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Military history of the Acadians

The military history of the Acadians consisted primarily of militias made up of Acadian settlers who participated in wars against the English (the British after 1707) in coordination with the Wabanaki Confederacy (particularly the Mi'kmaw militias) and French royal forces.[a] A number of Acadians provided military intelligence, sanctuary, and logistical support to the various resistance movements against British rule in Acadia,[2] while other Acadians remained neutral in the contest between the Franco–Wabanaki Confederacy forces and the British. The Acadian militias managed to maintain an effective resistance movement for more than 75 years and through six wars before their eventual demise. According to Acadian historian Maurice Basque, the story of Evangeline continues to influence historic accounts of the expulsion, emphasising Acadians who remained neutral and de-emphasising those who joined resistance movements.[3] While Acadian militias were briefly active during the American Revolutionary War, the militias were dormant throughout the nineteenth century. After confederation, Acadians eventually joined the Canadian War efforts in World War I and World War II. The most well-known colonial leaders of these militias were Joseph Broussard and Joseph-Nicolas Gautier.

Contest for supremacy in North America Edit

King William's War (1688–1697) Edit

The first war to influence the Acadians is now known as King William's War, and began in 1688. Much of the local conflict was orchestrated by the Governor of Acadia and Baron de St Castin, who raided Protestant villages along the Acadia-New England border at the Kennebec River in present-day Maine. The crews of the French privateer Pierre Maisonnat dit Baptiste were primarily Acadian.

The Acadians resisted during the Raid on Chignecto (1696). Colonel Benjamin Church and four hundred men (50 to 150 of whom were Indians, likely Iroquois) arrived offshore of Beaubassin on September 20. When they came ashore, the Acadians and Mi’kmaq opened fire on them. Church lost a lieutenant and several of his men.[4] They managed to get ashore and surprise the Acadians. Many fled while one confronted Church with papers showing they had signed an oath of allegiance in 1690 to the English King. Church was unconvinced, especially after he discovered the proclamation heralding the French success at Pemaquid posted on the church door.[citation needed]

On October 18 Church and his troops arrived opposite the capital of Acadia, in the siege of Fort Nashwaak (1696), landed three cannons and assembled earthworks on the south bank of the Nashwaak River.[b] Pierre Maisonnat dit Baptiste was there to defend the capital.[c] Baptiste joined the Maliseet from Meductic for the duration of the siege. There was a fierce exchange of gun fire for two days, with the advantage going to the better sited French guns. The New Englanders were defeated, having suffered eight killed and seventeen wounded. The French lost one killed and two wounded.[5]

Letters from an Acadian official censured and requested the removal of certain priests, called "do nothings", who took no part in the King William's War but attended strictly to their religious duties and were therefore suspected of favouring the British.[6] After the siege of Pemaquid (1696), d'Iberville led a force of 124 Canadians, Acadians, Mi’kmaq and Abenaki in the Avalon Peninsula campaign. They destroyed almost every British settlement in Newfoundland, killed more than 100 British and captured many more. They deported almost 500 British colonists to Britain or France.[7]

Queen Anne's War (1702–1713) Edit

 
Raid on Grand Pre (1704)

During Queen Anne's War, the members of the Wabanaki Confederacy from Acadia raided Protestant settlements along the Acadia/ New England border in present-day Maine in the Northeast Coast campaign (1703) . Mi’kmaq and Acadians resisted the New England retaliatory Raid on Grand Pré, Piziquid and Chignecto in 1704. The raid was led by Benjamin Church who was fired on by the local militia, who had gathered in the woods along the banks. According to Church, on the first day of the raid, the Acadians and Mi’kmaq "fired smartly at our forces".[8] Church had a small cannon on his boat, which he used to fire grape shot at the attackers on the shore, who withdrew, suffering one Mi’kmaw killed and several wounded. Church was unable to come ashore. Having withdrawn from the village, the next morning the Acadian and Mi’kmaw militia waited in the woods for Church and his men to arrive. At the break of day, the New Englanders again set off toward the village, under orders from Church to drive any resistance before them. The largest body of defenders fired on the raiders' right flank from behind trees and logs, but their fire was ineffective and they were driven off.

Conquest of Acadia and the Treaty of Utrecht Edit

Acadians joined the French privateer Pierre Maisonnat dit Baptiste as crew members in his victories over British vessels. Acadians also fought alongside the Confederacy and French soldiers to protect the capital in the siege of Port Royal (1707) and the final Conquest of Acadia. Acadians and the Wabanaki Confederacy were also successful in the Battle of Bloody Creek (1711).[9] The victory at Bloody Creek rallied the local resistance, and prompted many of the Acadians who were nominally under British protection to withdraw to the north.[10] Soon thereafter a force of some 600 warriors, including Acadians, Abenaki, and Mi’kmaq, under the leadership of Gaulin and Saint-Castin, gathered and blockaded Fort Anne. The defending garrison was small, but the attackers had no artillery and were thus unable to make an impression on the fort,[11] and the fort was still accessible by sea.[10] Gaulin went to Plaisance in Newfoundland for supplies and equipment to advance the siege; Governor Philippe Pastour de Costebelle provided supplies, but the ship had the misfortune to encounter a major British fleet and was captured.[12] That same expedition abandoned its goal of attacking Quebec when eight of its ships were lost on the shores of the Saint Lawrence River; Governor Vetch, who had accompanied the expedition as a leader of the provincial militia, returned to Annapolis Royal with 200 provincial militia, after which the besiegers withdrew.[13]

 
Recreation of part of the clothing issued to the Canadian Milice (Acadians) Delivered by The Governor General Frontenac from the 17th century

In the March 1713 Treaty of Utrecht, the French ceded "all Nova Scotia or Acadie, with its ancient boundaries, as also the city of Port Royal, now called Annapolis Royal, and all other things in those parts, which depend on the said lands and islands" to the British, but retained "the island called Cape Breton, as also all others, both in the mouth of the river of St. Lawrence, and in the gulph of the same name" with exception of the "island called Newfoundland with the adjacent islands," which "shall from this time forward belong of right wholly to Britain".[14] For whatever reason, most Acadians refused to swear an oath of loyalty to Queen Anne or, later, King George. Thus were fifty years of nearly uninterrupted conflict to start, which were only to be punctuated by the expulsion of the Acadians.[15]

Father Rale's War Edit

Raid on Canso (1718) – The Squirrel Affair Edit

In the lead up to Father Rale's War, shortly after Cyprian Southack established himself at Shelburne, Nova Scotia (1715), the Mi'kmaq raided the station and burned it to the ground.[16] In response, on 17–24 September 1718, Southack led a raid on Canso and Chedabucto (present-day community of Guysborough) in what became known as the Squirrel Affair. Southack laid siege for three days to Fort St. Louis at Chedabucto, which was defended primarily by Acadians under Acadian Bernard LaSonde.[17] There were approximately 300 Acadians in the area.[18]

On board HMS Squirrel, Smart held a number of Frenchmen, including Bernard Marres dit La Sonde, Captain Darguibes, the French fishing admiral, and Sieur Dominice, a Basque captain.

On 23 September, Smart and Southack pillaged Canso. The pillaged goods were then loaded onto several French ships that had been captured in the harbor. The following day, 24 September, Southack released the Acadian prisoners, with the exception of Bernard Marres dit La Sonde, onto the Canso Islands without any provisions or clothing.[19] Others fled to Isle Madame and Petit-de-Grat, Nova Scotia.[20] He seized two French ships, and encouraged Governor of Nova Scotia Richard Philipps to build Fort William Augustus at Canso.[16]

During Father Rale's War, the Maliseet raided numerous New England vessels on the Bay of Fundy while the Mi’kmaq, helped by Acadians, raided Canso, Nova Scotia (1723).[21] Much of the conflict of this war happened along the Acadia-New England border. A priest, Father Sebastian Rale and Wabanaki Confederacy members from Acadia also participated in the 1723, 1724 campaigns along the border against the British, who had long threatened to remove the Acadians because they would not take an oath of loyalty. Even during Father Le Loutre's War some twenty years later, the British talked of deporting the Acadians who would not swear loyalty to Britain. On 28 December 1720, in London, someone in the House of Lords said: "It seems as though the French in Nova Scotia will never be good British subjects to her Majesty ... This is why we believe that they should be expulsed as soon as the necessary forces, which will be sent to Nova Scotia, are ready."[22]

King George's War Edit

Siege of Annapolis Royal (1744) Edit

 
Mi'kmaq Man.[d][e]

During King George's War, Abbe Jean-Louis Le Loutre led an insurrection consisting of Acadians and Mi’kmaq to recapture the capital in the siege of Annapolis Royal (1744).[9] Acadian François Dupont Duvivier, who had led the Canso raid, led the second siege attempt against Fort Anne, with a force of 200 troops. Grand Pre had been the staging ground for the French and Mi’kmaw sieges of Annapolis Royal.[24] Two Minas inhabitants, Armand Bigeau and Joseph LeBlanc dit Le Maigre, had traded with Louisbourg and assisted the supplying of Duvivier's forces by sea. Both transported Duvivier's force from Louisbourg to Baie Verte and then accompanied the expedition to Annapolis Royal and had served as scoutes and couriers.[25] Duvivier arrived at Fort Anne on September 6, 1744. The first night he erected shelters. He used Joseph-Nicolas Gautier's house for his Headquarters.[26] After both sieges, Gorham demanded to take control of Grand Pre.[24] The British burned the dwellings of both Bigeau and 'Le Maigre' at Minas.[27] In Annapolis, they burned the home of Gautier and imprisoning him and his family at Fort Anne until they escaped after 10 months. The British also burned the homes of Acadian pilots Paul Doucett and Charles Pelerain.[28]

During the siege of 1745, the French officer Marin was required to withdraw from siege to protect Louisbourg from a British attack. He reported that upon hearing the news of Louisbourg and his own withdrawal from Annapolis Royal, the Acadians were "overpowered with grief from the apprehension of remaining in the disposition of the enemy".[29] Marin had taken British prisoners at Annapolis and remained with them in the bay at Cobequid, where an Acadian said that the French soldiers should have "left their [the British] carcasses behind and brought their skins".[30] The British officer also deemed there was enough evidence to hold Gautier's wife and Charles Raymond for collaborating with the siege.[31]

After the siege of Louisbourg (1745), the Wabanaki Confederacy members from Acadia conducted a campaign against British civilians along the New England/ Acadia border. (Such campaigns were repeated in 1746 and 1747).[32][33] After the first siege of Louisbourg (1745), the British deported thousands of "French Colonists" on Île-Royale to France.[34] There were Acadians among those deported.

At the same time, in July 1745, the other English detachment landed at Port-la-Joye. Under the command of Joseph de Pont Duvivier, the French had a garrison of 20 French troops (Compagnies Franches de la Marine) at Port-la-Joye.[35] The troops fled and New Englanders burned the capital to the ground. Duvivier and the twenty men retreated up the Northeast River (Hillsborough River), pursued by the New Englanders until the French troops received reinforcements from the Acadian militia and the Mi’kmaq.[36] The French troops and their allies were able to drive the New Englanders to their boats, nine New Englanders killed, wounded or made prisoner. The New Englanders took six Acadian hostages, who would be executed if the Acadians or Mi’kmaq rebelled against New England control.[36]

Siege of Port Toulouse Edit

During the siege of Port Toulouse, on May 2, 1745, Pepperell sent Jeremiah Moulton with 70 soldiers and two vessels to capture the fortified village of Port Toulouse. The New Englanders were only able to capture a single sloop and burn a few houses before being repelled by the French soldiers, Acadians and Mi’kmaq. They wounded three New Englanders when they were retreating.[37] Eight days later, on May 10, the New Englanders returned with a force four times larger – 270 men. They burned every standing structure at Port Toulouse, demolished the fort, and desecrated a cemetery where Mi’kmaq were buried.[38] Some French were killed in the assault and others were taken prisoner.[39]

After the failure of the French Duc d'Anville Expedition to recapture Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia Governor Paul Mascarene told Acadians to avoid "deluding Hopes of Returning under the Dominion of France".[40] One French officer noted that when the French troops withdrew from Annapolis Royal, the Acadians were alarmed and disappointed, and felt they were being abandoned to British retribution.[41] The following year, Acadians helped the French to destroy British troops in the Battle of Grand Pré.[42]

Battle of Grand Pre Edit

Broussard and other Acadians supported the French soldiers in the Battle of Grand Pré.[42][43] Ramezay elicited more support from the Acadians, enjoyed more of their collaboration, than the other enterprises. He reported to have enlisted 25 Acadians from Piziquid to Grand Pre ready to bear arms. (Some Acadians may not have supported French efforts in Acadia. Louis Liénard de Beaujeu de Villemond stated in his journal that while the Canadian troops were passing several villages near present day Truro, Captain Coulon on his approach march to the battle sent a detachment of troops at "daybreak to Copequit to block all the paths because the ill intentioned inhabitants could undertake to pass and alert the English to our march".[44] Captain Charles Morris reported the French were supported by "... about 100 of the Neutral French join'd with them".[45] As well, local intelligence pinpointed Noble's billets with stunning accuracy. Near the end of the battle Morris spied an enemy group "clothed like the Inhabitants whom afterward we were inform'd they were, they were all arm'd & having assisted the enemy in the night they were getting off to prevent discovery but unluckily passing into the woods came in full sight of us."[45] The French fleet movements in Nova Scotia waters before the massacre enjoyed the help of Acadian pilots, including Nicholas Gautier and his two sons.[46]

Louisbourg Edit

After the fall of Louisbourg, in conjunction with Father Charles Germain and Joseph Marin de la Malgue, Acadian and Mi'kmaw militias (40 Acadians and 100 Mi'kmaq) from Tatamagouche repeatedly attacked the British who were occupying the fort and the prevent any British settlements from being established in Acadia.[47]

Father Le Loutre's War Edit

 
Father Jean-Louis Le Loutre – "the soul of the Acadian resistance"[48]

Within 18 months of establishing Halifax, and the start of Father Le Loutre's War, the British took firm control of the Nova Scotia peninsula by building fortifications in all the major Acadian communities: present-day Windsor (Fort Edward); Grand Pré (Fort Vieux Logis) and Chignecto (Fort Lawrence). A British fort already existed at the other major Acadian centre of Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia and Cobequid remained without a fort. Le Loutre is reported to have said that "the English might build as many Forts as they pleased but he wou'd take care that they shou'd not come out of them, for he was resolved to torment them with his Indians...."[49] Richard Bulkeley wrote that between 1749 and 1755, Nova Scotia "was kept in an uninterrupted state of war by the Acadians ... and the reports of an officer commanding Fort Edward (Nova Scotia), [indicated he] could not be conveyed [to Halifax] with less an escort than an officer and thirty men."[50]

The Mi’kmaq attacked New England Rangers in the siege of Grand Pre and Battle at St. Croix. Upon the founding of Halifax (1749), Acadians and Mi’kmaq conducted twelve raids on the capital region; the most significant raid was the one in 1751 on Dartmouth. They also resisted the initial British occupation of Chignecto (1750) and later fought against them in the Battle of Beausejour (1755).

