Bonaventure Island (Île Bonaventure), with Percé, was among the early seasonal fishing ports of
New France, and was associated with the
lineage of
Nicolas Denys. Settlers from southern Ireland came in the early 1790s. Peter Du Val, a native of
Jersey, set up a fishery company on lot number one before 1819, population rose to an apex, but the company endured until 1845. The island became a migratory bird sanctuary in 1919 due to the
1916 Migratory Bird Convention between Canada and the United States. The Province of Quebec acquired ownership of the entire island by act of expropriation in 1971, evicting the whole population. At this time approximately 35 families were forced to move elsewhere, all residents were evicted. Later the Province of Quebec grouped it together with
Percé Rock into the
Parc national de l'île-Bonaventure-et-du-Rocher-Percé (Bonaventure Island and Percé Rock National Park) in 1985. One of the largest and most accessible bird sanctuaries in the world, with more than 280,000 birds, Bonaventure Island is a major
tourist destination with boat and island tours from May to October. The aircraft carrier
HMCS Bonaventure was named after the island. ==Birds==