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Raid on Grand Pré

Raid on Grand Pré
Part of Queen Anne's War

Colonel Benjamin Church, the "Father of American ranging"[1]
Date24–26 June (3–5 July New Style) 1704[a]
Location
Result English and allied victory
Belligerents

 Kingdom of France

Indian allies

 Kingdom of England

Indian allies
Commanders and leaders
Unknown Benjamin Church
John Gorham (Grandfather of John Gorham)
Winthrop Hilton
Cyprian Southack
Strength
Unknown 500 volunteers and warriors
Casualties and losses
About 6 killed, unknown wounded[2]
45 captured
6 killed, unknown wounded[2]

The Raid on Grand Pré was the major action of a raiding expedition conducted by the New England militia Colonel Benjamin Church against French Acadia in June 1704, during Queen Anne's War. The expedition was allegedly in retaliation for a French and Indian raid against the Massachusetts frontier community of Deerfield earlier that year.

Departing Boston on 25 May 1704 with 500 provincial militia and some Indian allies, the expedition reached the Minas Basin on 24 June, after raiding smaller settlements at Penobscot Bay and Passamaquoddy Bay. Although he lost surprise due to the famously high tides of the Bay of Fundy, Church quickly gained control of Grand-Pré, and spent three days destroying the town and attempting to destroy the dikes and levees that protected its croplands. The croplands were flooded by salt water, but the local Acadians quickly repaired the dikes after the raiders left, and the land was returned to production. Church continued his raiding expedition, striking at Beaubassin and other communities before finally returning to Boston in late July.

Context edit

When the War of the Spanish Succession (also called Queen Anne's War) widened to include England in 1702, it spawned conflict between the colonies of England and France in North America.[3] Joseph Dudley, the governor of the English Province of Massachusetts Bay (which then included present-day Maine), sought in June 1703 to ensure the neutrality of the Abenakis who occupied the frontier between Massachusetts and New France.[4] In this he was unsuccessful, because New France's Governor Philippe de Rigaud Vaudreuil, knowing he would have to rely on Indian support for defense against the more numerous English, had already encouraged the Indians to take up the hatchet.[5] Following the Wabanaki Confederacy of Acadia military campaign against the New England frontier during the summer of 1703, the English colonists embarked on largely unsuccessful retaliatory raids against Abenaki villages.[6] This prompted the Abenakis to participate in a raid on Deerfield, Massachusetts under French leadership in February 1704.[7] The severity of this raid (more than 50 villagers killed and more than 100 captured) prompted calls for revenge, and the veteran Indian fighter Benjamin Church offered his services for an expedition against the French colony of Acadia (roughly present-day Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and eastern Maine).[8]

Acadia was at the time dominated by a series of settlements dotting the shores of the Bay of Fundy and its adjacent bays. Its principal settlement and capital, Port Royal, was the only significantly fortified community, defended by a star fort with a modest garrison.[9] The land at the top of the bay, on the shores of the Minas and Cumberland Basins was one of the major seats of food production in the colony, and Grand Pré was one of the largest and most successful communities on the Minas Basin, with a population of about 500 in 1701.[10] French settlers to the area had brought with them knowledge on the constructions of dikes and levees, which they used to drain marshlands for agriculture, and to protect those lands from the inflow of the exceptionally high tides (over 6 meters, or 20 feet, in some places) for which the Bay of Fundy is well known.[11] The community of Beaubassin was the largest of several towns situated on the Isthmus of Chignecto and elsewhere on the shores of the Cumberland Basin.[12]

Start of the expedition edit

 
Grand Pré was raided in retaliation for the Raid on Deerfield, depicted here

Church had previously led expeditions against Acadia during King William's War, and Governor Dudley issued him a colonel's commission for the effort,[13] giving him specific orders to obtain Acadian prisoners that could be exchanged for the English prisoners taken in the Deerfield raid. The expedition was also to be one of punishment: "Use all possible methods for the burning and destroying of the enemies houses and breaking the dams of their corn grounds, and make what other spoil you can upon them".[14] Dudley, however, specifically denied Church permission to attack Port Royal, the Acadian capital, citing the need to get permission from London before taking such a step.[15]

The force Church raised consisted of about 500 volunteers from coastal areas of Massachusetts, including some Indians.[16] He left Boston on 15/26 May with fourteen transports and three warships. The warships include the Royal Navy vessels HMS Adventure,[17] HMS Jersey (42 guns) and HMS Gosport (32),[18] which were also accompanied by the Massachusetts ketch Province Galley under Cyprian Southack's command.[19] (Church took a former prisoner of the Maliseet, John Gyles as his translator.)[20]