Throughout Father Le Loutre's War, English speakers began calling the Acadians "French neutral", a label that would remain in common use through the 1750s. British people used the term sarcastically in derision.[51] This stance led to the Acadians becoming known at times as the "neutral French".[52] In 1749, Governor Cornwallis again asked the Acadians to take the oath and although he was unsuccessful, he took no drastic action against them. The following governor, Peregrine Hopson, continued the conciliatory policy towards the Acadians.[53]

Acadian Exodus Edit

During the war, Acadians revealed their political allegiance by leaving mainland Nova Scotia. From 1749–55, there was massive Acadian migration out of British-occupied mainland Nova Scotia and into French-occupied Île Saint-Jean (Prince Edward Island), Île Royale (Cape Breton) and present-day New Brunswick. A prominent Acadian who transported Acadians to Île St. Jean and Île Royal was Joseph-Nicolas Gautier. While some Acadians were forced to leave, for others the act of leaving British-occupied territory for French-occupied territory was an act of resistance to the British occupation.[54] On one occasion, when a British naval patrol intercepted Acadians in a vessel en route to Île St. Jean, an Acadian passenger said, "They chose rather to quit their lands and estates than possess them upon the terms propos'd by the English [sic] governor."[55] The leader of the Exodus was Father Jean-Louis Le Loutre, whom the British gave the code name "Moses".[56] Historian Micheline Johnson described Le Loutre as "the soul of the Acadian resistance."[48]

Battle at Chignecto (1750) Edit

 
Le Loutre retrieved this bell from the Beaubassin church during the Battle at Chignecto (1750): (Le Loutre retrieved the bell again from the Beausejour Cathedral during the Battle of Beausejour).

In May 1750, Lawrence was unsuccessful in getting a base at Chignecto because Le Loutre burned the village of Beaubassin, preventing Lawrence from using its supplies to establish a fort. (According to the historian Frank Patterson, the Acadians at Cobequid also burned their homes as they retreated from the British to Tatamagouche, Nova Scotia in 1754.[57]) Lawrence retreated, but he returned in September 1750.

On September 3, Rous, Lawrence and Gorham led over 700 men to Chignecto, where Mi’kmaq and Acadians opposed their landing. They killed twenty British, who in turn killed several Mi’kmaq. Le Loutre's militia eventually withdrew, burning the rest of the Acadians' crops and houses as they went.[58] Le Loutre and the Acadian militia leader Joseph Broussard resisted the British assault. The British troops defeated the resistance and began construction of Fort Lawrence near the site of the ruins of Beaubassin.[59] The work on the fort proceeded rapidly and they completed the facility within weeks. To limit the British to peninsular Nova Scotia, the French also began to fortify the Chignecto and its approaches; they constructed Fort Beausejour and two satellite forts: one at present-day Strait Shores, New Brunswick (Fort Gaspareaux) and the other at present-day Saint John, New Brunswick (Fort Menagoueche).[60]

During these months, 35 Mi’kmaq and Acadians ambushed Ranger Captain Francis Bartelo, killing him and six of his men while taking seven others captive. The Mi’kmaq conducted ritual torture of the captives throughout the night, which had a chilling effect on the New Englanders.[58]

Siege of Grand Pre Edit

On November 27, 1749, in the siege of Grand Pre, 300 Mi’kmaq, Maliseet, Penobscot and Acadians attacked Fort Vieux Logis at Grand Pre.[61] The fort was under the command of Captain Handfield[62] of the Cornwallis' Regiment. The Native and Acadian militia killed the sentries (guards) who were firing on them.[63] The Natives then captured Lieutenant John Hamilton and eighteen soldiers under his command (including Handfield's son), while surveying the fort's environs. After the capture of the British soldiers, the native and Acadian militias made several attempts over the next week to lay siege to the fort before breaking off the engagement. When Gorham’s Rangers arrived the militia had already departed with the prisoners to Chignecto.[64] The Acadians were then involved in the Battle at St. Croix, where one of them was killed.[65]

Raid on Dartmouth (1751) Edit

 
British erect a wooden palisade along Dartmouth in response to the Raid, opposite side of the harbour from the Great Pontack (Lower left corner), present-day Historic Properties.

The Raid on Dartmouth occurred during Father Le Loutre's War on May 13, 1751 when an Acadian and Mi’kmaw militia from Chignecto, under the command of Acadian Joseph Broussard, raided Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, destroying the town and killing twenty British villagers. On May 13, 1751 before sunrise, Broussard led sixty Mi'kmaq and Acadians to attack Dartmouth again, in what would be known as the "Dartmouth Massacre".[66] Broussard and the others killed twenty settlers and more were taken prisoner.[67][f] This raid was one of seven the Natives and Acadians would conduct against the town during the war.

The British retaliated by sending several armed companies to Chignecto. A few French defenders were killed and the dikes were breached. Hundreds of acres of crops were ruined, which was disastrous for the Acadians and the French troops.[68]

Immediately after the raid, a wooden palisade was erected around the town plot.[69] Mi'kmaw and Acadian attacks continued throughout the French and Indian War, which ended fourteen years after Dartmouth was first settled. (For example, in the spring of 1759, there was another attack on Fort Clarence, in which five soldiers were killed.)[70] After the initial raid, no new settlers were placed in Dartmouth again for the next thirty years. Of the 151 settlers who arrived in Dartmouth in August 1750, only half remained two years later.[69] By the end of war (1763), Dartmouth was only left with 78 settlers.[71]

Acadians exerted their political resistance by refusing to trade with the British. By 1754, the Acadians sent no produce to the Halifax market. When British merchants tried to buy directly from the Acadians, they were refused. Acadians also refused to supply Fort Edward with firewood.[72] Lawrence saw the need to neutralize the Acadian military threat. To defeat Louisbourg, the British destroyed the lines of supply by deporting the Acadians.[73]

French and Indian War Edit

 
Charles Deschamps de Boishébert et de Raffetot

In 1753, French troops from Canada marched south and seized and fortified the Ohio Valley. Britain protested the invasion and claimed Ohio for itself. On May 28, 1754, the French and Indian War (the North American theatre of the Seven Years' War) began with the Battle of Jumonville Glen. French Officer Ensign de Jumonville and a third of his escort was killed by a British patrol led by George Washington. In retaliation the French and the Indians defeated the British at Fort Necessity. Washington lost a third of his force, and surrendered. Major General Edward Braddock's troops were defeated in the Battle of the Monongahela, and William Johnson's troops stopped the French advance at Lake George.

In Acadia, the primary British objective was to defeat the French fortifications at Beausejour and Louisbourg. The British saw the Acadians' allegiance to the French and the Wabanaki Confederacy as a military threat. Father Le Loutre's War had created the conditions for total war; British civilians had not been spared and, as Governor Charles Lawrence and the Nova Scotia Council saw it, Acadian civilians had provided intelligence, sanctuary, and logistical support while others had fought against the British.[2]

After the British capture of Beausejour, the plan to capture Louisbourg included cutting trade to the Fortress in order to weaken the Fortress and, in turn, weaken the French ability to supply the Mi'kmaq in their warfare against the British. According to Historian Stephen Patterson, more than any other single factor—including the massive assault that eventually forced the surrender of Louisbourg—the supply problem brought an end to French power in the region. Lawrence realized he could reduce the military threat and weaken Fortress Louisbourg by deporting the Acadians, thus cutting off supplies to the fort.[74] During the Expulsion, French Officer Charles Deschamps de Boishébert led the Mi'kmaq and the Acadians in a guerrilla war against the British.[75] According to Louisbourg account books, by late 1756 the French had regularly dispensed supplies to 700 natives. From 1756 to the fall of Louisbourg in 1758, the French made regular payments to Chief Jean-Baptiste Cope and other natives for British scalps.[76]

Battle of Petitcodiac Edit

 
Battle of Petitcodiac

Charles Deschamps de Boishébert was a French militia commander who became a resistance leader. Based in the Miramichi River valley, he helped Acadians fleeing the British deportation operations escape to Quebec. After the fall of Beausejour, Monckton sent a naval squaldorn to evict him from the satellite fort at the mouth of the Saint John River. Knowing that he could not defend his position, Bosishebert destroyed the fort.[77] When he received word that the British were planning an expedition to the Petitcodiac River, he hurried to Chipoudy, where he organized 120 Acadians, Maliseets and Mi'kmaq into a guerrilla fighting force.[78]

On September 2, the expedition began these clearing operations on settlements in and around the Village-des-Blanchard. While the main body worked on the eastern bank of the river, a detachment of fifty or sixty under John Indicot was despatched to the western bank.[g] When they set fire to the village church, Boishébert and three hundred men attacked.[77] The British retreated behind a dyke and were in a near panic when Frye landed with the remainder of the force and took command. After three hours of spirited fighting, Frye eventually extracted the force to the boats and retreated. Twenty two British were killed and another six were wounded.[79][h] Ranger Joseph Gorham was wounded in the battle.[80]

Battle of Bloody Creek Edit

 
Battle of Bloody Creek (1757) monument

Led by Acadian William Johnson (Guillaume Jeanson),[i] a group of Mi'kmaq and Acadians attacked the British force in the Battle of Bloody Creek.[81] Marching on foot along the south shore of the Annapolis River, the British force was exposed to wet and cold before giving up their search for the prisoners. They were crossing a bridge on the René Forêt River on the morning of December 8 when the Mi'kmaq and Acadians attacked. The British made a brief stand and suffered a high number of casualties, including Captain Pigou, before retreating back to Annapolis Royal.

On another occasion, 226 Acadians (36 families) being deported from Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia on the ship Pembroke rebelled against the British crew. After fighting off an attack by another British vessel on February 9, 1756, the Acadians took 8 British prisoners to Quebec.[82][83]

Raids on Piziquid (Fort Edward) Edit

In December 1755, Acadian and Mi'kmaw militia repeated attacked British troops working to kill their livestock, killing one workman which left the others to flee to Halifax.[84]

In September 1756, a group of 100 Acadians ambushed a party of thirteen soldiers who were working outside the fort. Seven were taken prisoner and six escaped back to the fort.[85]

In April 1757, a band of Acadian and Mi'kmaq raided a warehouse near Fort Edward, killing thirteen British soldiers. After loading with what provisions they could carry, they set fire to the building.[86] A few days later, the same partisans also raided Fort Cumberland.[86] Because of the strength of the Acadian militia and Mi'kmaw militia, British officer John Knox wrote that "In the year 1757 we were said to be Masters of the province of Nova Scotia, or Acadia, which, however, was only an imaginary possession." He continues to state that the situation in the province was so precarious for the British that the "troops and inhabitants" at Fort Edward, Fort Sackville and Lunenburg "could not be reputed in any other light than as prisoners."[87][88]

Raids on Chignecto (Fort Cumberland) Edit

The Acadians and Mi’kmaq also resisted in the Chignecto region. They were victorious in the Battle of Petitcodiac (1755).[89] In the spring of 1756, a wood-gathering party from Fort Monckton (former Fort Gaspareaux), was ambushed and nine were scalped.[90] In the summer of 1756, Boishebert burned an English vessel at Bay Vert, killing seven and taking one prisoner.[83] In April 1757, after raiding Fort Edward, the same band of Acadian and Mi'kmaw partisans raided Fort Cumberland, killing and scalping two men and taking two prisoners.[86] July 20, 1757 Mi'kmaq killed 23 and captured two of Gorham's rangers outside Fort Cumberland near present-day Jolicure, New Brunswick.[91] In March 1758, forty Acadian and Mi'kmaq attacked a schooner at Fort Cumberland and killed its master and two sailors.[92] In the winter of 1759, the Mi'kmaq ambushed five British soldiers on patrol while they were crossing a bridge near Fort Cumberland. They were ritually scalped and their bodies mutilated as was common in frontier warfare.[93] During the night of April 4, 1759, using canoes, a force of Acadians and French captured the transport. At dawn they attacked the ship Moncton and chased it for five hours down the Bay of Fundy. Although the Moncton escaped, its crew suffered one killed and two wounded.[94]

Raids on Lawrencetown Edit

 
Eastern Battery Plaque, Dartmouth, Nova Scotia

By June 1757, the settlers had to be withdrawn completely from the settlement of Lawrencetown (established 1754) because the number of Indian raids eventually prevented settlers from leaving their houses.[95]

In nearby Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, in the spring of 1759, there was another Mi'kmaq attack on Eastern Battery, in which five soldiers were killed.[70] (In the same year, further east at Canso, Acadians took 3 British vessels.Murdoch (1865), p. 366)

Lunenburg campaign Edit

The Lunenburg campaign (1758) was executed by the Mi'kmaw militia and Acadian militia against the Foreign Protestants who the British had settled on the Lunenburg Peninsula during the French and Indian War. The British deployed Joseph Gorham and his Rangers along with Captain Rudolf Faesch and regular troops of the 60th Regiment of Foot to defend Lunenburg.[96] The campaign was so successful, by November of 1758, the members of the House of Assembly for Lunenburg stated "they received no benefit from His Majesty's Troops or Rangers" and required more protection.[97]

Raids on Maine Edit

In present-day Maine, the Mi’kmaq and the Maliseet raided numerous New England villages. At the end of April 1755, they raided Gorham, Maine, killing two men and a family. Next they appeared in New-Boston (Gray) and through the neighbouring towns destroying the plantations. On May 13, they raided Frankfort (Dresden), where two men were killed and a house burned. The same day they raided Sheepscot (Newcastle), and took five prisoners. Two were killed in North Yarmouth on May 29 and one taken captive. They shot one person at Teconnet. They took prisoners at Fort Halifax; two prisoners taken at Fort Shirley (Dresden). They took two captive at New Gloucester as they worked on the local fort.[98]

On 13 August 1758 Boishebert left Miramichi, New Brunswick with 400 soldiers, including Acadians whom he led from Port Toulouse. They marched to Fort St George (Thomaston, Maine). His detachment reached there on 9 September but was caught in an ambush and had to withdraw. They next went to Munduncook (Friendship, Maine). They wounded eight British settlers and killed others. This was Boishébert's last Acadian expedition. From there, Boishebert and the Acadians went to Quebec and fought in the Battle of Quebec (1759).[99]

Raids on Halifax Edit

On 2 April 1756, Mi'kmaq received payment from the Governor of Quebec for 12 British scalps taken at Halifax.[100] Acadian Pierre Gautier, son of Joseph-Nicolas Gautier, led Mi’kmaw warriors from Louisbourg on three raids against Halifax in 1757. In each raid, Gautier took prisoners or scalps or both. The last raid happened in September and Gautier went with four Mi’kmaq and killed and scalped two British men at the foot of Citadel Hill. (Pierre went on to participate in the Battle of Restigouche.)[101]

Arriving on the provincial vessel King George, four companies of Rogers Rangers (500 rangers) were at Dartmouth April 8 until May 28 awaiting the siege of Louisbourg (1758). While there they scoured the woods to stop raids on the capital.[102]

In July 1759, Mi'kmaq and Acadians kill five British in Dartmouth, opposite McNabb's Island.[103]

Siege of Louisbourg (1758) Edit

Acadian militias participated in the defence of Louisbourg in 1757 and 1758.[104] In preparation of a British assault on Louisbourg in 1757, all the tribes of the Wabanaki Confederacy were present including Acadian militia.[105] Without any result from their efforts, the number of Mi’kmaq and Acadians who showed the following year were much lower. The precedent for such a decline in numbers was set in the two attacks that happened in the siege of Annapolis 1744, the Mi’kmaq and Acadians appearing in much less numbers for the second assault after the first one had failed.[106]

New Englanders came ashore at Pointe Platee (Flat Point) during the siege of 1745.[107] In 1757 and again in 1758, the Natives and Acadian militias were stationed at the potential landing beaches of Pointe Platee and one further away Anse d la Cormorandiere (Kennington Cove).

