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Raid on Dartmouth (1749)

The Raid on Dartmouth (1749) occurred during Father Le Loutre's War on September 30, 1749 when a Mi'kmaw militia from Chignecto raided Major Ezekiel Gilman's sawmill at present-day Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, killing four workers and wounding two. This raid was one of seven the Wabanaki Confederacy and Acadians would conduct against the settlement during the war.

Raid on Dartmouth (1749)
Part of Father Le Loutre's War

Plaque to Raid on Dartmouth (1749) and the blockhouse that was built in response (1750), Dartmouth Heritage Museum
DateSeptember 30, 1749
Location
Result Mi'kmaw victory
Belligerents
Mi'kmaw militia
Acadian militia
British America
Commanders and leaders
Major Ezekiel Gilman[1]
Strength
40 Mi'kmaq 6 British
Casualties and losses
3 killed 4 killed, 2 wounded

Historical context edit

Despite the British |Conquest of Acadia in 1710, Nova Scotia remained primarily occupied by Catholic Acadians and Mi'kmaq. Father Le Loutre's War began when Edward Cornwallis arrived to establish Halifax with 13 transports on June 21, 1749.[2]

By the time Cornwallis had arrived in Halifax, there was a long history of the Wabanaki Confederacy (which included the Mi'kmaq) killing British civilians along the New England/ Acadia border in Maine (See the Northeast Coast Campaigns 1688, 1703, 1723, 1724, 1745, 1746, 1747).[3][4]

After establishing an initial settlement in Halifax in the summer of 1749, it was imperative that Governor Edward Cornwallis make peace with the Native peoples of the province before further colonization could proceed. On 15 August, Governor Cornwallis and members of his Council met with representatives of the Penobscot, Naridgwalk, St. John, Cape Sable and other tribes aboard HMS Beaufort in Halifax Harbour. They agreed to sign a redrafted treaty of 1725 that would be ratified at a later date.[5]

Governor Cornwallis was informed in August that two vessels were attacked by the Indians at Canso whereby "three English and seven Indians were killed." Council believed the attack had been orchestrated by Abbe Le Loutre.[6]

Prior to this incident, the priest had written the following to the minister of marine in France:

As we cannot openly expose the English ventures, I think that we cannot do better than to incite the indians to continue warring on the English; my plan is to persuade the Indians to send word to the English that they will not permit new settlements to be made in Acadia. . . I shall do my best to make it look to the English as if this plan comes from the Indians and that I have no part in it."[7]

To guard against Mi'kmaq, Acadian and French attacks on the new Protestant settlements, British fortifications were erected in Halifax (1749), Bedford (Fort Sackville) (1749), Dartmouth (1750), Lunenburg (1753) and Lawrencetown (1754).

On 24 September 1749, the Mi'kmaq formally wrote to Governor Cornwallis through Father Maillard, proclaiming their ownership of the land, and expressing their opposition to the British actions in settling at Halifax. Some historians have read this letter as declaration of hostility against the British.[8] Other historians have questioned that interpretation.[9]

Raids started at Canso, then Chignecto and then at present-day Dartmouth. During Father Le Loutre's War, there were four raids on Dartmouth.[10]

Major Ezekiel Gilman (Gillman) was in command of the mill at Dartmouth. He had worked in the lumber industry in Exeter, New Hampshire. He had distinguished himself in Colonel Samuel Moore's Regiment at the Siege of Louisbourg (1745), where he engineered moving the British canons across boggy terrain.[11][12][13] Sir William Pepperrell referred to Gilman as "very serviceable" in the expedition.[14] (He returned various times to New Hampshire but died in Nova Scotia in 1755.)[a][15][16][17][18][19][20][21]

Raid edit

On September 30, 1749, about forty Mi'kmaq attacked six men who were in Dartmouth cutting trees. The Mi'kmaq killed four of them on the spot, took one prisoner and one escaped.[22] Two of the men were scalped and the heads of the others were cut off. The attack was on the saw mill at Dartmouth Cove (Mill Location ), which was under the command of Major Ezekiel Gilman. A detachment of rangers was sent after the raiding party and cut off the heads of two Mi'kmaq and scalped one.[6]

