's Advocate January 29, 1954; Evening Telegram March 30, 1954; and Proceedings
of Fourth Session Thirtieth General Assembly of Newfoundland 1954 1: 22.
37. Proceedings of Fourth Session Thirtieth General Assembly of Newfoundland 1954 2: 2043-4.
38. Statutes of Newfoundland 1954 No. 72.
39. Proceedings of Seventh Session Thirtieth General Assembly of Newfoundland 1956 1: 150.
40. On Smallwood's political leadership, see Gwyn, Rowe, Pottle, Jamieson, and Paine.
41. Interview of Honourable J.R. Smallwood 14-5; and Evening Telegram December 23, 1955.
42. Daily News February 2, 1956.
43. Daily News February 22, 1956.
44. Evening Telegram March 24, 1956.
45. In 1944 the Commission of Government secured the services of K.G. Chisholm, Chief
Engineer with the Halifax office of the Dominion Water and Power Bureau of Canada, to examine
the hydro potential of both the island of Newfoundland and Labrador. In late 1944 Chisholm
recommended that Newfoundland hire a hydro engineer to examine more closely how new
hydroelectric sites could be developed. See National Archives of Canada NAC), RG25, vol.
2407, file 6704-40, Norman Robertson to J.S. Macdonald, October 24, 1944; and Daily News
November 7, 1944, Evening Telegram December 9, 1944.
46. CNS Archives, Coll-75, file 3.23.032, George Desbarats to Smallwood, February 1, 1950. While Smallwood
did not immediately act on this advice, he did find in Desbarats a kindred spirit in terms of economic
policy. Desbarats advised the premier in February, 1950: "it now seems reasonable to suppose that with this
shortage of power [in Canada and the United States], now is the time to try and induce industries to settle
in Newfoundland." See CNS Archives, Coll-75, file 3.23.032, George Desbarats to Smallwood, June 1, 1950,
with enclosed report "Water Power Potentialities in Newfoundland."
47. CNS Archives, Coll-75, file 3.23.032, "Newfoundland Power Commission Programme,
August 5, 1956."
48. CNS Archives, Coll-75, file 3.23.032, George Desbarats to Edgar McNeill, April 16, 1957.
49. CNS Archives, Coll-75, file 3.23.032, George Desbarats to Smallwood, October 16, 1956. In the town of
Burgeo on the island's south coast, Desbarats proposed a 150-horsepower diesel-electric unit costing over
$80,000. The annual budget to operate it was $21,000. Each of 250 customers in Burgeo would pay a minimum
monthly bill of $7.00.
50. CNS Archives, Coll-75, file 3.23.032, George Desbarats to Joseph Smallwood, October 24, 1956.
51. CNS Archives, Coll-75, file 3. 14.020, Gordon Pushie to Smallwood, October 5, 1956.
52. Tie-Lines, February, 1967, 3, and January, 1980, 16. Stairs was born in 1889 in Dartmouth,
Nova Scotia and joined Montreal Engineering in 1922 as an assistant engineer. This company was
owned by the Montreal investment firm of Royal Securities Corporation, whose principal owner
was Izaak Killam.
53. Debates. House of Commons Canada, Session 1957-58, 4: 3254-81, 3297-3308; and Statutes
of Canada 1957-1958 1: 6 Elizabeth II, Chap. 25. See also CNS Archives, Coll-75, file 3.10.013,
Smallwood to John Diefenbaker, telegram December 21, 1957, Diefenbaker to Smallwood,
December 21, 1957, and Smallwood to Diefenbaker, February 19, 1958.
54. CNS Archives, Coll-75, Smallwood to John Diefenbaker, August 19, 1958.
55. Daily News March 20, 1958. The federal government did provide funding for one rural line,
built to the community of St. Vincent's in the electoral district of St. John's West. This was
represented by William J. Browne, a minister without portfolio in 1958 in the PC federal cabinet.
See Browne 350-52.
56. Daily News March 20, 1958.
57. Desbarats, who had returned to private business as a hydro consultant and contractor,
recommended to Smallwood in December, 1958, that in view of the recent changes to the Power
Commission some rationalization of the province's electrical situation was necessary. This could
be achieved either through the creation of one private utility company or through the Commission
acquiring 51% of the common stock of the private utilities. See CNS Archives, Coll-75, file
3.23.032, George Desbarats to Smallwood, December 21, 1958.
58. Evening Telegram September 10, 1958.
59. Baker, Pitt, and Pitt 216.
60. CNS Archives, Coll-75, file 3.23.021, annual reports of the Newfoundland Power
Commission, 1959-1962.
61. McAllister 169.
62. Report of the Royal Commission on the Economic State and Prospects of Newfoundland and
Labrador 275.
63. Shawmont Newfoundland Engineering, a company incorporated on June 2, 1964, by Shawinigan
Engineering Company Ltd. of Montreal and Montreal Engineering, supervised the engineering and construction
work.