In the siege of Louisbourg (1758), Acadian and Mi’kmaw militias began to arrive in Louisboug around May 7, 1758.[108] By the end of the month 118 Acadians arrived and about 30 Mi’kmaq from Ile St. Jean and the Miramachi.[108] Boishebert arrived in June with 70 more Acadia militia members from Ile St. Jean and 60 Mi’kmaw militia.[109] On June 2, The British vessels arrived and the militias went to their defensive positions on the shore. The 200 British vessels waited for six days, until the weather conditions were right, before they attacked on June 8.[110] Four companies of Rogers Rangers under the command of George Scott were the first to come ashore in advance of James Wolfe.[111] The British came ashore at Anse de la Cormorandiere and "continuous fire was poured upon the invaders".[102] The Mi'kmaw and Acadian militias fought the Rangers until the latter were supported by Scott and James Wolfe, which led to the militias retreat. Seventy of the militia were captured and 50 others scalped.[112] The Mi'kmaw and Acadian militias killed 100 British, some of whom were wounded and drowned.[112] On June 16, 50 Mi'kmaq returned to the cove and took 5 seaman captive, firing at the other British marines.[113]

On July 15, Boishebert arrived with Acadian and Mi'kmaw militias and attacked Captain Sutherland and the Rogers Rangers posted at Northeast harbour.[114] When Scott and Wolfe's reinforcements arrived, 100 Rangers from McCurdey and Brewer's Companies were sent to track them down. They only captured one Mi'kmaw.[114] (From here the Rangers went on to conduct the St. John River campaign, in part, hoping to capture Boishebert.)[115]

Cape Breton Edit

Soon after the siege of Louisbourg, Major Dalling went with 30 of James Rogers rangers to Spanish Bay (Sydney, Nova Scotia) and took Acadians prisoner.[115] James Rogers' company made a raid on an Acadian village on the Bras d'Or Lake and "flushed out" 18 armed Acadian militia fighters and 100 other men, women and children.[116] In May 1759, the Mi’kmaw militia were making raids on Louisbourg and on June 1, the four companies of Rogers’ Rangers and the Mi’kmaq fought a "hot skimmish" until they eventually retreated.[117]

St. John River campaign Edit

 
Joseph Godin dit Bellefontaine

Acadia militias resisted during the St. John River campaign and the Petitcodiac River campaign.[118] The Acadian militia along the St. John River was led by Acadian Joseph Godin dit Bellefontaine, Sieur de Beauséjour, who had led the militias since 1749.[119] The command at Fort Frederick was not convinced the village was totally destroyed and sent at least three more expeditions up river to Ste Anne between July and September 1759. The soldiers captured some Acadians along the way, burned their homes, destroyed their crops and slaughtered their cattle. The September expedition involved more than 90 men. At present-day French Lake on the Oromocto River, they met fierce resistance from the Acadians, and resulted in the death of at least seven rangers.[120]

On 18 February 1759, Lieutenant Hazen and 22 men arrived at Sainte-Anne des Pays-Bas.[121] They pillaged and burned the village of 147 buildings, including two Mass-houses and all of the barns and stables. They burned a large store-house, and with it a large quantity of hay, wheat, peas, oats, etc., killing 212 horses, about 5 head of cattle, a large number of hogs and so forth. They also burned the church (located just west of Old Government House, Fredericton). Only a handful of Acadians were found in the area, most had already fled north with their families.[122]

Major Joseph Godin dit Bellefontaine and a group of Acadians ambushed the Rangers.[123] The rangers scalped six Acadians and took six prisoners during this raid.[122] Major Joseph Godin dit Bellefontaine, Sieur de Beauséjour (Seigneur of Pointe Ste-Anne) was Commander of the Acadian Militia of the St-John River valley.[119] During the Seven Years' War he supported and encouraged the Indians in their opposition to the British and even led some of their war parties. In February 1759, they killed Godin's daughter and three of his grandchildren in front of him.

Petiticodiac campaign Edit

In June 1758, Lieutenant Meech of Benoni Danks' Rangers along with fifty-five men advanced up the Petitcodiac River, suspecting that this was where the Acadian and Mi’kmaw raids originated. They made contact with 40 Acadians but were unable to catch them.[124]

On July 1, 1758, Danks himself began to pursue the Acadians. They arrived at present day Moncton and Danks’ Rangers ambushed about thirty Acadians, who were led by Joseph Broussard (Beausoleil). Many were driven into the river, three of them were killed and scalped, and others were captured. Broussard was seriously wounded.[125]

In September 1758, Rogers Rangers burned a village of 100 buildings. The Acadians captured five of the British troops and retreated with then to the Miramachi.[126] The Acadians took prisoner William Caesar McCormick of William Stark's rangers and his detachment of three rangers and two light infantry privates from the 35th Regiment. They were taken to Miramachi and then Restogouch.[115] (They were kept by Pierre du Calvet who later released them to Halifax.)[127]

November 12, 1758, Danks' Rangers sailed up the river and returned the next day with four men and twelve women and children as prisoners. The prisoners notified Danks about the location of Joseph Broussard's home (present day Boundary Creek). Danks' company sailed immediately up the Petitodiac to attack Broussard's home. By the time Danks arrived the house was vacant. Danks killed the livestock and burned the fields and village.[128]

The Rangers returned to the river. Captain Silvanus Cobb continued to ferry Rangers up and down the river to destroy the houses and crops over two nights, November 13–14. On November 14, Acadian resistance appeared early in the morning. Two of Danks' Rangers were missing. The Rangers overwhelmed the Acadians once Danks' reinforcement of a platoon of Rangers arrived. The Rangers took a dozen women and children hostage.[129] Joseph Gorham reported that he had burned over a hundred homes and Danks reported he destroyed twenty three buildings.[129]

The Rangers then returned to Fort Frederick at the mouth of the St. John River with the prisoners.

Plains of Abraham Edit

Under command of Boishébert, the Acadian militia (150 fighters) took part in the defence of Quebec during the summer of 1759 and then in the Battle of the Plains of Abraham (1759). In the winter he returned for the last time to Acadia, to gather reinforcements for the defence of Canada and to restore the morale of the discouraged Acadians.[99]

Battle of Restigouche Edit

An Acadian militia and Mi’kmaw militia, totalling 1500 fighters, organized in the Battle of Restigouche. The Acadians arrived in about 20 schooners and small boats. Along with the French, they continued up river to draw the British fleet closer to the Acadian community of Pointe-à-la-Batterie, where they were ready to launch a surprise attack on the English. The Acadians sunk a number of their vessels to create a blockade, upon which the Acadian and Mi’kmaq fired at the ships. On 27 June, the British succeeded in maneuvering just beyond the chain of sunken ships. Once the British were range of the battery, they fired on the battery. This skirmish lasted all night and was repeated with various breaks from 28 June to 3 July, when the British overwhelmed Pointe à la Batterie, burning 150 to 200 buildings that made up the Acadian village community at Pointe à la Batterie.

The militias retreated and re-grouped with the French frigate Machault. They sunk more schooners to create another blockade. They created two new batteries, one on the north shore at Pointe de la Mission (today Listuguj, Quebec), and one on the south shore at Pointe aux Sauvages (today Campbellton, New Brunswick). They created blockade with schooners at Pointe aux Sauvages. On July 7 British commander Byron spent the day getting rid of the battery at Pointe aux Sauvages and later returned to the task of destroying the Machault. By the morning of 8 July the Scarborough and the Repulse were in range of the blockade and face to face with the Machault. The British made two attempts to defeat the batteries and the militias held out. On the third attempt, they were successful.[130]

Treaty of Paris (1763) Edit

The fifty years of quasi-uninterrupted hostilities on the Acadian territory were finally resolved by the Treaty of Paris (1763), in which the French were expelled from British North America; they retained only a small portion of Louisiana on that continent. The fate of the Acadians—expulsion from their homelands—was due to their reliance on their clerics, who employed them mercilessly as tools of a failed policy of empire. As Vaudreuil remarked in 1760 to his superior, "Les malheurs des Accadiens sont beaucoup moins leur ouvrage que le fruit des sollicitations et des demarches des missionnaires."[15] Thomas Pichon would write in his Lettres et Memoires pour servir a l'Histoire du Cap Breton that same year:[15]

Nous avons six missionnaires dont l'occupation perpetuelle est de porter les esprits au fanatisme et a la vengeance... Je ne puis supporter dans nos pretres ces odieuses declamations qu'ils font tous les jours aux sauvages: 'Les Anglois sont les ennemis de Dieu, les compagnons du Diable.'

American Revolution Edit

In the lead up to the American Revolution, Nova Scotia prepared for an American assault. A militia of 100 Acadians from Clare and Yarmouth was raised and marched to Halifax (1774).[131] Simon Thibodeau fought the American patriots while in Quebec during the American Revolution.[132]

The Capture of Fort Bute signalled the opening of Spanish intervention in the American Revolutionary War on the side of France and the United States. Mustering an ad hoc army of Spanish regulars, Acadian militia, and native levies under Gilbert Antoine de St. Maxent, Bernardo de Gálvez, the Governor of Spanish Louisiana stormed and captured the small British frontier post on Bayou Manchac on 7 September 1779.[133]

War of 1812 Edit

 
Lévite Thériault

Jean-Baptiste Hébert and Jean-Joseph Girouard served in the War of 1812. Lévite Thériault was the founder and lieutenant-colonel of the 1st Battalion of Madawaska militia in New Brunswick. Urbain Johnson was a captain of a militia in New Brunswick. Noël Hébert also served in a militia in Canada East. Henri M. Robicheau and Frederick A. Robicheau served as captains of local militias in Nova Scotia.[134] Charles Cormier was a militia leader in Montreal.

American Civil War Edit

During the American Civil War, in Louisiana there were numerous Cajun militia units raised in the Army of the Confederacy. One unit was named "Independent Rangers of Iberville Squadron Militia Cavalry", after Pierre Le Moyne d'Iberville, founder of the French colony of Louisiana.[135]

World War I Edit

During World War I, Acadians participated in the 165th Battalion (Acadiens), CEF, a unit in the Canadian Expeditionary Force. Based in Moncton, New Brunswick, the unit began recruiting in late 1915 throughout the Maritime provinces. After sailing to England in March 1917, the battalion was absorbed into the 13th Reserve Battalion on 7 April 1917.

World War II Edit

 
Canadian soldiers approaching Juno Beach aboard LCAs

During World War II, Acadian soldiers were instrumental in the Battle of Normandy and the liberation of Saint-Aubin-sur-Mer, Calvados, in which they are named by the Brèche des Acadiens.[136] Saint-Aubin-sur-Mer is located at the eastern end of Nan Sector of Juno Beach, one of the landing sites on D-Day, at the beginning of the Battle of Normandy, during World War II.

On D-Day the infantry of the North Shore Regiment of New Brunswick landed there, and were backed up by the armour of the Fort Garry Horse (also known as the 10th Armoured Regiment). Le Régiment de la Chaudière of Quebec came ashore in reserve. About 100 defenders garrisoned the town and they were largely unaffected by the preparatory barrage. As such they were able to put up heavy resistance at the beach and in the town as the Canadians pushed inland, but were eventually overcome.

A commemorative plaque marks their involvement in the liberation of Carpiquet airport.[136]