Consequence edit

 
Major Gilman's (Gilmot's) sawmill, Dartmouth Nova Scotia 1750

On October 2, 1749, to stop the attacks on the emigrants, Governor Edward Cornwallis created an extirpation proclamation directing "all Officers Civil and Military, and all His Majesty's Subjects or others to annoy, distress, take or destroy the Savage commonly called Micmac, wherever they are found."[23] As part of the proclamation he offered a bounty for the capture or scalps of Mi'kmaw men and for the capture of women and children: "every Indian you shall destroy (upon producing his Scalp as the Custom is) or every Indian taken, Man, Woman or Child."[23] The three companies scoured the land around Halifax looking for Mi'kmaq, however, the Rangers never made contact with any Mi'kmaq.[24]

Cornwallis also stationed thirty men guarding the saw mill over the following winter, with two armed vessels. Gilman left unannounced to New England by April 1750.[b][25] By July, Cornwallis had given the saw mill to Clapham to manage.[25] In September, he gave command of Gilman's rangers to Captain Francis Bartelo.[25]

Despite Cornwallis' efforts to defend the community, in July 1750, the Mi'kmaq killed and scalped seven men who were at work in Dartmouth.[26] In August 1750, 353 people arrived on the ship Alderney and began the town of Dartmouth, which was laid out in the autumn of that year.[26] The following month, on September 30, 1750, Dartmouth was attacked again by the Mi'kmaq and five more residents were killed.[27] In October 1750 a group of about eight men went out "to take their diversion; and as they were fowling, they were attacked by the Indians, who took the whole prisoners; scalped ... [one] with a large knife, which they wear for that purpose, and threw him into the sea ..."[28]

In March 1751, the Mi'kmaq attacked on two more occasions, bringing the total number of raids to six in the previous two years.[c] Three months later, on May 13, 1751, Broussard led sixty Mi'kmaq and Acadians to attack Dartmouth again, in what would be known as the "Dartmouth Massacre".[29]

Controversy edit

Mi'kmaw historian Daniel N. Paul has disputed British accounts of the raid. Paul dismisses the possibility that Mi'kmaw people would attack unarmed civilians and speculates, instead, that the woodcutters were probably armed and better equipped compared to the Mi'kmaq raiders. Paul provides no historical evidence to support his speculations.[30] In his book We Were Not the Savages Paul writes:

The question this poses is, why was this group of 'defenseless' Englishmen sent out into the forest alone to cut wood during a time of war without troop protection and thus left vulnerable to attack? If this was the case then it smacks of gross incompetence on a British officer's part. If the story is true and not propaganda, a more credible reason for them being sent out without troop protection is that they were not defenseless but as well-armed as the Mi'kmaq and probably more so. This can be reasonably assumed because, as woodcutters, they had axes to cut wood with, which alone would have made them possessors of weapons as lethally effective, and probably more reliable, than most of the arms the Mi'kmaq had access to. In any event, because the English were assaulting the Mi'kmaq and stealing their territory, Cornwallis and his Council should not have been so affronted and reacted so barbarously when the Mi'kmaq fought back. In fighting back to preserve their freedom and country, the Mi'kmaq paid a heavy price.

— Daniel N. Paul, We Were Not the Savages[30]

Paul asserts that Cornwallis used "a few incidents such as these" to justify his bounty proclamation.[31] Cornwallis' decision to put a bounty on the Mi'kmaq did not pivot simply on the Raid on Dartmouth in 1749.[3] By the time Cornwallis had arrived in Halifax, there was a long history of conflict between the Wabanaki Confederacy (which included the Mi'kmaq) and the various British American colonies of North America; with the Wabanaki launching several raids along the New England-Acadia Border in Maine in response to British settlement (See the Northeast Coast Campaigns 1688, 1703, 1723, 1724, 1745).[3] The proclamation was modelled on earlier proclamations used by New England Governors.

