Imagine that Newfoundland history is enclosed inside a gigantic room. Inside the room everything is pitch black.
Every now and again, someone opens the door and goes inside the room to take a look at an event somewhere in the past. They don’t have much in the way of light to help them see. When they get to whatever spot they are looking for, they take a picture and bring out with them to tell the rest of us the story of what they saw in the dark room.
If you had hundreds or even dozens of people going in and out of the room, after a while you might build up a really clear picture of all the stuff inside. Unfortunately, only a few people have gone in. Some of them have come out with nothing more than sketches. Some of them brought cameras and a couple had the sense to get short movies.
For anyone who wants to understand what happened in our collective past, you can see what kind of a problem there is. Not only have we only had a handful of people go in, a lot of them go to the same place over and over again. In some cases, people interested in the local history don’t even go into the room any more. They just describe to us the sketches and out-of-focus snapshots taken by others.