Notable veterans Edit

See also Edit

References Edit

Notes
  1. ^ Many of the Acadians and Mi'kmaw people were metis. For example, when Shirley put a bounty on the Mi'kmaw people during King George's War, the Acadians appealed in anxiety to Mascarene because of the "great number of Mulattoes amongst them".[1] For information on Metis Acadians see:
     • Parmenter, Jon; Robison, Mark Power (April 2007). "The Perils and Possibilities of Wartime Neutrality on the Edges of Empire: Iroquois and Acadians between the French and British in North America, 1744–1760". Diplomatic History. 31 (2): 182. doi:10.1111/j.1467-7709.2007.00611.x.
     • Faragher (2005), pp. 35–48, 146–67, 179–81, 203, 271–77
     • Paul, Daniel N. (1993). We Were Not the Savages: A Micmac Perspective on the Collision of European and Aboriginal Civilizations. Nimbus. pp. 38–67, 86, 97–104. ISBN 978-1-55109-056-6.
     • Plank (2001), pp. 23–39, 70–98, 111–14, 122–38
     • Robison, Mark Power (2000). Maritime frontiers: The evolution of empire in Nova Scotia, 1713–1758 (Ph.D.). University of Colorado at Boulder. pp. 53–84.
     • Wicken, Bill (Autumn 1995). "26 Augusts 1726: A case study in Mi'kmaq-New England Relationships in the Early 18th Century". Acadiensis. XXIII (1): 20–21. JSTOR 30303468.
     • Wicken, William C. (1998). "Re-examining Mi'kmaq-Acadian Relations, 1635–1755". In Sylvie Dépatie; et al. (eds.). Vingt Ans Apres: Habitants et Marchands [Twenty Years Later]. McGill-Queen's University Press. pp. 93–109. ISBN 9780773567023.
  2. ^ Near where the Fort Nashwaak Motel now stands.
  3. ^ For details on the siege see Murdoch (1865), pp. 228–231
  4. ^ The Nova Scotia Museum indicates that this is a Mi’kmaq man. "This Mi'kmaq man has light hair and European features; his accoutrements are also inaccurately depicted. The 1750 account of Swedish botanist Peter Kalm, or the eighteenth-century letters of the Abbé Pierre Antoine Simon Maillard, may be the artist's basis for this engraving; both mention Mi'kmaq men tattooed with crosses and suns. This engraving was published in an encyclopedia by J. Grasset St-Saveur, "ci-devant vice-consul de la Nation française en Hongrie."[23] The complementary image—"Femme Acadienne" is also Mi’kmaq.
  5. ^ Morris, Charles. A Brief Survey of Nova Scotia. The Royal Artillery Regimental Library, Woolwich. Morris provides a description of the Acadians: "The people are tall and well proportioned, they delight much in wearing long hair, they are of dark complexion, in general, and somewhat of the mixture of Indians; but there are some of a light complexion. They retain the language and customs of their neighbours the French, with a mixed affectation of the native Indians, and imitate them in their haunting and wild tones in their merriment; they are naturally full cheer and merry, subtle, speak and promise fair,..."
  6. ^ Cornwallis' official report mentioned that four settlers were killed and six soldiers taken prisoner. See Governor Cornwallis to Board of Trade, letter, June 24, 1751, referenced in Harry Chapman, p. 29; John Wilson reported that fifteen people were killed immediately, seven were wounded, three of whom would die in hospital; six were carried away and never seen again" (See A genuine narrative of the transactions in Nova Scotia since the settlement, June 1749, till August the 5th, 1751 [microform] : in which the nature, soil, and produce of the country are related, with the particular attempts of the Indians to disturb the colony / by John Wilson); John Salusbury recorded in his diary that approximately twenty were killed (See Expeditions of Honour: The Journal of John Salusbury in Halifax, Nova Scotia, 1749–53. Edited by Ronald Rompkey. Newark: University of Delaware Press. 1982. p. 111)
  7. ^ Note: Grenier (2008), p. 180 locates this battle at Chipoudy rather than at Petitcodiac. There is a primary source, however, of a letter written by Major Jedediah Preble that indicates the battle happened in "Shipodia" (See Peter Landry. The Lion and the Lily. Trafford Press. 2007. p. 535)
  8. ^ The French reported that eighty British were killed (see Grenier (2008), p. 180).
  9. ^ Johnson's father had been in the British garrison at Annapolis Royal and whose mother was Acadian, was said to have been the leader of the attackers.
Citations
  1. ^ Bell (1961), p. 405, note 18a.
  2. ^ a b Patterson (1994), p. 146.
  3. ^ Basque, Maurice (2011). "Atlantic Realities, Acadian Identities, Arcadian Dreams". In John Graham Reid; Donald J. Savoie (eds.). Shaping an Agenda for Atlantic Canada. Fernwood. p. 66. ISBN 978-1-55266-449-0.
  4. ^ Church, p. 228[full citation needed]
  5. ^ Roger Marsters. 2004. p. 34[full citation needed]
  6. ^ Baker, C. Alice (1897). True Stories of New England Captives Carried to Canada during the Old French and Indian Wars. Cambridge. p. 41.
  7. ^ Reid, John G. (1994). "1686–1720: Imperial Intrusions". In Phillip Buckner; John G. Reid (eds.). The Atlantic Region to Confederation: A History. University of Toronto Press. p. 84. ISBN 978-1-4875-1676-5. JSTOR j.ctt15jjfrm.
  8. ^ Benjamin Church, p. 273[full citation needed]
  9. ^ a b Faragher (2005), pp. 110–112.
  10. ^ a b Griffiths (2005), p. 247.
  11. ^ Faragher (2005), p. 135.
  12. ^ Griffiths (2005), p. 248.
  13. ^ Griffiths (2005), p. 249.
  14. ^ Peace and Friendship Treaty of Utrecht between France and Great Britain . 1713 – via Wikisource.
  15. ^ a b c Parkman, p.135[full citation needed]
  16. ^ a b Plank (2001), pp. 76–77.
  17. ^ Haynes (2004), pp. 121, 125.
  18. ^ Haynes (2004), p. 122.
  19. ^ Campbell, p. 132
  20. ^ Robinson, p. 53[full citation needed]; Haynes (2004), pp. 111, 114, 121
  21. ^ Grenier (2008), pp. 46–73.
  22. ^ Groulx, Lionel-Adolphe (1924). "L'histoire Acadienne". In Bibliothèque de l’Action française (ed.). Notre maître le passé (10-10 ed.). p. 168.
  23. ^ "Image MP0071". Mi’kmaq Portraits. Nova Scotia Museum.
  24. ^ a b Bates, p. 33, 41[full citation needed]
  25. ^ Barnes (1996), p. 98.
  26. ^ Bernard, p. 70
  27. ^ Barnes (1996), p. 106.
  28. ^ Barnes (1996), p. 112.
  29. ^ Brodhead (1858), pp. 4–5.
  30. ^ Pote (1896), p. 34.
  31. ^ Barnes (1996), p. 103.
  32. ^ Grenier (2008).
  33. ^ Reid, John G.; Baker, Emerson W. (2008). "Amerindian Power in the Early Modern Northeast: A Reappraisal". Essays on Northeastern North America, Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries. University of Toronto Press. pp. 129–152. doi:10.3138/9781442688032. ISBN 978-0-8020-9137-6. JSTOR 10.3138/9781442688032.12.
  34. ^ Johnston, A.J.B. Storied Shores. University College of Cape Breton Press. 2004., p. 70
  35. ^ Harvey, p. 110
  36. ^ a b Harvey, p. 111
  37. ^ Rawlyk, George A. (1999). Yankees at Louisbourg: The Story of the First Siege, 1745. Breton Books. p. 64. ISBN 978-1-895415-45-2.
  38. ^ "Project Gutenberg". Retrieved 7 November 2016.
  39. ^ Johnson, p. 68
  40. ^ Grenier (2008), p. 133.
  41. ^ Dunn, Brenda (2004). A History of Port Royal/Annapolis Royal, 1605-1800. Historical Association of Annapolis Royal. Nimbus Pub. p. 166. ISBN 978-1-55109-484-7.
  42. ^ a b Barnes (1996), pp. 98–113.
  43. ^ Sauvageau, Robert (1987). Acadie: La guerre de cents ans des Francais d'Amerique aux Maritimes et en Louisiane, 1670–1769 [Acadia: The Hundred Years' War of the French Americans in the Maritimes and Louisiana, 1670–1769] (in French). Paris: Berger-Levrault.
  44. ^ Taylor, Aaron (2009). The 1747 Trek to Grand Pré: A Study in Historical Archaeology (Honours Thesis). Saint Mary's University.
  45. ^ a b Charles Morris. A Brief Survey of Nova Scotia. The Royal Artillery Regimental Library, Woolwich. A copy of the original is held at the Library & Archives of Canada, Ottawa. Charles Morris fonds (circa 1748)R2227-0-6-E
  46. ^ Barnes (1996), p. 104.
  47. ^ Brodhead (1858), pp. 166, 168, 171, 179.
  48. ^ a b Johnson, Micheline D. (1974). "Daudin, Henri". In Halpenny, Francess G (ed.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. III (1741–1770) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press.
  49. ^ Patterson, 1993, p. 47
  50. ^ "Collections of the Nova Scotia Historical Society". Halifax, Nova Scotia Historical Society. 1880. Retrieved 7 November 2016.
  51. ^ Plank (2001), p. 105.
  52. ^ R. Douglas Francis, Richard Jones, and Donald B. Smith, Origins: Canadian History to Confederation, 6th ed. (Toronto: Nelson Education, 2009), 117
  53. ^ John Brebner, New England's Outpost: Acadia before the Conquest of Canada, (Hamden, CT: Archon Books, 1965), 190.
  54. ^ A.J.B. Johnston. "French Attitudes Toward the Acadians, ca. 1680–1756", In Du Grand Dérangement à la Déportation. pp. 152
  55. ^ Faragher (2005), p. 262.
  56. ^ "Selections from the public documents of the province of Nova Scotia". Halifax, N.S., C. Annand. 1869. Retrieved 7 November 2016.
  57. ^ Frank Harris Patterson. History of Tatamagouche, Halifax: Royal Print & Litho., 1917 (also Mika, Belleville: 1973), p. 19
  58. ^ a b Grenier (2008), p. 159.
  59. ^ Hand, p. 20[full citation needed]
  60. ^ Hand, p. 25[full citation needed]
  61. ^ Murdoch (1866), p. 172.
  62. ^ Godfrey, William G. (1974). "Handfield, John". In Halpenny, Francess G (ed.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. III (1741–1770) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press.
  63. ^ Brebner, New England's Outpost. p. 174
  64. ^ See (Faragher 2005, p. 262); Griffith 392; Murdoch (1866), pp. 166–167; Grenier (2008), p. 153; John Salusbury's Diary, Dec. 10, 1749; and . Archived from the original on 2013-05-14. Retrieved 2014-02-05.).
  65. ^ "The Scots magazine". pp. 55 v.
  66. ^ Atkins, p. 27–28
  67. ^ Grenier (2008), p. 160.
  68. ^ Faragher (2005), p. 272.
  69. ^ a b Harry Chapman, p. 31
  70. ^ a b Harry Chapman, p. 32; Faragher (2005), p. 410
  71. ^ Harry Chapman, p. 32
  72. ^ Patterson (1994), p. 142.
  73. ^ Patterson (1998), pp. 105–106; Patterson (1994), p. 144
  74. ^ Patterson (1994), p. 152.
  75. ^ Grenier (2008), p. 177–206.
  76. ^ Patterson (1994), p. 148.
  77. ^ a b Faragher (2005), p. 350.
  78. ^ Faragher (2005), p. 350; Grenier (2008), p. 180; Brodhead (1858), p. 358
  79. ^ Grenier (2008), p. 180.
  80. ^ Pote (1896), p. 176.
  81. ^ Canada, Parks Canada Agency, Government of. "Parks Canada – Bloody Creek National Historic Site of Canada – History". Retrieved 7 November 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  82. ^ Consentino, Lucie LeBlanc. "Acadians Pembroke:Acadian History:The Exile: Acadian Ancestral Home". Retrieved 7 November 2016.
  83. ^ a b Brodhead (1858), p. 426.
  84. ^ Bell (1961), p. 496.
  85. ^ Boston Evening Post. 1756 October 18. p. 2
  86. ^ a b c Faragher (2005), p. 398.
  87. ^ Bell (1961), p. 514.
  88. ^ Knox, John (1769). An Historical Journal of the Campaigns in North America for the years 1757, 1758, 1759 and 1760:[...]. Vol. II. London: W. Johnston and J. Dodsley. p. 443. ISBN 9780665364563.
  89. ^ Faragher (2005), p. 110.
  90. ^ Webster as cited by bluepete, p. 371
  91. ^ Grenier (2008), p. 190; New Brunswick Military Project
  92. ^ Grenier (2008), p. 195.
  93. ^ Faragher (2005), p. 410.
  94. ^ New Brunswick Military Project
  95. ^ Bell (1961), p. 508.
  96. ^ "Regular" refers to a professional British soldier, paid by the British Crown.
  97. ^ Bell (1961), p. 512, note 44.
  98. ^ William Williamson. The history of the state of Maine. Vol. 2. 1832. p. 311–112; During this time period, the Maliseet and Mi'kmaq were the only tribes of the Wabanaki Confederacy who were able to right.
  99. ^ a b Leblanc, Phyllis E. (1979). "Deschamps de Boishébert et de Raffetot, Charles". In Halpenny, Francess G (ed.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. IV (1771–1800) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press.
    • Eaton, Cyrus (1865). History of Thomaston, Rockland, and South Thomaston, Maine, from their First Exploration, 1605; with Family Genealogies. Hallowell, Maine: Masters, Smith & Co. p. 77.
    • William Durkee Williamson, The history of the state of Maine: from its first discovery, A.D. ..., Volume 2, p. 333 (Williamson's Book)
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  101. ^ Earle Lockerby. "Pre-Deportation Letters from Ile Saint Jean". Les Cahiers. La Societe historique acadienne. Vol. 42, No. 2. June 2011. pp. 99–100
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  104. ^ Johnston (2007).
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  109. ^ Johnston (2007), p. 189.
  110. ^ Johnston (2007), p. 196.
  111. ^ Loescher (1969), p. 27.
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  124. ^ Grenier (2008), p. 198.
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  129. ^ a b Grenier (2008), p. 201.
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  132. ^ a b Roy, Jacqueline (1983). "Thibodeau, Simon". In Halpenny, Francess G (ed.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. V (1801–1820) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press.
  133. ^ "Acadia:Acadians:American Revolution:Acadian & French Canadian Ancestral Home". Retrieved 7 November 2016.
    • "Acadian.info A guide to Cajun Country". Retrieved 7 November 2016.
  134. ^ Calnek, W. A.; Savary, A. W. (1897). History of the county of Annapolis, including old Port Royal and Acadia. W. Briggs. ISBN 9780665003868.
  135. ^ Cormier, Steven A. (2004). Rangers of Iberville Squadron Militia Cavalry "Independent Rangers of Iberville Squadron Militia Cavalry". Acadians in Grey. {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help)
  136. ^ a b veterans.gc.ca: "Minister of Veterans Affairs to Attend Commemorative Events in Normandy to Honour Quebec Acadian Veterans", 9 Aug 2010
  137. ^ Brodhead (1858), p. 154.
  138. ^ a b Barnes (1996), p. 112, note 17.
  139. ^ Brodhead (1858), p. 171, 173.
  140. ^ Brodhead (1858), p. 168.
  141. ^ Pothier, Bernard (1974). "LeBlanc, Le Maigre, Joseph". In Halpenny, Francess G (ed.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. III (1741–1770) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press.
  142. ^ d’Entremont, C. J. (1974). "Bourg, Belle-Humeur, Alxandre". In Halpenny, Francess G (ed.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. III (1741–1770) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press.
  143. ^ Northern Armageddon: The Battle of the Plains of Abraham By D. Peter MacLeod
    • "The French retreat". Retrieved 7 November 2016.
  144. ^ p. 46
  145. ^ p. 46 – note Villebon has Melanson's first initial as "M" when it was "P"
    • Reid, John G. (2004). The "Conquest" of Acadia, 1710: Imperial, Colonial, and Aboriginal Constructions. University of Toronto Press. p. 58. ISBN 978-0-8020-8538-2.
Bibliography
  • Barnes, Thomas Garden (1996). "Twelve Apostles or a Dozen Traitors? Acadian Collaborators during King George's War 1744–1748". In Frank Murray Greenwood; Barry Wright (eds.). Canadian State Trials: Vol 1. Law, Politics, and Security Measures, 1608-1837. Osgoode Society for Canadian Legal History. ISBN 978-0-8020-7893-3.
  • Bell, Winthrop Pickard (1961). The Foreign Protestants and the Settlement of Nova Scotia: The History of a Piece of Arrested British Colonial Policy in the Eighteenth Century. University of Toronto Press.
  • Brodhead, John Romeyn (1858). Documents Relative to the Colonial History of the State of New York. Weed, Parsons and Company.
  • Faragher, John Mack (2005). A Great and Noble Scheme: The Tragic Story of the Expulsion of the French Acadians from Their American Homeland. W.W Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0-393-05135-3.
  • Grenier, John (2008). The Far Reaches of Empire: War in Nova Scotia, 1710-1760. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-3876-3.
  • Haynes, Mark (2004). The Forgotten Battle: A History of the Acadians of Canso/Chedabuctou. Trafford Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4120-3235-3.
  • Johnston, A. J. B. (2007). Endgame 1758: The Promise, the Glory, and the Despair of Louisbourg's Last Decade. University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0-8032-0986-2.
  • Loescher, Burt Garfield (1969). The History of Rogers Rangers: The First Green Berets. Vol. I.
  • Murdoch, Beamish (1865). A History of Nova-Scotia, Or Acadie. Vol. I. Halifax, Nova Scotia: J. Barnes.
  • Murdoch, Beamish (1866). A History of Nova-Scotia, Or Acadie. Vol. II. Halifax, Nova Scotia: J. Barnes.
  • Patterson, Stephen E. (1994). "1744–1763: Colonial Wars and Aboriginal Peoples". In Phillip A. Buckner; John G. Reid (eds.). The Atlantic Region to Confederation: A History. University of Toronto Press. pp. 125–155. ISBN 978-1-4875-1676-5.
  • Patterson, Stephen E. (1998). "Indian-White Relations in Nova Scotia, 1749–61: A Study in Political Interaction". In Phillip A. Buckner; Gail G. Campbell; David Frank (eds.). The Acadiensis Reader: Atlantic Canada Before Confederation. Acadiensis Press. ISBN 978-0-919107-44-1.
  • Plank, Geoffrey (2001). An Unsettled Conquest: The British Campaign Against the Peoples of Acadia. University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 0-8122-1869-8.
  • Pote, William (1896). The Journal of Captain William Pote, Jr., during his Captivity in the French and Indian War from May, 1745, to August, 1747. Dodd, Mead & Company.