See also edit

References edit

Footnotes
  1. ^ Read a memorial of Ezekiel Gilman, together with a state of his case, setting forth his having been appointed captain of a company in the regiment raised in New Hampshire for the intended expedition against Canada, but that when the expedition was at an end his name was left out of the pay rolls and his company given to one of Governor Wentworth's sons.
  2. ^ Gilman seems to have returned having purchased at auction the mill again in 1752.
  3. ^ For the two raids that happened in March 1751 see Grenier (2008), p. 160
Citations
  1. ^ Salusbury (2011), pp. 164–165.
  2. ^ Grenier (2008); Akins (1895), p. 7.
  3. ^ a b c Reid & Baker (2008); Grenier (2008).
  4. ^ Scott, Tod (2016). "Mi'kmaw Armed Resistance to British Expansion in Northern New England (1676–1761)". Royal Nova Scotia Historical Society. 19: 1–18.
  5. ^ http://www.halifaxexplosion.net/dialogue.pdf; http://www.halifaxexplosion.net/1749treaty.pdf
  6. ^ a b Akins (1895), p. 18.
  7. ^ Patterson, Stephen E. (1994). "1744–1763: Colonial Wars and Aboriginal Peoples". In Phillip Buckner; John G. Reid (eds.). The Atlantic Region to Confederation: A History. University of Toronto Press. p. 129. ISBN 978-1-4875-1676-5.
  8. ^ Griffith, p. 390
  9. ^ Zemel, Joel (2016). "A Mi'kmaq Declaration of War?". HalifaxExplosion.net. from the original on 2016-10-28. Retrieved August 17, 2017.
  10. ^ Wilson (1751); Also see Landry (2007), Chapter. 7, The Indian Threat (1749-58)
  11. ^ Parsons (1855), p. 348.
  12. ^ Report of the Adjutant-General of the State of New Hampshire. for the Year Ending June 1, 1866: Contains the military history of New Hampshire, from its settlement, in 1623 to the year 1861. Concord, New Hampshire: George E. Jenks, State Printer. 1866. p. 69.
  13. ^ Roll of New Hampshire men at Louisburg, Cape Breton, 1745. Concord, New Hampshire: E.N. Pearson. 1896. p. 21.
  14. ^ Parsons (1855), p. 200.
  15. ^ Murdoch (1866); Salusbury (2011).
  16. ^ Putnam, Eben, ed. (March 1917). "The Genealogical Magazine". Vol. IV, no. 2. Boston. p. 67. {{cite magazine}}: Cite magazine requires |magazine= (help)
  17. ^ Lancaster, Daniel (1845). The history of Gilmanton. Gilmanton, New Hampshire: Alfred Prescott. p. 96.
  18. ^ Gordon, William (1789). The history of the rise, progress, and establishment of the Independence of the United States of America. New York: Hodge, Allen, and Campbell. p. 95.
  19. ^ Battles, Carolyn St John Elliott; Battles, James Bruce (2013). A Puritan Family's Journey: From Hingham to Hingham and onto Sanbornton, New Hampshire The Ancestors of Marion Gilman Elliott. Carolyn St John Elliott Battles. p. 108. ISBN 978-1-304-75052-5.
  20. ^ Mitchell, Harry Edward; Bartlett, J. Ernest; Lawton, P.I.; et al. (1908). The town register: Exeter, Hampton. Augusta, Maine: The Mitchell-Cony Company. p. 30.
  21. ^ Welch, William Lewis (July 1901). "Francis Lyford, of Boston, and Exeter, and Some of his Descendants". Essex Institute historical collections. Vol. 37, no. 3. Salem, Massachusetts. p. 320.
