Welcome to Corner Brook
Experience our picturesque City from many groomed walking trails or visit the Captain James Cook Monument and bask in the glory of the sun setting over the Bay of Islands. Step back in time at the Corner Brook Museum and Archives or the Railway Society of Newfoundland Historic Train Site. Explore our downtown area and discover unique gifts and crafts and dine out in one of the City's many fine restaurants. Take a scenic drive along the coast of the Bay of Islands or have a more extreme adventure in Gros Morne National Park, just one hour away.

Corner Brook is situated on the west coast of the island portion of the
province. The people of Newfoundland and Labrador are known worldwide for their
open and friendly nature and their unwavering hospitality. The people of Corner
Brook live up to this reputation.
The City is nestled among the folded and faulted Long Range Mountains, which are
a continuation of the Appalachian Mountain belt, stretching up from Georgia in
the southern United States. Set at the mouth of the Bay of Islands, the City is
40 km (25 miles) inland from the open waters of the Gulf of St. Lawrence. The
landscape of the Corner Brook region is rugged and the scenery is spectacular.
The surrounding coastline holds magnificent fjords, jagged headlands, thickly
forested areas and many offshore islands. Wildlife, forest and water mingle with
the City's borders on all sides and mountains fill the horizon in all
directions.
History
The history of the Corner Brook region is long and diverse. For thousands of
years, people have lived and worked along the shores of the Bay of Islands and
in the Humber River Valley, including two aboriginal groups - the Maritime
Archaic Indians and the Beothuk people.
James Cook, the famous British cartographer and explorer was the first to survey
and record the geography of the Bay of Islands. Throughout the summer of 1767 he
surveyed most of the area and copies of the maps he created are displayed at the
Captain James Cook Monument in Corner Brook.
The area served as a meeting, marketing and distribution point for local
fisherman, who fished the Strait of Belle Isle by summer and spent the winters
working in Corner Brook's lumber woods. Permanent settlement came as a result of
the island-wide railway system and the construction of the pulp and paper mill
in the mid-1920s. During the war years of 1939-1945, both the pulp and paper
industry and the fishery were booming and Corner Brook was prosperous. Soon
after the end of World War II, a cement plant and a gypsum wallboard plant were
established, creating new jobs in addition to those already available at the
areašs three fish processing plants, and at the paper mill.

Four distinct communities with unique commercial activities had developed
along the shores of the Bay of Islands. Curling with its fishery; Humber West
with its retail businesses; Humbermouth with its railway operations; and
Townsite, home to the employees of the pulp and paper mill. In 1956, these four
communities were amalgamated to form the present-day City of Corner Brook.
Arts and Culture
Theatre and art are alive in Corner Brook. Theatre Newfoundland and Labrador (TNL),
one of the province's only professional theatre companies, maintains its home
office in Corner Brook. The Arts and Culture Centre sets the stage for visiting
productions - ballet companies, comedians, theatrical productions and musical
artists all make Corner Brook a stop on their Canadian tours.
The visual arts are also thriving in Corner Brook. Painters, photographers and
sculptors find inspiration in the landscape and culture of Corner Brook and a
number of art galleries display and sell their work. Those interested in visual
art can study at Memorial University of Newfoundland's Sir Wilfred Grenfell
College, which has offered a Bachelor of Fine Arts program since 1988.
International Sports and Entertainment Events
Corner Brook is Newfoundland and Labrador's "Host City." Our vibrant
community is ideally positioned to host major sporting events. Here is a sample
of some of the exciting events held in Corner Brook:
| 2004 Adventure Racing World Championships / Raid the North Extreme | |||||||||||||||
2004 World Broomball Championships
| Annual TRI-FEST and International Triathlon Union (ITU) Triathlon World
Cup
| 2003 Canadian Senior Broomball Championships
| 2003 FIS Freestyle Junior World Ski Championships
| MuchMusic's Snow Job 1997 and 2002
| 2002 National Junior Baseball Championships
| 2001 Raid the North Extreme Adventure Race
| 1999 Jeux Canada Winter Games | |