Links Edit

  • Acadian Veterans – Veterans Affairs Canada
  • Acadian Veterans of the First World War
  • Acadians in the American Revolution
  • Acadians veterans of the American Revolution
  • Significantly Cajun Units in the Armies of the Confederacy

Further reading Edit

  • Atkins, Thomas, Papers related to the French encroachment on Nova Scotia (1749–1754), and the War in North America (1754–1761)
  • Cormier, Ronald, The Forgotten Soldiers: Stories from Acadian Veterans of World War Two. Fredericton, N.B. New Ireland Press, 1992
  • Doughty, Arthur G. (1916), The Acadian Exiles. A Chronicle of the Land of Evangeline, Toronto: Glasgow, Brook & Co. 178 pages
  • Douglas, W. A. B., "The Sea Militia of Nova Scotia, 1749–1755: A Comment on Naval Policy". The Canadian Historical Review. Vol. XLVII, No.1. 1966. 22–37
  • Edwards, Joseph Plimsoll. "The Militia of Nova Scotia, 1749–1867." Collections of the Nova Scotia Historical Society. Vol. 17 (1913). pp. 63–110.
  • Griffiths, N.E.S. (2005). From Migrant to Acadian: A North American Border People, 1604-1755. McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 978-0-7735-2699-0.
  • Griffiths, N.E.S. (1969). The Acadian Deportation: Deliberate Perfidy Or Cruel Necessity?. Copp Clark. ISBN 9780773031005.
  • Hadley, Michael L. U-Boats Against Canada: German Submarines in Canadian Waters.
  • Hunt, M. S. Nova Scotia's Part in the Great War The Nova Scotia Veteran Publishing Company Limited. 1920
  • Johnston, John. "The Acadian Deportation in a Comparative Context: An Introduction". Royal Nova Scotia Historical Society: The Journal. 2007. pp. 114–131
  • Landry, Peter. The Lion & The Lily. Vol. 1. Victoria: Trafford, 2007.
  • Simon MacDonald. Ships of war lost on the coast of Nova Scotia and Sable Island during the eighteenth century (1884)
  • Léger, Claude, Le bataillon acadien de la Première Guerre mondiale provides detailed coverage of Madawaskayen and Acadian experiences during WWI
  • McCarthy, Eric, Acadian effort in France will never be forgotten by. Journal Pioneer. November 12, 2009
  • Moody, Barry (1981). The Acadians, Toronto: Grolier. 96 pages ISBN 0-7172-1810-4
  • Rompkey, Ronald, ed. Expeditions of Honour: The Journal of John Salusbury in Halifax, Nova Scotia, 1749–53. Newark: U of Delaware P, Newark, 1982.
  • Reid, John G. The 'Conquest' of Acadia, 1710: Imperial, Colonial, an Aboriginal Constructions University of Toronto Press. 2004 ISBN 0-8020-3755-0
  • Sirois, Georges, La Participation des Brayons à la Grande guerre: 1914–1918
  • Webster, John Clarence. The career of the Abbé Le Loutre in Nova Scotia (Shediac, N.B., 1933),
  • Wicken, William C. (2002). Mi'kmaq Treaties on Trial: History, Land and Donald Marshall Junior. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-0-8020-7665-6.
  • Annals of Yarmouth and Barrington (Nova Scotia) in the Revolutionary War; compiled from original manuscripts, etc., contained in the office of the secretary of the Commonwealth, State House, Boston, Mass (1899)

