Into the Night: The Samantha Walsh Story
By Gordon Walsh
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Into the Night - Gordon Walsh
Into
the
Night
The Samantha Walsh Story
Gordon Walsh
flanker press limited
st. john’s
National Library of Canada Cataloguing in Publication Data
Walsh, Gordon, 1941-
Into the night : the Samantha Walsh story / Gordon Walsh.
ISBN 978-1-894463-28-7
1. Walsh, Samantha, 1986-2000. 2. Murder--Newfoundland and
Labrador--Fleur de Lys. 3. Fleur de Lys (Nfld.)--History. I. Title.
HV6535.C32N49 2002 364.15’23’092 C2002-904243-7
___________________________________________________________________
© 2002 by Gordon Walsh
all rights reserved. No part of the work covered by the copyright hereon may be reproduced or used in any form or by any means—graphic, electronic or mechanical—without the written permission of the publisher. Any request for photocopying, recording, taping or information storage and retrieval systems of any part of this book shall be directed to Access Copyright, The Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency, 1 Yonge Street, Suite 800, Toronto, ON M5E 1E5. This applies to classroom use as well.
Printed in Canada
Flanker Press
PO Box 2522, Station C St. John’s, NL, Canada
Toll Free: 1-866-739-4420 www.flankerpress.com
www.flankerpress.com
16 15 14 13 12 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
We acknowledge the financial support of the Government of Canada through the Book Publishing Industry Development Program (BPIDP) for our publishing activities; the Canada Council for the Arts which last year invested $24.3 million in writing and publishing throughout Canada; the Government of Newfoundland and Labrador, Department of Tourism, Culture and Recreation.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Foreword
Prologue
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Photos
Saltwater Joys (Sam’s Song)
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Epilogue
A Note of Thanks of Behalf of Sam’s Family
Thanks to Gordon
About the Author
Acknowledgements
I would like to thank George and Millie Walsh for putting their faith in me to do this story about their daughter Samantha.
I would like to say a special thank you to my wife Clotilda and daughter Joy for their help, also my daughters Helena, Roberta, Kristie, and my son Gordon. To those who did the photocopying and offered the use of their newspaper clippings and photographs, thanks.
Thanks go to authors Carmelita McGrath for suggesting the title Into the Night, Tom Moore for referring me to Flanker Press, and Kenneth Young for reading the manuscript. At Flanker Press, thanks to editor Jerry Cranford, Margo Cranford, Vera McDonald, and publisher Garry Cranford.
Thanks go to Maura Hanrahan for writing the foreword to the book and to Paul Butler who edited the book by long-distance from Ottawa.
Foreword
A few days after the lifeless body of thirteen-year-old Samantha Walsh was found, reporter Ryan Cleary wrote in the Telegram: the Baie Verte Peninsula, like every other nook and cranny of the province, cries out in distress over the loss of Sammy B.
Cleary was not exaggerating or being sentimental; this was the truth.
I was in St. Anthony Airport on my way to coastal Labrador when word spread through the lounge that the missing girl from Fleur de Lys had been found dead. The airport terminus was eerily quiet. Such a grim discovery was expected—Sam had been gone for eighteen long, cold winter days—but everyone who heard the news was grief-stricken. People silently shed tears or tried to hold them back.
Eventually I flew farther north into the Metis community of Black Tickle to find that the high-school students there had written a letter of sympathy to Samantha’s friends in Fleur de Lys. As I travelled, I made the same discovery as author Gordon Walsh as he went back and forth over the province’s roads: that ours was a collective grief.
This might seem odd, though, as most of us had not heard of Samantha until she went missing that Sunday night. Nor were her parents well known. Like hundreds of other outports, Samantha’s home community was a quiet little place you did not hear much about. And she was not the first Newfoundland child to disappear in this manner; just before Christmas in 1981, fourteen-year-old Dana Bradley was abducted and murdered in St. John’s, the capital city. Newfoundlanders still remember Dana’s name. We’ll never forget Sam’s either.
Samantha Bertha Walsh was born on May 27, 1986—in Newfoundland. Her mother Millie Lewis Walsh was nine months pregnant and living in Fort McMurray, Alberta, when her husband George bundled his family into their truck and headed straight for home. George was determined that his baby would be born a Newfoundlander. And she was.
Samantha was a proud Newfoundlander, too. In her haunting rendition of Saltwater Joys (renamed Samantha’s Song after her death) she sings, I was born down by the water and it’s here I’m going to stay, I’ve searched for all the reasons why I should go away…
Samantha was only five when the groundfish moratorium brought a centuries-old way of life to a halt. With no viable future in sight, thousands of families closed their homes forever and drove off to the mainland. Some of them were Sam’s neighbours on the Baie Verte Peninsula. Listening to Samantha sing, you sense that she’s considered all the turmoil into which her island had been thrown. And she’s chosen to respond with stubbornness and determination in spite of that. After all, she was George’s daughter.