  22. ^ Chapman (2000), p. 23; Grenier (2008), p. 150; For the primary sources that document the Raids on Dartmouth see Salusbury (2011); Also see Wilson (1751); Also see Landry (2007), Chapter. 7, The Indian Threat (1749-58)
  23. ^ a b Dickason, Olive (1971). Louisbourg and the Indians: A study in Imperial race relations, 1713-1760 (Thesis). University of Ottawa. p. 138. doi:10.20381/ruor-9436. referencing Cornwallis' instructions to Capt. Silvanus Cobb, commanding the sloop York, 13 January 1750.
  24. ^ Akins (1895), p. 19.
  25. ^ a b c "Selections from the public documents of the province of Nova Scotia". Halifax, N.S., C. Annand. July 5, 1869 – via Internet Archive.
  26. ^ a b Akins (1895), p. 27.
  27. ^ Grenier (2008), p. 159.
  28. ^ Wilson (1751) as cited by Grenier (2008), pp. 173–174
  29. ^ Akins (1895), pp. 27–28.
  30. ^ a b Paul (2000), pp. 111–112.
  31. ^ Paul (2000), p. 111.
Primary Sources
  • "The Monthly Chronologer". The London Magazine. Vol. 18. December 1749. p. 574.
  • Douglass, William (1755). A Summary, Historical and Political, of the First Planting, Progressive Improvements, and Present State of the British Settlements in North-America. Boston, New England: R. Baldwin.
  • Salusbury, John (2011). Ronald Rompkey (ed.). Expeditions of Honour: The Journal of John Salusbury in Halifax, Nova Scotia, 1749-53. McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 978-0-7735-9089-2.
  • Wilson, John (1751). A Genuine Narrative of the Transactions in Nova Scotia since the Settlement, June 1749, till August the 5th, 1751: in which the Nature, Soil, and Produce of the Country are Related, with the Particular Attempts of the Indians to Disturb the Colony. London: A. Henderson et al. ISBN 9780665201530.
Secondary Sources
  • Akins, Thomas (1895). History of Halifax City. Halifax: Nova Scotia Historical Society. ISBN 9780888120014. – online at History of Halifax City at Project Gutenberg
  • Chapman, Harry (2000). In the Wake of the Alderney: Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, 1750-2000. Dartmouth Historical Association. ISBN 978-1-55109-374-1.
  • 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. ISBN 978-0-393-24243-0.
  • Grenier, John (2008). The Far Reaches of Empire: War in Nova Scotia, 1710-1760. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-3876-3.
  • Lawson, Mrs. William (Mary Jane Katzmann) (1893). Harry Piers (ed.). History of the Townships of Dartmouth, Preston and Lawrencetown, Halifax County, Nova Scotia. Halifax, Nova Scotia: Morton & Co. pp. 4–5. ISBN 978-0-919302-51-8.
  • Landry, Peter (2007). The Lion and the Lily. Trafford. ISBN 978-1-4251-5450-9.
  • Murdoch, Beamish (1866). A History of Nova-Scotia, Or Acadie. Vol. II. Halifax: J. Barnes. p. 162.
  • Paul, Daniel N. (2000). We Were Not the Savages: A Mi'kmaq Perspective on the Collision Between European and Native American Civilizations (2nd ed.). Fernwood. pp. 111–112. ISBN 978-1-55266-039-3.
  • 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.
  • Parsons, Usher (1855). The life of Sir William Pepperell, bart. Boston: Little, Brown and Company.