military, history, acadians, military, history, acadians, consisted, primarily, militias, made, acadian, settlers, participated, wars, against, english, british, after, 1707, coordination, with, wabanaki, confederacy, particularly, kmaw, militias, french, roya. The military history of the Acadians consisted primarily of militias made up of Acadian settlers who participated in wars against the English the British after 1707 in coordination with the Wabanaki Confederacy particularly the Mi kmaw militias and French royal forces a A number of Acadians provided military intelligence sanctuary and logistical support to the various resistance movements against British rule in Acadia 2 while other Acadians remained neutral in the contest between the Franco Wabanaki Confederacy forces and the British The Acadian militias managed to maintain an effective resistance movement for more than 75 years and through six wars before their eventual demise According to Acadian historian Maurice Basque the story of Evangeline continues to influence historic accounts of the expulsion emphasising Acadians who remained neutral and de emphasising those who joined resistance movements 3 While Acadian militias were briefly active during the American Revolutionary War the militias were dormant throughout the nineteenth century After confederation Acadians eventually joined the Canadian War efforts in World War I and World War II The most well known colonial leaders of these militias were Joseph Broussard and Joseph Nicolas Gautier Contents 1 Contest for supremacy in North America 1 1 King William s War 1688 1697 1 2 Queen Anne s War 1702 1713 1 3 Conquest of Acadia and the Treaty of Utrecht 1 4 Father Rale s War 1 4 1 Raid on Canso 1718 The Squirrel Affair 1 5 King George s War 1 5 1 Siege of Annapolis Royal 1744 1 5 2 Siege of Port Toulouse 1 5 3 Battle of Grand Pre 1 5 4 Louisbourg 1 6 Father Le Loutre s War 1 6 1 Acadian Exodus 1 6 2 Battle at Chignecto 1750 1 6 3 Siege of Grand Pre 1 6 4 Raid on Dartmouth 1751 1 7 French and Indian War 1 7 1 Battle of Petitcodiac 1 7 2 Battle of Bloody Creek 1 7 3 Raids on Piziquid Fort Edward 1 7 4 Raids on Chignecto Fort Cumberland 1 7 5 Raids on Lawrencetown 1 7 6 Lunenburg campaign 1 7 7 Raids on Maine 1 7 8 Raids on Halifax 1 7 9 Siege of Louisbourg 1758 1 7 10 Cape Breton 1 7 11 St John River campaign 1 7 12 Petiticodiac campaign 1 7 13 Plains of Abraham 1 7 14 Battle of Restigouche 1 8 Treaty of Paris 1763 2 American Revolution 3 War of 1812 4 American Civil War 5 World War I 6 World War II 7 Notable veterans 8 See also 9 References 10 Links 11 Further readingContest for supremacy in North America EditKing William s War 1688 1697 Edit See also King William s War The first war to influence the Acadians is now known as King William s War and began in 1688 Much of the local conflict was orchestrated by the Governor of Acadia and Baron de St Castin who raided Protestant villages along the Acadia New England border at the Kennebec River in present day Maine The crews of the French privateer Pierre Maisonnat dit Baptiste were primarily Acadian The Acadians resisted during the Raid on Chignecto 1696 Colonel Benjamin Church and four hundred men 50 to 150 of whom were Indians likely Iroquois arrived offshore of Beaubassin on September 20 When they came ashore the Acadians and Mi kmaq opened fire on them Church lost a lieutenant and several of his men 4 They managed to get ashore and surprise the Acadians Many fled while one confronted Church with papers showing they had signed an oath of allegiance in 1690 to the English King Church was unconvinced especially after he discovered the proclamation heralding the French success at Pemaquid posted on the church door citation needed On October 18 Church and his troops arrived opposite the capital of Acadia in the siege of Fort Nashwaak 1696 landed three cannons and assembled earthworks on the south bank of the Nashwaak River b Pierre Maisonnat dit Baptiste was there to defend the capital c Baptiste joined the Maliseet from Meductic for the duration of the siege There was a fierce exchange of gun fire for two days with the advantage going to the better sited French guns The New Englanders were defeated having suffered eight killed and seventeen wounded The French lost one killed and two wounded 5 Letters from an Acadian official censured and requested the removal of certain priests called do nothings who took no part in the King William s War but attended strictly to their religious duties and were therefore suspected of favouring the British 6 After the siege of Pemaquid 1696 d Iberville led a force of 124 Canadians Acadians Mi kmaq and Abenaki in the Avalon Peninsula campaign They destroyed almost every British settlement in Newfoundland killed more than 100 British and captured many more They deported almost 500 British colonists to Britain or France 7 Queen Anne s War 1702 1713 Edit nbsp Raid on Grand Pre 1704 During Queen Anne s War the members of the Wabanaki Confederacy from Acadia raided Protestant settlements along the Acadia New England border in present day Maine in the Northeast Coast campaign 1703 Mi kmaq and Acadians resisted the New England retaliatory Raid on Grand Pre Piziquid and Chignecto in 1704 The raid was led by Benjamin Church who was fired on by the local militia who had gathered in the woods along the banks According to Church on the first day of the raid the Acadians and Mi kmaq fired smartly at our forces 8 Church had a small cannon on his boat which he used to fire grape shot at the attackers on the shore who withdrew suffering one Mi kmaw killed and several wounded Church was unable to come ashore Having withdrawn from the village the next morning the Acadian and Mi kmaw militia waited in the woods for Church and his men to arrive At the break of day the New Englanders again set off toward the village under orders from Church to drive any resistance before them The largest body of defenders fired on the raiders right flank from behind trees and logs but their fire was ineffective and they were driven off Conquest of Acadia and the Treaty of Utrecht Edit Acadians joined the French privateer Pierre Maisonnat dit Baptiste as crew members in his victories over British vessels Acadians also fought alongside the Confederacy and French soldiers to protect the capital in the siege of Port Royal 1707 and the final Conquest of Acadia Acadians and the Wabanaki Confederacy were also successful in the Battle of Bloody Creek 1711 9 The victory at Bloody Creek rallied the local resistance and prompted many of the Acadians who were nominally under British protection to withdraw to the north 10 Soon thereafter a force of some 600 warriors including Acadians Abenaki and Mi kmaq under the leadership of Gaulin and Saint Castin gathered and blockaded Fort Anne The defending garrison was small but the attackers had no artillery and were thus unable to make an impression on the fort 11 and the fort was still accessible by sea 10 Gaulin went to Plaisance in Newfoundland for supplies and equipment to advance the siege Governor Philippe Pastour de Costebelle provided supplies but the ship had the misfortune to encounter a major British fleet and was captured 12 That same expedition abandoned its goal of attacking Quebec when eight of its ships were lost on the shores of the Saint Lawrence River Governor Vetch who had accompanied the expedition as a leader of the provincial militia returned to Annapolis Royal with 200 provincial militia after which the besiegers withdrew 13 nbsp Recreation of part of the clothing issued to the Canadian Milice Acadians Delivered by The Governor General Frontenac from the 17th centuryIn the March 1713 Treaty of Utrecht the French ceded all Nova Scotia or Acadie with its ancient boundaries as also the city of Port Royal now called Annapolis Royal and all other things in those parts which depend on the said lands and islands to the British but retained the island called Cape Breton as also all others both in the mouth of the river of St Lawrence and in the gulph of the same name with exception of the island called Newfoundland with the adjacent islands which shall from this time forward belong of right wholly to Britain 14 For whatever reason most Acadians refused to swear an oath of loyalty to Queen Anne or later King George Thus were fifty years of nearly uninterrupted conflict to start which were only to be punctuated by the expulsion of the Acadians 15 Father Rale s War Edit Raid on Canso 1718 The Squirrel Affair Edit In the lead up to Father Rale s War shortly after Cyprian Southack established himself at Shelburne Nova Scotia 1715 the Mi kmaq raided the station and burned it to the ground 16 In response on 17 24 September 1718 Southack led a raid on Canso and Chedabucto present day community of Guysborough in what became known as the Squirrel Affair Southack laid siege for three days to Fort St Louis at Chedabucto which was defended primarily by Acadians under Acadian Bernard LaSonde 17 There were approximately 300 Acadians in the area 18 On board HMS Squirrel Smart held a number of Frenchmen including Bernard Marres dit La Sonde Captain Darguibes the French fishing admiral and Sieur Dominice a Basque captain On 23 September Smart and Southack pillaged Canso The pillaged goods were then loaded onto several French ships that had been captured in the harbor The following day 24 September Southack released the Acadian prisoners with the exception of Bernard Marres dit La Sonde onto the Canso Islands without any provisions or clothing 19 Others fled to Isle Madame and Petit de Grat Nova Scotia 20 He seized two French ships and encouraged Governor of Nova Scotia Richard Philipps to build Fort William Augustus at Canso 16 During Father Rale s War the Maliseet raided numerous New England vessels on the Bay of Fundy while the Mi kmaq helped by Acadians raided Canso Nova Scotia 1723 21 Much of the conflict of this war happened along the Acadia New England border A priest Father Sebastian Rale and Wabanaki Confederacy members from Acadia also participated in the 1723 1724 campaigns along the border against the British who had long threatened to remove the Acadians because they would not take an oath of loyalty Even during Father Le Loutre s War some twenty years later the British talked of deporting the Acadians who would not swear loyalty to Britain On 28 December 1720 in London someone in the House of Lords said It seems as though the French in Nova Scotia will never be good British subjects to her Majesty This is why we believe that they should be expulsed as soon as the necessary forces which will be sent to Nova Scotia are ready 22 King George s War Edit Siege of Annapolis Royal 1744 Edit nbsp Mi kmaq Man d e During King George s War Abbe Jean Louis Le Loutre led an insurrection consisting of Acadians and Mi kmaq to recapture the capital in the siege of Annapolis Royal 1744 9 Acadian Francois Dupont Duvivier who had led the Canso raid led the second siege attempt against Fort Anne with a force of 200 troops Grand Pre had been the staging ground for the French and Mi kmaw sieges of Annapolis Royal 24 Two Minas inhabitants Armand Bigeau and Joseph LeBlanc dit Le Maigre had traded with Louisbourg and assisted the supplying of Duvivier s forces by sea Both transported Duvivier s force from Louisbourg to Baie Verte and then accompanied the expedition to Annapolis Royal and had served as scoutes and couriers 25 Duvivier arrived at Fort Anne on September 6 1744 The first night he erected shelters He used Joseph Nicolas Gautier s house for his Headquarters 26 After both sieges Gorham demanded to take control of Grand Pre 24 The British burned the dwellings of both Bigeau and Le Maigre at Minas 27 In Annapolis they burned the home of Gautier and imprisoning him and his family at Fort Anne until they escaped after 10 months The British also burned the homes of Acadian pilots Paul Doucett and Charles Pelerain 28 During the siege of 1745 the French officer Marin was required to withdraw from siege to protect Louisbourg from a British attack He reported that upon hearing the news of Louisbourg and his own withdrawal from Annapolis Royal the Acadians were overpowered with grief from the apprehension of remaining in the disposition of the enemy 29 Marin had taken British prisoners at Annapolis and remained with them in the bay at Cobequid where an Acadian said that the French soldiers should have left their the British carcasses behind and brought their skins 30 The British officer also deemed there was enough evidence to hold Gautier s wife and Charles Raymond for collaborating with the siege 31 After the siege of Louisbourg 1745 the Wabanaki Confederacy members from Acadia conducted a campaign against British civilians along the New England Acadia border Such campaigns were repeated in 1746 and 1747 32 33 After the first siege of Louisbourg 1745 the British deported thousands of French Colonists on Ile Royale to France 34 There were Acadians among those deported At the same time in July 1745 the other English detachment landed at Port la Joye Under the command of Joseph de Pont Duvivier the French had a garrison of 20 French troops Compagnies Franches de la Marine at Port la Joye 35 The troops fled and New Englanders burned the capital to the ground Duvivier and the twenty men retreated up the Northeast River Hillsborough River pursued by the New Englanders until the French troops received reinforcements from the Acadian militia and the Mi kmaq 36 The French troops and their allies were able to drive the New Englanders to their boats nine New Englanders killed wounded or made prisoner The New Englanders took six Acadian hostages who would be executed if the Acadians or Mi kmaq rebelled against New England control 36 Siege of Port Toulouse Edit During the siege of Port Toulouse on May 2 1745 Pepperell sent Jeremiah Moulton with 70 soldiers and two vessels to capture the fortified village of Port Toulouse The New Englanders were only able to capture a single sloop and burn a few houses before being repelled by the French soldiers Acadians and Mi kmaq They wounded three New Englanders when they were retreating 37 Eight days later on May 10 the New Englanders returned with a force four times larger 270 men They burned every standing structure at Port Toulouse demolished the fort and desecrated a cemetery where Mi kmaq were buried 38 Some French were killed in the assault and others were taken prisoner 39 After the failure of the French Duc d Anville Expedition to recapture Annapolis Royal Nova Scotia Governor Paul Mascarene told Acadians to avoid deluding Hopes of Returning under the Dominion of France 40 One French officer noted that when the French troops withdrew from Annapolis Royal the Acadians were alarmed and disappointed and felt they were being abandoned to British retribution 41 The following year Acadians helped the French to destroy British troops in the Battle of Grand Pre 42 Battle of Grand Pre Edit Broussard and other Acadians supported the French soldiers in the Battle of Grand Pre 42 43 Ramezay elicited more support from the Acadians enjoyed more of their collaboration than the other enterprises He reported to have enlisted 25 Acadians from Piziquid to Grand Pre ready to bear arms Some Acadians may not have supported French efforts in Acadia Louis Lienard de Beaujeu de Villemond stated in his journal that while the Canadian troops were passing several villages near present day Truro Captain Coulon on his approach march to the battle sent a detachment of troops at daybreak to Copequit to block all the paths because the ill intentioned inhabitants could undertake to pass and alert the English to our march 44 Captain Charles Morris reported the French were supported by about 100 of the Neutral French join d with them 45 As well local intelligence pinpointed Noble s billets with stunning accuracy Near the end of the battle Morris spied an enemy group clothed like the Inhabitants whom afterward we were inform d they were they were all arm d amp having assisted the enemy in the night they were getting off to prevent discovery but unluckily passing into the woods came in full sight of us 45 The French fleet movements in Nova Scotia waters before the massacre enjoyed the help of Acadian pilots including Nicholas Gautier and his two sons 46 Louisbourg Edit After the fall of Louisbourg in conjunction with Father Charles Germain and Joseph Marin de la Malgue Acadian and Mi kmaw militias 40 Acadians and 100 Mi kmaq from Tatamagouche repeatedly attacked the British who were occupying the fort and the prevent any British settlements from being established in Acadia 47 Father Le Loutre s War Edit nbsp Father Jean Louis Le Loutre the soul of the Acadian resistance 48 Within 18 months of establishing Halifax and the start of Father Le Loutre s War the British took firm control of the Nova Scotia peninsula by building fortifications in all the major Acadian communities present day Windsor Fort Edward Grand Pre Fort Vieux Logis and Chignecto Fort Lawrence A British fort already existed at the other major Acadian centre of Annapolis Royal Nova Scotia and Cobequid remained without a fort Le Loutre is reported to have said that the English might build as many Forts as they pleased but he wou d take care that they shou d not come out of them for he was resolved to torment them with his Indians 49 Richard Bulkeley wrote that between 1749 and 1755 Nova Scotia was kept in an uninterrupted state of war by the Acadians and the reports of an officer commanding Fort Edward Nova Scotia indicated he could not be conveyed to Halifax with less an escort than an officer and thirty men 50 The Mi kmaq attacked New England Rangers in the siege of Grand Pre and Battle at St Croix Upon the founding of Halifax 1749 Acadians and Mi kmaq conducted twelve raids on the capital region the most significant raid was the one in 1751 on Dartmouth They also resisted the initial British occupation of Chignecto 1750 and later fought against them in the Battle of Beausejour 1755 Throughout Father Le Loutre s War English speakers began calling the Acadians French neutral a label that would remain in common use through the 1750s British people used the term sarcastically in derision 51 This stance led to the Acadians becoming known at times as the neutral French 52 In 1749 Governor Cornwallis again asked the Acadians to take the oath and although he was unsuccessful he took no drastic action against them The following governor Peregrine Hopson continued the conciliatory policy towards the Acadians 53 Acadian Exodus Edit Main article Acadian Exodus During the war Acadians revealed their political allegiance by leaving mainland Nova Scotia From 1749 55 there was massive Acadian migration out of British occupied mainland Nova Scotia and into French occupied Ile Saint Jean Prince Edward Island Ile Royale Cape Breton and present day New Brunswick A prominent Acadian who transported Acadians to Ile St Jean and Ile Royal was Joseph Nicolas Gautier While some Acadians were forced to leave for others the act of leaving British occupied territory for French occupied territory was an act of resistance to the British occupation 54 On one occasion when a British naval patrol intercepted Acadians in a vessel en route to Ile St Jean an Acadian passenger said They chose rather to quit their lands and estates than possess them upon the terms propos d by the English sic governor 55 The leader of the Exodus was Father Jean Louis Le Loutre whom the British gave the code name Moses 56 Historian Micheline Johnson described Le Loutre as the soul of the Acadian resistance 48 Battle at Chignecto 1750 Edit nbsp Le Loutre retrieved this bell from the Beaubassin church during the Battle at Chignecto 1750 Le Loutre retrieved the bell again from the Beausejour Cathedral during the Battle of Beausejour Main article Battle at Chignecto In May 1750 Lawrence was unsuccessful in getting a base at Chignecto because Le Loutre burned the village of Beaubassin preventing Lawrence from using its supplies to establish a fort According to the historian Frank Patterson the Acadians at Cobequid also burned their homes as they retreated from the British to Tatamagouche Nova Scotia in 1754 57 Lawrence retreated but he returned in September 1750 On September 3 Rous Lawrence and Gorham led over 700 men to Chignecto where Mi kmaq and Acadians opposed their landing They killed twenty British who in turn killed several Mi kmaq Le Loutre s militia eventually withdrew burning the rest of the Acadians crops and houses as they went 58 Le Loutre and the Acadian militia leader Joseph Broussard resisted the British assault The British troops defeated the resistance and began construction of Fort Lawrence near the site of the ruins of Beaubassin 59 The work on the fort proceeded rapidly and they completed the facility within weeks To limit the British to peninsular Nova Scotia the French also began to fortify the Chignecto and its approaches they constructed Fort Beausejour and two satellite forts one at present day Strait Shores New Brunswick Fort Gaspareaux and the other at present day Saint John New Brunswick Fort Menagoueche 60 During these months 35 Mi kmaq and Acadians ambushed Ranger Captain Francis Bartelo killing him and six of his men while taking seven others captive The Mi kmaq conducted ritual torture of the captives throughout the night which had a chilling effect on the New Englanders 58 Siege of Grand Pre Edit On November 27 1749 in the siege of Grand Pre 300 Mi kmaq Maliseet Penobscot and Acadians attacked Fort Vieux Logis at Grand Pre 61 The fort was under the command of Captain Handfield 62 of the Cornwallis Regiment The Native and Acadian militia killed the sentries guards who were firing on them 63 The Natives then captured Lieutenant John Hamilton and eighteen soldiers under his command including Handfield s son while surveying the fort s environs After the capture of the British soldiers the native and Acadian militias made several attempts over the next week to lay siege to the fort before breaking off the engagement When Gorham s Rangers arrived the militia had already departed with the prisoners to Chignecto 64 The Acadians were then involved in the Battle at St Croix where one of them was killed 65 Raid on Dartmouth 1751 Edit nbsp British erect a wooden palisade along Dartmouth in response to the Raid opposite side of the harbour from the