Then as Samantha’s picture flashed on the Newfoundland television news every night, she became everyone’s daughter. We grew familiar with the little round clips that held her brown hair to the side of her head, the big grin, the bright eyes, the baby fat she still carried on her cheeks. We didn’t know a lot about her, though, only that she was missing and that, as the days went by unchanging, an entire community was being driven mad with frustration and grief. These people, the people of Fleur de Lys, were coping with the apparent loss of one of their children in what seemed to be the most heinous way. For them, this was the most awful in-your-face nightmare. And it was so unexpected.
Fleur de Lys is the most northerly community on the Baie Verte Peninsula on Newfoundland’s northeast coast. It has a long-standing association with French fishermen who named it after a large rock in the harbour that reminded them of their national flower, the fleur-de-lys or lily. Petit Nord, a rich fishing ground, was nearby, and it kept the French coming back to this area year after year. Once part of the French Shore, Fleur de Lys welcomed French fishermen long after their presence had diminished elsewhere on the coast. For many years, the community was an important stopover for vessels en route to Labrador or France.
According to the region’s oral history, the first settlers were Michael and Robert Walsh. The 1857 census reports that there were thirty people living in Fleur de Lys, all Roman Catholic. Some of the early settlers could speak French, and relations between the two ethnic groups were generally smooth. Tradition also says, though, that the settlers moved their boats and nets from certain fishing grounds in response to threats from the seasonal French fishermen. However they managed it, overt conflict was avoided—as it was many years later as the community coped with a missing child and suspicions that one among them was guilty.
Samantha’s forebears, the Walshes, were of Irish descent. By 1869, they were neighbours to the Lewises, believed to be of French origins (their original name may be Louis). This is Samantha’s mother’s family. Shortly after the Lewises arrived, the first school was built. It’s not known if the Lewises were the driving force behind the school, but their descendant Millie became a teacher.
The community grew and grew. The sixty-five families who called Fleur de Lys home in 1911 fished cod, salmon and herring, and hunted seals. Later they worked in the lumber industry and in mining in nearby Baie Verte. Eventually there were more miners than fishermen in town. Fleur de Lys became a receiving community for some of those outport Newfoundlanders forced to move to bigger settlements as a result of the federal and provincial governments’ controversial resettlement programs. Almost seven hundred people lived in Fleur de Lys as the program drew to a close. This was the largest the community would ever be.
Fleur de Lys was home for George and Millie Walsh; this was the place their roots lay. They were thrilled to be raising Samantha and her older brother Sandy there. Soon after they moved back to the community, they built a large home on a bluff above the harbour. When George went to buy the lumber to build the house, he brought toddler Sam with him. While he was talking to the sawmill operator, he left Sam in the truck, next to the envelope of cash on the front seat. But there was no money left when George returned to the truck: Sam had opened the envelope and thrown the bills out the window, where the winds carried them away.
Samantha, of course, was forgiven. In her short life, this child knew only love.
She was crazy about sports, especially soccer, and even more passionate about music. She was a Céline Dion fan; her favourite song was My Heart Will Go On from the film Titanic. She loved Newfoundland music, too: she spent part of her last day alive singing Ennis Sisters and Fables songs with her dad as he drove to a local ski run.
Not long after that, the horror started. In this book, Gordon Walsh brings us inside the heart of someone who is living with the knowledge that a child they love is missing and probably murdered. Gordon makes us feel a gamut of emotions: fear, vengeance, sorrow, hope, and love. His honesty is compelling; he is forthright about how he feels and unconcerned about whether or not anyone will judge him for his feelings. He takes us into the very minute when George and Millie realize something is wrong, when the men and women of the community debate what to do, when he sits in the church near the young man who was later found guilty of killing his niece. This is not a book from which the reader can experience any sense of detachment.
I think this will be particularly true of Newfoundland readers. By the time Samantha died, we had lost so many of our young people. The demise of the cod-fishery pushed our children and youth and their parents to mainland towns where they would always be strangers. For the first time, a generation of Newfoundlanders would not start their working lives in fishing boats. Indeed, they would never even see boats unload steak cod, or have the stench of cod guts invade their nostrils. The inshore cod-fishery that was the backbone of Newfoundland ended, and we were left with only a plaque to commemorate it. The rural communities that were the backbone of Newfoundland were (and are) under