44°39′50″N 63°34′5.4″W / 44.66389°N 63.568167°W / 44.66389; -63.568167

raid, dartmouth, 1749, confused, with, raid, dartmouth, 1751, occurred, during, father, loutre, september, 1749, when, kmaw, militia, from, chignecto, raided, major, ezekiel, gilman, sawmill, present, dartmouth, nova, scotia, killing, four, workers, wounding, . Not to be confused with Raid on Dartmouth 1751 The Raid on Dartmouth 1749 occurred during Father Le Loutre s War on September 30 1749 when a Mi kmaw militia from Chignecto raided Major Ezekiel Gilman s sawmill at present day Dartmouth Nova Scotia killing four workers and wounding two This raid was one of seven the Wabanaki Confederacy and Acadians would conduct against the settlement during the war Raid on Dartmouth 1749 Part of Father Le Loutre s WarPlaque to Raid on Dartmouth 1749 and the blockhouse that was built in response 1750 Dartmouth Heritage MuseumDateSeptember 30 1749LocationDartmouth Nova ScotiaResultMi kmaw victoryBelligerentsMi kmaw militia Acadian militiaBritish AmericaCommanders and leadersMajor Ezekiel Gilman 1 Strength40 Mi kmaq6 BritishCasualties and losses3 killed4 killed 2 wounded Contents 1 Historical context 2 Raid 3 Consequence 4 Controversy 5 See also 6 ReferencesHistorical context editDespite the British Conquest of Acadia in 1710 Nova Scotia remained primarily occupied by Catholic Acadians and Mi kmaq Father Le Loutre s War began when Edward Cornwallis arrived to establish Halifax with 13 transports on June 21 1749 2 By the time Cornwallis had arrived in Halifax there was a long history of the Wabanaki Confederacy which included the Mi kmaq killing British civilians along the New England Acadia border in Maine See the Northeast Coast Campaigns 1688 1703 1723 1724 1745 1746 1747 3 4 After establishing an initial settlement in Halifax in the summer of 1749 it was imperative that Governor Edward Cornwallis make peace with the Native peoples of the province before further colonization could proceed On 15 August Governor Cornwallis and members of his Council met with representatives of the Penobscot Naridgwalk St John Cape Sable and other tribes aboard HMS Beaufort in Halifax Harbour They agreed to sign a redrafted treaty of 1725 that would be ratified at a later date 5 Governor Cornwallis was informed in August that two vessels were attacked by the Indians at Canso whereby three English and seven Indians were killed Council believed the attack had been orchestrated by Abbe Le Loutre 6 Prior to this incident the priest had written the following to the minister of marine in France As we cannot openly expose the English ventures I think that we cannot do better than to incite the indians to continue warring on the English my plan is to persuade the Indians to send word to the English that they will not permit new settlements to be made in Acadia I shall do my best to make it look to the English as if this plan comes from the Indians and that I have no part in it 7 To guard against Mi kmaq Acadian and French attacks on the new Protestant settlements British fortifications were erected in Halifax 1749 Bedford Fort Sackville 1749 Dartmouth 1750 Lunenburg 1753 and Lawrencetown 1754 On 24 September 1749 the Mi kmaq formally wrote to Governor Cornwallis through Father Maillard proclaiming their ownership of the land and expressing their opposition to the British actions in settling at Halifax Some historians have read this letter as declaration of hostility against the British 8 Other historians have questioned that interpretation 9 Raids started at Canso then Chignecto and then at present day Dartmouth During Father Le Loutre s War there were four raids on Dartmouth 10 Major Ezekiel Gilman Gillman was in command of the mill at Dartmouth He had worked in the lumber industry in Exeter New Hampshire He had distinguished himself in Colonel Samuel Moore s Regiment at the Siege of Louisbourg 1745 where he engineered moving the British canons across boggy terrain 11 12 13 Sir William Pepperrell referred to Gilman as very serviceable in the expedition 14 He returned various times to New Hampshire but died in Nova Scotia in 1755 a 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Raid editOn September 30 1749 about forty Mi kmaq attacked six men who were in Dartmouth cutting trees The Mi kmaq killed four of them on the spot took one prisoner and one escaped 22 Two of the men were scalped and the heads of the others were cut off The attack was on the saw mill at Dartmouth Cove Mill Location which was under the command of Major Ezekiel Gilman A detachment of rangers was sent after the raiding party and cut off the heads of two Mi kmaq and scalped one 6 Consequence edit nbsp Major Gilman s Gilmot s sawmill Dartmouth Nova Scotia 1750On October 2 1749 to stop the attacks on the emigrants Governor Edward Cornwallis created an extirpation