Great Pontack Lower left corner present day Historic Properties The Raid on Dartmouth occurred during Father Le Loutre s War on May 13 1751 when an Acadian and Mi kmaw militia from Chignecto under the command of Acadian Joseph Broussard raided Dartmouth Nova Scotia destroying the town and killing twenty British villagers On May 13 1751 before sunrise Broussard led sixty Mi kmaq and Acadians to attack Dartmouth again in what would be known as the Dartmouth Massacre 66 Broussard and the others killed twenty settlers and more were taken prisoner 67 f This raid was one of seven the Natives and Acadians would conduct against the town during the war The British retaliated by sending several armed companies to Chignecto A few French defenders were killed and the dikes were breached Hundreds of acres of crops were ruined which was disastrous for the Acadians and the French troops 68 Immediately after the raid a wooden palisade was erected around the town plot 69 Mi kmaw and Acadian attacks continued throughout the French and Indian War which ended fourteen years after Dartmouth was first settled For example in the spring of 1759 there was another attack on Fort Clarence in which five soldiers were killed 70 After the initial raid no new settlers were placed in Dartmouth again for the next thirty years Of the 151 settlers who arrived in Dartmouth in August 1750 only half remained two years later 69 By the end of war 1763 Dartmouth was only left with 78 settlers 71 Acadians exerted their political resistance by refusing to trade with the British By 1754 the Acadians sent no produce to the Halifax market When British merchants tried to buy directly from the Acadians they were refused Acadians also refused to supply Fort Edward with firewood 72 Lawrence saw the need to neutralize the Acadian military threat To defeat Louisbourg the British destroyed the lines of supply by deporting the Acadians 73 French and Indian War Edit nbsp Charles Deschamps de Boishebert et de RaffetotIn 1753 French troops from Canada marched south and seized and fortified the Ohio Valley Britain protested the invasion and claimed Ohio for itself On May 28 1754 the French and Indian War the North American theatre of the Seven Years War began with the Battle of Jumonville Glen French Officer Ensign de Jumonville and a third of his escort was killed by a British patrol led by George Washington In retaliation the French and the Indians defeated the British at Fort Necessity Washington lost a third of his force and surrendered Major General Edward Braddock s troops were defeated in the Battle of the Monongahela and William Johnson s troops stopped the French advance at Lake George In Acadia the primary British objective was to defeat the French fortifications at Beausejour and Louisbourg The British saw the Acadians allegiance to the French and the Wabanaki Confederacy as a military threat Father Le Loutre s War had created the conditions for total war British civilians had not been spared and as Governor Charles Lawrence and the Nova Scotia Council saw it Acadian civilians had provided intelligence sanctuary and logistical support while others had fought against the British 2 After the British capture of Beausejour the plan to capture Louisbourg included cutting trade to the Fortress in order to weaken the Fortress and in turn weaken the French ability to supply the Mi kmaq in their warfare against the British According to Historian Stephen Patterson more than any other single factor including the massive assault that eventually forced the surrender of Louisbourg the supply problem brought an end to French power in the region Lawrence realized he could reduce the military threat and weaken Fortress Louisbourg by deporting the Acadians thus cutting off supplies to the fort 74 During the Expulsion French Officer Charles Deschamps de Boishebert led the Mi kmaq and the Acadians in a guerrilla war against the British 75 According to Louisbourg account books by late 1756 the French had regularly dispensed supplies to 700 natives From 1756 to the fall of Louisbourg in 1758 the French made regular payments to Chief Jean Baptiste Cope and other natives for British scalps 76 Battle of Petitcodiac Edit nbsp Battle of PetitcodiacCharles Deschamps de Boishebert was a French militia commander who became a resistance leader Based in the Miramichi River valley he helped Acadians fleeing the British deportation operations escape to Quebec After the fall of Beausejour Monckton sent a naval squaldorn to evict him from the satellite fort at the mouth of the Saint John River Knowing that he could not defend his position Bosishebert destroyed the fort 77 When he received word that the British were planning an expedition to the Petitcodiac River he hurried to Chipoudy where he organized 120 Acadians Maliseets and Mi kmaq into a guerrilla fighting force 78 On September 2 the expedition began these clearing operations on settlements in and around the Village des Blanchard While the main body worked on the eastern bank of the river a detachment of fifty or sixty under John Indicot was despatched to the western bank g When they set fire to the village church Boishebert and three hundred men attacked 77 The British retreated behind a dyke and were in a near panic when Frye landed with the remainder of the force and took command After three hours of spirited fighting Frye eventually extracted the force to the boats and retreated Twenty two British were killed and another six were wounded 79 h Ranger Joseph Gorham was wounded in the battle 80 Battle of Bloody Creek Edit nbsp Battle of Bloody Creek 1757 monumentLed by Acadian William Johnson Guillaume Jeanson i a group of Mi kmaq and Acadians attacked the British force in the Battle of Bloody Creek 81 Marching on foot along the south shore of the Annapolis River the British force was exposed to wet and cold before giving up their search for the prisoners They were crossing a bridge on the Rene Foret River on the morning of December 8 when the Mi kmaq and Acadians attacked The British made a brief stand and suffered a high number of casualties including Captain Pigou before retreating back to Annapolis Royal On another occasion 226 Acadians 36 families being deported from Annapolis Royal Nova Scotia on the ship Pembroke rebelled against the British crew After fighting off an attack by another British vessel on February 9 1756 the Acadians took 8 British prisoners to Quebec 82 83 Raids on Piziquid Fort Edward Edit In December 1755 Acadian and Mi kmaw militia repeated attacked British troops working to kill their livestock killing one workman which left the others to flee to Halifax 84 In September 1756 a group of 100 Acadians ambushed a party of thirteen soldiers who were working outside the fort Seven were taken prisoner and six escaped back to the fort 85 In April 1757 a band of Acadian and Mi kmaq raided a warehouse near Fort Edward killing thirteen British soldiers After loading with what provisions they could carry they set fire to the building 86 A few days later the same partisans also raided Fort Cumberland 86 Because of the strength of the Acadian militia and Mi kmaw militia British officer John Knox wrote that In the year 1757 we were said to be Masters of the province of Nova Scotia or Acadia which however was only an imaginary possession He continues to state that the situation in the province was so precarious for the British that the troops and inhabitants at Fort Edward Fort Sackville and Lunenburg could not be reputed in any other light than as prisoners 87 88 Raids on Chignecto Fort Cumberland Edit The Acadians and Mi kmaq also resisted in the Chignecto region They were victorious in the Battle of Petitcodiac 1755 89 In the spring of 1756 a wood gathering party from Fort Monckton former Fort Gaspareaux was ambushed and nine were scalped 90 In the summer of 1756 Boishebert burned an English vessel at Bay Vert killing seven and taking one prisoner 83 In April 1757 after raiding Fort Edward the same band of Acadian and Mi kmaw partisans raided Fort Cumberland killing and scalping two men and taking two prisoners 86 July 20 1757 Mi kmaq killed 23 and captured two of Gorham s rangers outside Fort Cumberland near present day Jolicure New Brunswick 91 In March 1758 forty Acadian and Mi kmaq attacked a schooner at Fort Cumberland and killed its master and two sailors 92 In the winter of 1759 the Mi kmaq ambushed five British soldiers on patrol while they were crossing a bridge near Fort Cumberland They were ritually scalped and their bodies mutilated as was common in frontier warfare 93 During the night of April 4 1759 using canoes a force of Acadians and French captured the transport At dawn they attacked the ship Moncton and chased it for five hours down the Bay of Fundy Although the Moncton escaped its crew suffered one killed and two wounded 94 Raids on Lawrencetown Edit nbsp Eastern Battery Plaque Dartmouth Nova ScotiaBy June 1757 the settlers had to be withdrawn completely from the settlement of Lawrencetown established 1754 because the number of Indian raids eventually prevented settlers from leaving their houses 95 In nearby Dartmouth Nova Scotia in the spring of 1759 there was another Mi kmaq attack on Eastern Battery in which five soldiers were killed 70 In the same year further east at Canso Acadians took 3 British vessels Murdoch 1865 p 366 Lunenburg campaign Edit The Lunenburg campaign 1758 was executed by the Mi kmaw militia and Acadian militia against the Foreign Protestants who the British had settled on the Lunenburg Peninsula during the French and Indian War The British deployed Joseph Gorham and his Rangers along with Captain Rudolf Faesch and regular troops of the 60th Regiment of Foot to defend Lunenburg 96 The campaign was so successful by November of 1758 the members of the House of Assembly for Lunenburg stated they received no benefit from His Majesty s Troops or Rangers and required more protection 97 Raids on Maine Edit In present day Maine the Mi kmaq and the Maliseet raided numerous New England villages At the end of April 1755 they raided Gorham Maine killing two men and a family Next they appeared in New Boston Gray and through the neighbouring towns destroying the plantations On May 13 they raided Frankfort Dresden where two men were killed and a house burned The same day they raided Sheepscot Newcastle and took five prisoners Two were killed in North Yarmouth on May 29 and one taken captive They shot one person at Teconnet They took prisoners at Fort Halifax two prisoners taken at Fort Shirley Dresden They took two captive at New Gloucester as they worked on the local fort 98 On 13 August 1758 Boishebert left Miramichi New Brunswick with 400 soldiers including Acadians whom he led from Port Toulouse They marched to Fort St George Thomaston Maine His detachment reached there on 9 September but was caught in an ambush and had to withdraw They next went to Munduncook Friendship Maine They wounded eight British settlers and killed others This was Boishebert s last Acadian expedition From there Boishebert and the Acadians went to Quebec and fought in the Battle of Quebec 1759 99 Raids on Halifax Edit On 2 April 1756 Mi kmaq received payment from the Governor of Quebec for 12 British scalps taken at Halifax 100 Acadian Pierre Gautier son of Joseph Nicolas Gautier led Mi kmaw warriors from Louisbourg on three raids against Halifax in 1757 In each raid Gautier took prisoners or scalps or both The last raid happened in September and Gautier went with four Mi kmaq and killed and scalped two British men at the foot of Citadel Hill Pierre went on to participate in the Battle of Restigouche 101 Arriving on the provincial vessel King George four companies of Rogers Rangers 500 rangers were at Dartmouth April 8 until May 28 awaiting the siege of Louisbourg 1758 While there they scoured the woods to stop raids on the capital 102 In July 1759 Mi kmaq and Acadians kill five British in Dartmouth opposite McNabb s Island 103 Siege of Louisbourg 1758 Edit Acadian militias participated in the defence of Louisbourg in 1757 and 1758 104 In preparation of a British assault on Louisbourg in 1757 all the tribes of the Wabanaki Confederacy were present including Acadian militia 105 Without any result from their efforts the number of Mi kmaq and Acadians who showed the following year were much lower The precedent for such a decline in numbers was set in the two attacks that happened in the siege of Annapolis 1744 the Mi kmaq and Acadians appearing in much less numbers for the second assault after the first one had failed 106 New Englanders came ashore at Pointe Platee Flat Point during the siege of 1745 107 In 1757 and again in 1758 the Natives and Acadian militias were stationed at the potential landing beaches of Pointe Platee and one further away Anse d la Cormorandiere Kennington Cove In the siege of Louisbourg 1758 Acadian and Mi kmaw militias began to arrive in Louisboug around May 7 1758 108 By the end of the month 118 Acadians arrived and about 30 Mi kmaq from Ile St Jean and the Miramachi 108 Boishebert arrived in June with 70 more Acadia militia members from Ile St Jean and 60 Mi kmaw militia 109 On June 2 The British vessels arrived and the militias went to their defensive positions on the shore The 200 British vessels waited for six days until the weather conditions were right before they attacked on June 8 110 Four companies of Rogers Rangers under the command of George Scott were the first to come ashore in advance of James Wolfe 111 The British came ashore at Anse de la Cormorandiere and continuous fire was poured upon the invaders 102 The Mi kmaw and Acadian militias fought the Rangers until the latter were supported by Scott and James Wolfe which led to the militias retreat Seventy of the militia were captured and 50 others scalped 112 The Mi kmaw and Acadian militias killed 100 British some of whom were wounded and drowned 112 On June 16 50 Mi kmaq returned to the cove and took 5 seaman captive firing at the other British marines 113 On July 15 Boishebert arrived with Acadian and Mi kmaw militias and attacked Captain Sutherland and the Rogers Rangers posted at Northeast harbour 114 When Scott and Wolfe s reinforcements arrived 100 Rangers from McCurdey and Brewer s Companies were sent to track them down They only captured one Mi kmaw 114 From here the Rangers went on to conduct the St John River campaign in part hoping to capture Boishebert 115 Cape Breton Edit Soon after the siege of Louisbourg Major Dalling went with 30 of James Rogers rangers to Spanish Bay Sydney Nova Scotia and took Acadians prisoner 115 James Rogers company made a raid on an Acadian village on the Bras d Or Lake and flushed out 18 armed Acadian militia fighters and 100 other men women and children 116 In May 1759 the Mi kmaw militia were making raids on Louisbourg and on June 1 the four companies of Rogers Rangers and the Mi kmaq fought a hot skimmish until they eventually retreated 117 St John River campaign Edit nbsp Joseph Godin dit BellefontaineAcadia militias resisted during the St John River campaign and the Petitcodiac River campaign 118 The Acadian militia along the St John River was led by Acadian Joseph Godin dit Bellefontaine Sieur de Beausejour who had led the militias since 1749 119 The command at Fort Frederick was not convinced the village was totally destroyed and sent at least three more expeditions up river to Ste Anne between July and September 1759 The soldiers captured some Acadians along the way burned their homes destroyed their crops and slaughtered their cattle The September expedition involved more than 90 men At present day French Lake on the Oromocto River they met fierce resistance from the Acadians and resulted in the death of at least seven rangers 120 On 18 February 1759 Lieutenant Hazen and 22 men arrived at Sainte Anne des Pays Bas 121 They pillaged and burned the village of 147 buildings including two Mass houses and all of the barns and stables They burned a large store house and with it a large quantity of hay wheat peas oats etc killing 212 horses about 5 head of cattle a large number of hogs and so forth They also burned the church located just west of Old Government House Fredericton Only a handful of Acadians were found in the area most had already fled north with their families 122 Major Joseph Godin dit Bellefontaine and a group of Acadians ambushed the Rangers 123 The rangers scalped six Acadians and took six prisoners during this raid 122 Major Joseph Godin dit Bellefontaine Sieur de Beausejour Seigneur of Pointe Ste Anne was Commander of the Acadian Militia of the St John River valley 119 During the Seven Years War he supported and encouraged the Indians in their opposition to the British and even led some of their war parties In February 1759 they killed Godin s daughter and three of his grandchildren in front of him Petiticodiac campaign Edit In June 1758 Lieutenant Meech of Benoni Danks Rangers along with fifty five men advanced up the Petitcodiac River suspecting that this was where the Acadian and Mi kmaw raids originated They made contact with 40 Acadians but were unable to catch them 124 On July 1 1758 Danks himself began to pursue the Acadians They arrived at present day Moncton and Danks Rangers ambushed about thirty Acadians who were led by Joseph Broussard Beausoleil Many were driven into the river three of them were killed and scalped and others were captured Broussard was seriously wounded 125 In September 1758 Rogers Rangers burned a village of 100 buildings The Acadians captured five of the British troops and retreated with then to the Miramachi 126 The Acadians took prisoner William Caesar McCormick of William Stark s rangers and his detachment of three rangers and two light infantry privates from the 35th Regiment They were taken to Miramachi and then Restogouch 115 They were kept by Pierre du Calvet who later released them to Halifax 127 November 12 1758 Danks Rangers sailed up the river and returned the next day with four men and twelve women and children as prisoners The prisoners notified Danks about the location of Joseph Broussard s home present day Boundary Creek Danks company sailed immediately up the Petitodiac to attack Broussard s home By the time Danks arrived the house was vacant Danks killed the livestock and burned the fields and village 128 The Rangers returned to the river Captain Silvanus Cobb continued to ferry Rangers up and down the river to destroy the houses and crops over two nights November 13 14 On November 14 Acadian resistance appeared early in the morning Two of Danks Rangers were missing The Rangers overwhelmed the Acadians once Danks reinforcement of a platoon of Rangers arrived The Rangers took a dozen women and children hostage 129 Joseph Gorham reported that he had burned over a hundred homes and Danks reported he destroyed twenty three buildings 129 The Rangers then returned to Fort Frederick at the mouth of the St John River with the prisoners Plains of Abraham Edit Under command of Boishebert the Acadian militia 150 fighters took part in the defence of Quebec during the summer of 1759 and then in the Battle of the Plains of Abraham 1759 In the winter he returned for the last time to Acadia to gather reinforcements for the defence of Canada and to restore the morale of the discouraged Acadians 99 Battle of Restigouche Edit An Acadian militia and Mi kmaw militia totalling 1500 fighters organized in the Battle of Restigouche The Acadians arrived in about 20 schooners and small boats Along with the French they continued up river to draw the British fleet closer to the Acadian community of Pointe a la Batterie where they were ready to launch a surprise attack on the English The Acadians sunk a number of their vessels to create a blockade upon which the Acadian and Mi kmaq fired at the ships On 27 June the British succeeded in maneuvering just beyond the chain of sunken ships Once the British were range of the battery they fired on the battery This skirmish lasted all night and was repeated with various breaks from 28 June to 3 July when the British overwhelmed Pointe a la Batterie burning 150 to 200 buildings that made up the Acadian village community at Pointe a la Batterie The militias retreated and re grouped with the French frigate Machault They sunk more schooners to create another blockade They created two new batteries one on the north shore at Pointe de la Mission today Listuguj Quebec and one on the south shore at Pointe aux Sauvages today Campbellton New Brunswick They created blockade with schooners at Pointe aux Sauvages On July 7 British commander Byron spent the day getting rid of the battery at Pointe aux Sauvages and later returned to the task of destroying the Machault By the morning of 8 July the Scarborough and the Repulse were in range of the blockade and face to face with the Machault The British made two attempts to defeat the batteries and the militias held out On the third attempt they were successful 130 Treaty of Paris 1763 Edit The fifty years of quasi uninterrupted hostilities on the Acadian territory were finally resolved by the Treaty of Paris 1763 in which the French were expelled from British North America they retained only a small portion of Louisiana on that continent The fate of the Acadians expulsion from their homelands was due to their reliance on their clerics who employed them mercilessly as tools of a failed policy of empire As Vaudreuil remarked in 1760 to his superior Les malheurs des Accadiens sont beaucoup moins leur ouvrage que le fruit des sollicitations et des demarches des missionnaires 15 Thomas Pichon would write in his Lettres et Memoires pour servir a l Histoire du Cap Breton that same year 15 Nous avons six missionnaires dont l occupation perpetuelle est de porter les esprits au fanatisme et a la vengeance Je ne puis supporter dans nos pretres ces odieuses declamations qu ils font tous les jours aux sauvages Les Anglois sont les ennemis de Dieu les compagnons du Diable American Revolution EditIn the lead up to the American Revolution Nova Scotia prepared for an American assault A militia of 100 Acadians from Clare and Yarmouth was raised and marched to Halifax 1774 131 Simon Thibodeau fought the American patriots while in Quebec during the American Revolution 132 The Capture of Fort Bute signalled the opening of Spanish intervention in the American Revolutionary War on the side of France and the United States