proclamation directing all Officers Civil and Military and all His Majesty s Subjects or others to annoy distress take or destroy the Savage commonly called Micmac wherever they are found 23 As part of the proclamation he offered a bounty for the capture or scalps of Mi kmaw men and for the capture of women and children every Indian you shall destroy upon producing his Scalp as the Custom is or every Indian taken Man Woman or Child 23 The three companies scoured the land around Halifax looking for Mi kmaq however the Rangers never made contact with any Mi kmaq 24 Cornwallis also stationed thirty men guarding the saw mill over the following winter with two armed vessels Gilman left unannounced to New England by April 1750 b 25 By July Cornwallis had given the saw mill to Clapham to manage 25 In September he gave command of Gilman s rangers to Captain Francis Bartelo 25 Despite Cornwallis efforts to defend the community in July 1750 the Mi kmaq killed and scalped seven men who were at work in Dartmouth 26 In August 1750 353 people arrived on the ship Alderney and began the town of Dartmouth which was laid out in the autumn of that year 26 The following month on September 30 1750 Dartmouth was attacked again by the Mi kmaq and five more residents were killed 27 In October 1750 a group of about eight men went out to take their diversion and as they were fowling they were attacked by the Indians who took the whole prisoners scalped one with a large knife which they wear for that purpose and threw him into the sea 28 In March 1751 the Mi kmaq attacked on two more occasions bringing the total number of raids to six in the previous two years c Three months later on May 13 1751 Broussard led sixty Mi kmaq and Acadians to attack Dartmouth again in what would be known as the Dartmouth Massacre 29 Controversy editMi kmaw historian Daniel N Paul has disputed British accounts of the raid Paul dismisses the possibility that Mi kmaw people would attack unarmed civilians and speculates instead that the woodcutters were probably armed and better equipped compared to the Mi kmaq raiders Paul provides no historical evidence to support his speculations 30 In his book We Were Not the Savages Paul writes The question this poses is why was this group of defenseless Englishmen sent out into the forest alone to cut wood during a time of war without troop protection and thus left vulnerable to attack If this was the case then it smacks of gross incompetence on a British officer s part If the story is true and not propaganda a more credible reason for them being sent out without troop protection is that they were not defenseless but as well armed as the Mi kmaq and probably more so This can be reasonably assumed because as woodcutters they had axes to cut wood with which alone would have made them possessors of weapons as lethally effective and probably more reliable than most of the arms the Mi kmaq had access to In any event because the English were assaulting the Mi kmaq and stealing their territory Cornwallis and his Council should not have been so affronted and reacted so barbarously when the Mi kmaq fought back In fighting back to preserve their freedom and country the Mi kmaq paid a heavy price Daniel N Paul We Were Not the Savages 30 Paul asserts that Cornwallis used a few incidents such as these to justify his bounty proclamation 31 Cornwallis decision to put a bounty on the Mi kmaq did not pivot simply on the Raid on Dartmouth in 1749 3 By the time Cornwallis had arrived in Halifax there was a long history of conflict between the Wabanaki Confederacy which included the Mi kmaq and the various British American colonies of North America with the Wabanaki launching several raids along the New England Acadia Border in Maine in response to British settlement See the Northeast Coast Campaigns 1688 1703 1723 1724 1745 3 The proclamation was modelled on earlier proclamations used by New England Governors See also editList of massacres in CanadaReferences editFootnotes Read a memorial of Ezekiel Gilman together with a state of his case setting forth his having been appointed captain of a company in the regiment raised in New Hampshire for the intended expedition against Canada but that when the expedition was at an end his name was left out of the pay rolls and his company given to one of Governor Wentworth s sons Gilman seems to have returned having purchased at auction the mill again in 1752 For the two raids that happened in March 1751 see Grenier 2008 p 160 Citations Salusbury 2011 pp 164 165 Grenier 2008 Akins 1895 p 7 a b c Reid amp Baker 2008 Grenier 2008 Scott Tod 2016 Mi kmaw Armed Resistance to British Expansion in Northern New England 1676 1761 Royal Nova Scotia Historical Society 19 1 18 http www halifaxexplosion net dialogue pdf http www halifaxexplosion net 1749treaty pdf a b Akins 1895 