Mustering an ad hoc army of Spanish regulars Acadian militia and native levies under Gilbert Antoine de St Maxent Bernardo de Galvez the Governor of Spanish Louisiana stormed and captured the small British frontier post on Bayou Manchac on 7 September 1779 133 War of 1812 Edit nbsp Levite TheriaultJean Baptiste Hebert and Jean Joseph Girouard served in the War of 1812 Levite Theriault was the founder and lieutenant colonel of the 1st Battalion of Madawaska militia in New Brunswick Urbain Johnson was a captain of a militia in New Brunswick Noel Hebert also served in a militia in Canada East Henri M Robicheau and Frederick A Robicheau served as captains of local militias in Nova Scotia 134 Charles Cormier was a militia leader in Montreal American Civil War EditDuring the American Civil War in Louisiana there were numerous Cajun militia units raised in the Army of the Confederacy One unit was named Independent Rangers of Iberville Squadron Militia Cavalry after Pierre Le Moyne d Iberville founder of the French colony of Louisiana 135 World War I EditDuring World War I Acadians participated in the 165th Battalion Acadiens CEF a unit in the Canadian Expeditionary Force Based in Moncton New Brunswick the unit began recruiting in late 1915 throughout the Maritime provinces After sailing to England in March 1917 the battalion was absorbed into the 13th Reserve Battalion on 7 April 1917 World War II Edit nbsp Canadian soldiers approaching Juno Beach aboard LCAsDuring World War II Acadian soldiers were instrumental in the Battle of Normandy and the liberation of Saint Aubin sur Mer Calvados in which they are named by the Breche des Acadiens 136 Saint Aubin sur Mer is located at the eastern end of Nan Sector of Juno Beach one of the landing sites on D Day at the beginning of the Battle of Normandy during World War II On D Day the infantry of the North Shore Regiment of New Brunswick landed there and were backed up by the armour of the Fort Garry Horse also known as the 10th Armoured Regiment Le Regiment de la Chaudiere of Quebec came ashore in reserve About 100 defenders garrisoned the town and they were largely unaffected by the preparatory barrage As such they were able to put up heavy resistance at the beach and in the town as the Canadians pushed inland but were eventually overcome A commemorative plaque marks their involvement in the liberation of Carpiquet airport 136 Notable veterans EditBernard Marres Marc dit La Sonde fought British at Canso Nova Scotia 1718 Joseph Broussard 137 Bernard Anselme d Abbadie de Saint Castin Joseph d Abbadie de Saint Castin Paul Doucet alias Paul Laurent pilot for French Navy during King George s War 138 Charles Pelerain Tuck pilot for French Navy during King George s War 138 Joseph Nicolas Gautier and his wife Charles Raymond Jacques Coste 139 Louis Amand Bujold Armand Bigeau 140 Joseph LeBlanc dit Le Maigre 141 Prudent Robichaud leader of the mutiny on the Pembroke Alexandre Bourg 142 Francois Dupont Duvivier Pierre II Surette William Johnson Guillaume Jeanson Battle of Bloody Creek 1757 John Bradstreet fought for British Joseph Winniett supported the British grandchild of Pierre Maisonnat dit Baptiste Jean Vincent d Abbadie de Saint Castin Pierre Maisonnat dit Baptiste Charles de Saint Etienne de la Tour Joseph Godin dit Bellefontaine Sieur de Beausejour and Commander of the Acadian Militia of the St John River valley St John River campaign 119 Joseph Trahan 143 Battle of the Plains of Abraham Rene LeBlanc from Minas worked for Villebon during King William s War 144 Pierre Melanson from Minas worked for Villebon during King William s War appointed captain of the coast 145 Simon Thibodeau American Revolution 132 Levite TheriaultSee also EditMilitary history of Nova Scotia 165th Battalion Acadiens CEF Military history of the Mi kmaq Military history of the Maliseet people History of the AcadiansReferences EditNotes Many of the Acadians and Mi kmaw people were metis For example when Shirley put a bounty on the Mi kmaw people during King George s War the Acadians appealed in anxiety to Mascarene because of the great number of Mulattoes amongst them 1 For information on Metis Acadians see Parmenter Jon Robison Mark Power April 2007 The Perils and Possibilities of Wartime Neutrality on the Edges of Empire Iroquois and Acadians between the French and British in North America 1744 1760 Diplomatic History 31 2 182 doi 10 1111 j 1467 7709 2007 00611 x Faragher 2005 pp 35 48 146 67 179 81 203 271 77 Paul Daniel N 1993 We Were Not the Savages A Micmac Perspective on the Collision of European and Aboriginal Civilizations Nimbus pp 38 67 86 97 104 ISBN 978 1 55109 056 6 Plank 2001 pp 23 39 70 98 111 14 122 38 Robison Mark Power 2000 Maritime frontiers The evolution of empire in Nova Scotia 1713 1758 Ph D University of Colorado at Boulder pp 53 84 Wicken Bill Autumn 1995 26 Augusts 1726 A case study in Mi kmaq New England Relationships in the Early 18th Century Acadiensis XXIII 1 20 21 JSTOR 30303468 Wicken William C 1998 Re examining Mi kmaq Acadian Relations 1635 1755 In Sylvie Depatie et al eds Vingt Ans Apres Habitants et Marchands Twenty Years Later McGill Queen s University Press pp 93 109 ISBN 9780773567023 Near where the Fort Nashwaak Motel now stands For details on the siege see Murdoch 1865 pp 228 231 The Nova Scotia Museum indicates that this is a Mi kmaq man This Mi kmaq man has light hair and European features his accoutrements are also inaccurately depicted The 1750 account of Swedish botanist Peter Kalm or the eighteenth century letters of the Abbe Pierre Antoine Simon Maillard may be the artist s basis for this engraving both mention Mi kmaq men tattooed with crosses and suns This engraving was published in an encyclopedia by J Grasset St Saveur ci devant vice consul de la Nation francaise en Hongrie 23 The complementary image Femme Acadienne is also Mi kmaq Morris Charles A Brief Survey of Nova Scotia The Royal Artillery Regimental Library Woolwich Morris provides a description of the Acadians The people are tall and well proportioned they delight much in wearing long hair they are of dark complexion in general and somewhat of the mixture of Indians but there are some of a light complexion They retain the language and customs of their neighbours the French with a mixed affectation of the native Indians and imitate them in their haunting and wild tones in their merriment they are naturally full cheer and merry subtle speak and promise fair Cornwallis official report mentioned that four settlers were killed and six soldiers taken prisoner See Governor Cornwallis to Board of Trade letter June 24 1751 referenced in Harry Chapman p 29 John Wilson reported that fifteen people were killed immediately seven were wounded three of whom would die in hospital six were carried away and never seen again See A genuine narrative of the transactions in Nova Scotia since the settlement June 1749 till August the 5th 1751 microform in which the nature soil and produce of the country are related with the particular attempts of the Indians to disturb the colony by John Wilson John Salusbury recorded in his diary that approximately twenty were killed See Expeditions of Honour The Journal of John Salusbury in Halifax Nova Scotia 1749 53 Edited by Ronald Rompkey Newark University of Delaware Press 1982 p 111 Note Grenier 2008 p 180 locates this battle at Chipoudy rather than at Petitcodiac There is a primary source however of a letter written by Major Jedediah Preble that indicates the battle happened in Shipodia See Peter Landry The Lion and the Lily Trafford Press 2007 p 535 The French reported that eighty British were killed see Grenier 2008 p 180 Johnson s father had been in the British garrison at Annapolis Royal and whose mother was Acadian was said to have been the leader of the attackers Citations Bell 1961 p 405 note 18a a b Patterson 1994 p 146 Basque Maurice 2011 Atlantic Realities Acadian Identities Arcadian Dreams In John Graham Reid Donald J Savoie eds Shaping an Agenda for Atlantic Canada Fernwood p 66 ISBN 978 1 55266 449 0 Church p 228 full citation needed Roger Marsters 2004 p 34 full citation needed Baker C Alice 1897 True Stories of New England Captives Carried to Canada during the Old French and Indian Wars Cambridge p 41 Reid John G 1994 1686 1720 Imperial Intrusions In Phillip Buckner John G Reid eds The Atlantic Region to Confederation A History University of Toronto Press p 84 ISBN 978 1 4875 1676 5 JSTOR j ctt15jjfrm Benjamin Church p 273 full citation needed a b Faragher 2005 pp 110 112 a b Griffiths 2005 p 247 Faragher 2005 p 135 Griffiths 2005 p 248 Griffiths 2005 p 249 Peace and Friendship Treaty of Utrecht between France and Great Britain 1713 via Wikisource a b c Parkman p 135 full citation needed a b Plank 2001 pp 76 77 Haynes 2004 pp 121 125 Haynes 2004 p 122 Campbell p 132 Robinson p 53 full citation needed Haynes 2004 pp 111 114 121 Grenier 2008 pp 46 73 Groulx Lionel Adolphe 1924 L histoire Acadienne In Bibliotheque de l Action francaise ed Notre maitre le passe 10 10 ed p 168 Image MP0071 Mi kmaq Portraits Nova Scotia Museum a b Bates p 33 41 full citation needed Barnes 1996 p 98 Bernard p 70 Barnes 1996 p 106 Barnes 1996 p 112 Brodhead 1858 pp 4 5 Pote 1896 p 34 Barnes 1996 p 103 Grenier 2008 Reid John G Baker Emerson W 2008 Amerindian Power in the Early Modern Northeast A Reappraisal Essays on Northeastern North America Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries University of Toronto Press pp 129 152 doi 10 3138 9781442688032 ISBN 978 0 8020 9137 6 JSTOR 10 3138 9781442688032 12 Johnston A J B Storied Shores University College of Cape Breton Press 2004 p 70 Harvey p 110 a b Harvey p 111 Rawlyk George A 1999 Yankees at Louisbourg The Story of the First Siege 1745 Breton Books p 64 ISBN 978 1 895415 45 2 Project Gutenberg Retrieved 7 November 2016 Johnson p 68 Grenier 2008 p 133 Dunn Brenda 2004 A History of Port Royal Annapolis Royal 1605 1800 Historical Association of Annapolis Royal Nimbus Pub p 166 ISBN 978 1 55109 484 7 a b Barnes 1996 pp 98 113 Sauvageau Robert 1987 Acadie La guerre de cents ans des Francais d Amerique aux Maritimes et en Louisiane 1670 1769 Acadia The Hundred Years War of the French Americans in the Maritimes and Louisiana 1670 1769 in French Paris Berger Levrault Taylor Aaron 2009 The 1747 Trek to Grand Pre A Study in Historical Archaeology Honours Thesis Saint Mary s University a b Charles Morris A Brief Survey of Nova Scotia The Royal Artillery Regimental Library Woolwich A copy of the original is held at the Library amp Archives of Canada Ottawa Charles Morris fonds circa 1748 R2227 0 6 E Barnes 1996 p 104 Brodhead 1858 pp 166 168 171 179 a b Johnson Micheline D 1974 Daudin Henri In Halpenny Francess G ed Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol III 1741 1770 online ed University of Toronto Press Patterson 1993 p 47 Collections of the Nova Scotia Historical Society Halifax Nova Scotia Historical Society 1880 Retrieved 7 November 2016 Plank 2001 p 105 R Douglas Francis Richard Jones and Donald B Smith Origins Canadian History to Confederation 6th ed Toronto Nelson Education 2009 117 John Brebner New England s Outpost Acadia before the Conquest of Canada Hamden CT Archon Books 1965 190 A J B Johnston French Attitudes Toward the Acadians ca 1680 1756 In Du Grand Derangement a la Deportation pp 152 Faragher 2005 p 262 Selections from the public documents of the province of Nova Scotia Halifax N S C Annand 1869 Retrieved 7 November 2016 Frank Harris Patterson History of Tatamagouche Halifax Royal Print amp Litho 1917 also Mika Belleville 1973 p 19 a b Grenier 2008 p 159 Hand p 20 full citation needed Hand p 25 full citation needed Murdoch 1866 p 172 Godfrey William G 1974 Handfield John In Halpenny Francess G ed Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol III 1741 1770 online ed University of Toronto Press Brebner New England s Outpost p 174 See Faragher 2005 p 262 Griffith 392 Murdoch 1866 pp 166 167 Grenier 2008 p 153 John Salusbury s Diary Dec 10 1749 and Northeast Archaeological Research Archived from the original on 2013 05 14 Retrieved 2014 02 05 The Scots magazine pp 55 v Atkins p 27 28 Grenier 2008 p 160 Faragher 2005 p 272 a b Harry Chapman p 31 a b Harry Chapman p 32 Faragher 2005 p 410 Harry Chapman p 32 Patterson 1994 p 142 Patterson 1998 pp 105 106 Patterson 1994 p 144 Patterson 1994 p 152 Grenier 2008 p 177 206 Patterson 1994 p 148 a b Faragher 2005 p 350 Faragher 2005 p 350 Grenier 2008 p 180 Brodhead 1858 p 358 Grenier 2008 p 180 Pote 1896 p 176 Canada Parks Canada Agency Government of Parks Canada Bloody Creek National Historic Site of Canada History Retrieved 7 November 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Consentino Lucie LeBlanc Acadians Pembroke Acadian History The Exile Acadian Ancestral Home Retrieved 7 November 2016 a b Brodhead 1858 p 426 Bell 1961 p 496 Boston Evening Post 1756 October 18 p 2 a b c Faragher 2005 p 398 Bell 1961 p 514 Knox John 1769 An Historical Journal of the Campaigns in North America for the years 1757 1758 1759 and 1760 Vol II London W Johnston and J Dodsley p 443 ISBN 9780665364563 Faragher 2005 p 110 Webster as cited by bluepete p 371 Grenier 2008 p 190 New Brunswick Military Project Grenier 2008 p 195 Faragher 2005 p 410 New Brunswick Military Project Bell 1961 p 508 Regular refers to a professional British soldier paid by the British Crown Bell 1961 p 512 note 44 William Williamson The history of the state of Maine Vol 2 1832 p 311 112 During this time period the Maliseet and Mi kmaq were the only tribes of the Wabanaki Confederacy who were able to right a b Leblanc Phyllis E 1979 Deschamps de Boishebert et de Raffetot Charles In Halpenny Francess G ed Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol IV 1771 1800 online ed University of Toronto Press Eaton Cyrus 1865 History of Thomaston Rockland and South Thomaston Maine from their First Exploration 1605 with Family Genealogies Hallowell Maine Masters Smith amp Co p 77 William Durkee Williamson The history of the state of Maine from its first discovery A D Volume 2 p 333 Williamson s Book J S McLennan Louisbourg From its foundation to its fall 1713 1758 1918 p 190 Earle Lockerby Pre Deportation Letters from Ile Saint Jean Les Cahiers La Societe historique acadienne Vol 42 No 2 June 2011 pp 99 100 a b Loescher 1969 p 29 Murdoch 1866 p 366 Johnston 2007 Johnston 2007 p 126 Johnston 2007 p 161 Johnston 2007 p 128 a b Johnston 2007 p 179 Johnston 2007 p 189 Johnston 2007 p 196 Loescher 1969 p 27 a b Loescher 1969 p 30 Loescher 1969 p 32 a b Loescher 1969 p 35 a b c Loescher 1969 p 34 Loescher 1969 p 73 Loescher 1969 p 74 Grenier 2008 pp 199 200 a b c MacBeath George 1979 Godin Bellefontaine Beausejour Joseph In Halpenny Francess G ed Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol IV 1771 1800 online ed University of Toronto Press Plank 2001 p 62 66 Campbell p 31 note that Campbell reports five rangers killed and eight wounded Loescher 1969 p 70 a b Grenier 2008 p 202 Plank 2001 p 61 Loescher 1969 p 71 Grenier 2008 p 198 Grenier 2008 p 198 Faragher 2005 p 402 Loescher 1969 pp 34 35 Tousignant Pierre Dionne Tousignant Madeleine 1979 du Calvet Pierre In Halpenny Francess G ed Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol IV 1771 1800 online ed University of Toronto Press Grenier 2008 p 200 a b Grenier 2008 p 201 Beattie Judith Pothier Bernard 1996 The Battle of the Restigouche 1760 PDF Ottawa Canadian Heritage Parks Canada ISBN 0 660 16384 5 Akins Thomas History of Halifax City p 73 a b Roy Jacqueline 1983 Thibodeau Simon In Halpenny Francess G ed Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol V 1801 1820 online ed University of Toronto Press Acadia Acadians American Revolution Acadian amp French Canadian Ancestral Home Retrieved 7 November 2016 Acadian info A guide to Cajun Country Retrieved 7 November 2016 Calnek W A Savary A W 1897 History of the county of Annapolis including old Port Royal and Acadia W Briggs ISBN 9780665003868 Cormier Steven A 2004 Rangers of Iberville Squadron Militia Cavalry Independent Rangers of Iberville Squadron Militia Cavalry Acadians in Grey a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Check url value help a b veterans gc ca Minister of Veterans Affairs to Attend Commemorative Events in Normandy to Honour Quebec Acadian Veterans 9 Aug 2010 Brodhead 1858 p 154 a b Barnes 1996 p 112 note 17 Brodhead 1858 p 171 173 Brodhead 1858 p 168 Pothier Bernard 1974 LeBlanc Le Maigre Joseph In Halpenny Francess G ed Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol III 1741 1770 online ed University of Toronto Press d Entremont C J 1974 Bourg Belle Humeur Alxandre In Halpenny Francess G ed Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol III 1741 1770 online ed University of Toronto Press Northern Armageddon The Battle of the Plains of Abraham By D Peter MacLeod The French retreat Retrieved 7 November 2016 p 46 p 46 note Villebon has Melanson s first initial as M when it was P Reid John G 2004 The Conquest of Acadia 1710 Imperial Colonial and Aboriginal Constructions University of Toronto Press p 58 ISBN 978 0 8020 8538 2 BibliographyBarnes Thomas Garden 1996 Twelve Apostles or a Dozen Traitors Acadian Collaborators during King George s War 1744 1748 In Frank Murray Greenwood Barry Wright eds Canadian State Trials Vol 1 Law Politics and Security Measures 1608 1837 Osgoode Society for Canadian Legal History ISBN 978 0 8020 7893 3 Bell Winthrop Pickard 1961 The Foreign Protestants and the Settlement of Nova Scotia The History of a Piece of Arrested British Colonial Policy in the Eighteenth Century University of Toronto Press Brodhead John Romeyn 1858 Documents Relative to the Colonial History of the State of New York Weed Parsons and Company Faragher John Mack 2005 A Great and Noble Scheme The Tragic Story of the Expulsion of the French Acadians from Their American Homeland W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 05135 3 Grenier John 2008 The Far Reaches of Empire War in Nova Scotia 1710 1760 University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0 8061 3876 3 Haynes Mark 2004 The Forgotten Battle A History of the Acadians of Canso Chedabuctou Trafford Publishing ISBN 978 1 4120 3235 3 Johnston A J B 2007 Endgame 1758 The Promise the Glory and the Despair of Louisbourg s Last Decade University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 0986 2 Loescher Burt Garfield 1969 The History of Rogers Rangers The First Green Berets Vol I Murdoch Beamish 1865 A History of Nova Scotia Or Acadie Vol I Halifax Nova Scotia J Barnes Murdoch Beamish 1866 A History of Nova Scotia Or Acadie Vol II Halifax Nova Scotia J Barnes Patterson Stephen E 1994 1744 1763 Colonial Wars and Aboriginal Peoples In Phillip A Buckner John G Reid eds The Atlantic Region to Confederation A History University of Toronto Press pp 125 155 ISBN 978 1 4875 1676 5 Patterson Stephen E 1998 Indian White Relations in Nova Scotia 1749 61 A Study in Political Interaction In Phillip A Buckner Gail G Campbell David Frank eds The Acadiensis Reader Atlantic Canada Before Confederation Acadiensis Press ISBN 978 0 919107 44 1 Plank Geoffrey 2001 An Unsettled Conquest The British Campaign Against the Peoples of Acadia University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 0 8122 1869 8 Pote William 1896 The Journal of Captain William Pote Jr during his Captivity in the French and Indian War from May 1745 to August 1747 Dodd Mead amp Company Links EditAcadian Veterans Veterans Affairs Canada Acadian Veterans of the First World War Acadians in the American Revolution Acadians veterans of the American Revolution Significantly Cajun Units in the Armies of the ConfederacyFurther reading EditAtkins Thomas Papers related to the French encroachment on Nova Scotia 1749 1754 and the War in North America 1754 1761 Cormier Ronald The Forgotten Soldiers Stories from Acadian Veterans of World War Two Fredericton N B New Ireland Press 1992 Doughty Arthur G 1916 The Acadian Exiles A Chronicle of the Land of Evangeline Toronto Glasgow Brook amp Co 178 pages Douglas W A B The Sea Militia of Nova Scotia 1749 1755 A Comment on Naval Policy The Canadian Historical Review Vol XLVII No 1 1966 22 37 Edwards Joseph Plimsoll The Militia of Nova Scotia 1749 1867 Collections of the Nova Scotia Historical Society Vol 17 1913 pp 63 110 Griffiths N E S 2005 From Migrant to Acadian A North American Border People 1604 1755 McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 978 0 7735 2699 0 Griffiths N E S 1969 The Acadian Deportation Deliberate Perfidy Or Cruel Necessity Copp Clark ISBN 9780773031005 Hadley Michael L U Boats Against Canada German Submarines in Canadian Waters Hunt M S Nova Scotia s Part in the Great War The Nova Scotia Veteran Publishing Company Limited 1920 Johnston John The Acadian Deportation in a Comparative Context An Introduction Royal Nova Scotia Historical Society The Journal 2007 pp 114 131 Landry Peter The Lion amp The Lily Vol 1 Victoria Trafford 2007 Simon MacDonald Ships of war lost on the coast of Nova Scotia and Sable Island during the eighteenth century 1884 Leger Claude Le bataillon acadien de la Premiere Guerre mondiale provides detailed coverage of Madawaskayen and Acadian experiences during WWI McCarthy Eric Acadian effort in France will never be forgotten by Journal Pioneer November 12 2009 Moody Barry 1981 The Acadians Toronto Grolier 96 pages ISBN 0 7172 1810 4 Rompkey Ronald ed Expeditions of Honour The Journal of John Salusbury in Halifax Nova Scotia 1749 53 Newark U of Delaware P Newark 1982 Reid John G The Conquest of Acadia 1710 Imperial Colonial an Aboriginal Constructions University of Toronto Press 2004 ISBN 0 8020 3755 0 Sirois Georges La Participation des Brayons a la Grande guerre 1914 1918 Webster John Clarence The career of the Abbe Le Loutre in Nova Scotia Shediac N B 1933 Wicken William C 2002 Mi kmaq Treaties on Trial History Land and Donald Marshall Junior University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0 8020 7665 6 Annals of Yarmouth and Barrington Nova Scotia in the Revolutionary War compiled from original manuscripts etc contained in the office of the secretary of the Commonwealth State House Boston Mass 1899 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Military history of the Acadians amp oldid 1172472092, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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