p 18 Patterson Stephen E 1994 1744 1763 Colonial Wars and Aboriginal Peoples In Phillip Buckner John G Reid eds The Atlantic Region to Confederation A History University of Toronto Press p 129 ISBN 978 1 4875 1676 5 Griffith p 390 Zemel Joel 2016 A Mi kmaq Declaration of War HalifaxExplosion net Archived from the original on 2016 10 28 Retrieved August 17 2017 Wilson 1751 Also see Landry 2007 Chapter 7 The Indian Threat 1749 58 Parsons 1855 p 348 Report of the Adjutant General of the State of New Hampshire for the Year Ending June 1 1866 Contains the military history of New Hampshire from its settlement in 1623 to the year 1861 Concord New Hampshire George E Jenks State Printer 1866 p 69 Roll of New Hampshire men at Louisburg Cape Breton 1745 Concord New Hampshire E N Pearson 1896 p 21 Parsons 1855 p 200 Murdoch 1866 Salusbury 2011 Putnam Eben ed March 1917 The Genealogical Magazine Vol IV no 2 Boston p 67 a href Template Cite magazine html title Template Cite magazine cite magazine a Cite magazine requires magazine help Lancaster Daniel 1845 The history of Gilmanton Gilmanton New Hampshire Alfred Prescott p 96 Gordon William 1789 The history of the rise progress and establishment of the Independence of the United States of America New York Hodge Allen and Campbell p 95 Battles Carolyn St John Elliott Battles James Bruce 2013 A Puritan Family s Journey From Hingham to Hingham and onto Sanbornton New Hampshire The Ancestors of Marion Gilman Elliott Carolyn St John Elliott Battles p 108 ISBN 978 1 304 75052 5 Mitchell Harry Edward Bartlett J Ernest Lawton P I et al 1908 The town register Exeter Hampton Augusta Maine The Mitchell Cony Company p 30 Welch William Lewis July 1901 Francis Lyford of Boston and Exeter and Some of his Descendants Essex Institute historical collections Vol 37 no 3 Salem Massachusetts p 320 Chapman 2000 p 23 Grenier 2008 p 150 For the primary sources that document the Raids on Dartmouth see Salusbury 2011 Also see Wilson 1751 Also see Landry 2007 Chapter 7 The Indian Threat 1749 58 a b Dickason Olive 1971 Louisbourg and the Indians A study in Imperial race relations 1713 1760 Thesis University of Ottawa p 138 doi 10 20381 ruor 9436 referencing Cornwallis instructions to Capt Silvanus Cobb commanding the sloop York 13 January 1750 Akins 1895 p 19 a b c Selections from the public documents of the province of Nova Scotia Halifax N S C Annand July 5 1869 via Internet Archive a b Akins 1895 p 27 Grenier 2008 p 159 Wilson 1751 as cited by Grenier 2008 pp 173 174 Akins 1895 pp 27 28 a b Paul 2000 pp 111 112 Paul 2000 p 111 Primary Sources The Monthly Chronologer The London Magazine Vol 18 December 1749 p 574 Douglass William 1755 A Summary Historical and Political of the First Planting Progressive Improvements and Present State of the British Settlements in North America Boston New England R Baldwin Salusbury John 2011 Ronald Rompkey ed Expeditions of Honour The Journal of John Salusbury in Halifax Nova Scotia 1749 53 McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 978 0 7735 9089 2 Wilson John 1751 A Genuine Narrative of the Transactions in Nova Scotia since the Settlement June 1749 till August the 5th 1751 in which the Nature Soil and Produce of the Country are Related with the Particular Attempts of the Indians to Disturb the Colony London A Henderson et al ISBN 9780665201530 Secondary SourcesAkins Thomas 1895 History of Halifax City Halifax Nova Scotia Historical Society ISBN 9780888120014 online at History of Halifax City at Project Gutenberg Chapman Harry 2000 In the Wake of the Alderney Dartmouth Nova Scotia 1750 2000 Dartmouth Historical Association ISBN 978 1 55109 374 1 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 ISBN 978 0 393 24243 0 Grenier John 2008 The Far Reaches of Empire War in Nova Scotia 1710 1760 University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0 8061 3876 3 Lawson Mrs William Mary Jane Katzmann 1893 Harry Piers ed History of the Townships of Dartmouth Preston and Lawrencetown Halifax County Nova Scotia Halifax Nova Scotia Morton amp Co pp 4 5 ISBN 978 0 919302 51 8 Landry Peter 2007 The Lion and the Lily Trafford ISBN 978 1 4251 5450 9 Murdoch Beamish 1866 A History of Nova Scotia Or Acadie Vol II Halifax J Barnes p 162 Paul Daniel N 2000 We Were Not the Savages A Mi kmaq Perspective on the Collision Between European and Native American Civilizations 2nd ed Fernwood pp 111 112 ISBN 978 1 55266 039 3 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 Parsons Usher 1855 The life of Sir William Pepperell bart Boston Little Brown and Company 44 39 50 N 63 34 5 4 W 44 66389 N 63 568167 W 44 66389 63 568167 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Raid on Dartmouth 1749 amp oldid 1138633534, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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