The expedition first sailed for Mount Desert Island, near the entrance to Penobscot Bay. Church sent a force to raid Pentagoet (present-day Castine, Maine), where the Frenchman Baron Saint-Castin had a fortified trading post. Saint-Castin was absent, but Church took prisoner his daughter and her children.[16] He also learned that a new French settlement was being built at Passamaquoddy Bay, so the expedition next sailed for that destination. Church sent a small force ashore near present-day St. Stephen, New Brunswick, where they destroyed a house and raided a nearby Maliseet encampment, killing one Indian. Church then separated the warships, sending them to blockade the Digby Gut in the hopes of capturing a French supply ship, while the bulk of the expedition sailed for Grand Pré.[21] The three ship captains on 24 June demanded the surrender of the garrison at Port Royal, threatening a frontal assault with 1,700 New Englanders and "Sauvages".[22] Governor Jacques-François de Monbeton de Brouillan, despite defenses in poor conditions and a garrison of only 150 able men, saw through the bluff and refused. Historian George Rawlyk speculates that Governor Dudley may have intentionally asked them to make this bluff without Church's involvement.[22]

Grand Pré edit

 
Detail from an 18th-century map showing the English expedition's movements up to its arrival at Grand Pré and Port Royal

The principal detailed account of these events was provided by Colonel Church in his memoirs, first published in 1716.[23] French military officers later summarized the damage caused by the raiders.[2]

Day 1: Arrival edit

On 24 June/3 July 1704, Church arrived at Grand Pré on the frigate Adventure.[21] Hoping to take advantage of the element of surprise, Church secretly approached the village from behind the heavily wooded Boot Island. His men unloaded the whaleboats to go ashore late in the day and started to move quickly toward the village. Church sent Lieut. Giles ahead with a flag of truce and a written notice demanding the village's complete surrender.[24]

We do also declare, that we have already made some beginnings of killing and scalping some Canada men, which we have not been wont to do or allow, and are now come with a great number of English and Indians, all volunteers, with resolutions to subdue you, and make you sensible of your cruelties to us, by treating you after the same manner.

— Proclamation of Benjamin Church[25]

Church stipulated the Acadians and Mi'kmaq had one hour to surrender. Although he expected to reach the village by the time the hour had past, Church's force became delayed by stream crossings made more difficult by the receding tide: "But meeting with several creeks near twenty or thirty feet deep, which were very muddy and dirty, so that the army could not get over them, were obliged to return to their boats again."[26]

Because Church's forces were stuck in the mud exposed by the retreating tide, they lost any element of surprise, and the Acadians took the opportunity to evacuate Grand Pré with some of their cattle and the "best of their goods".[27] Church's forces waited in their boats for the tide to rise. Church expected the high stream banks to provide some cover, but when tide rose that night, it was so high that the boats were exposed to gunfire from the local militia, who had gathered in the woods along the banks. According to Church, the Acadians and Mi'kmaq "fired smartly at our forces".[26] 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'kmaq killed and several wounded. Church's forces then waited out the rest of the night.[27]

Day 2: Inhabitants driven off edit

 
Raid on Grand Pre (1704)

Having withdrawn from the village, the next morning the Acadian and Mi'kmaq 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. The raiders then entered the village and began plundering. Some of the men broke into the liquor stores they found and began drinking, but Colonel Church quickly put a stop to that activity. They spent the rest of the day destroying much of the village.[27] According to one of Church's dispatches, they destroyed 60 houses, 6 mills, and many barns, along with about 70 cattle.[28]

At one point some of the men noticed that some of the Acadians were nearby, driving off some of their cattle. Church detached Lieutenant Barker and some men to give chase, warning them to advance with care. However, Barker was somewhat rash in pursuing the chase, and he and another man were killed before the raiders retreated back to the village.[29]

That evening the raiders built a fortification out of logs while burning the church and the rest of the village. Church reported that "the whole town seemed to be on fire all at once."[29] All but one home was burned.[2]

Day 3: Destruction of the harvest edit

 
Detail from an 18th-century map annotated to show the English expedition's movements after the raid

On the morning of the third day, Church gave the orders to destroy the dykes and, in turn, all of the crops. Seven dykes were broken, destroying most of the harvest and ruining over 200 hogsheads of stored wheat.[2]

To give the impression to the Acadians and Mi'kmaq that his forces were leaving, Church had his soldiers burn the fortifications they had built the day before.[29] He also had them load themselves and the whale boats back onto their transport vessels. Some of the Acadians returned in the night and immediately began to mend the broken dykes. However, Church had anticipated this, and sent men back to the town to drive the Acadians off.[30]

End of the expedition edit

 
Governor of Massachusetts Joseph Dudley

The next day Church left Grand Pré and went on to raid Pisiguit (present day Windsor and Falmouth, Nova Scotia, not far from Grand Pré), where he took 45 prisoners.[31] He then sailed for Port Royal to rejoin the fleet blockading Port Royal.[2] According to uncorroborated French reports, the blockaders had made some landings in the vicinity of Port Royal, burning a few isolated houses and taking some prisoners. Governor Brouillan organized defenses that successfully prevented further landings.[32]

After rejoining the warships, Church held a council to discuss whether or not to launch a large-scale attack against Port Royal. The council decided that their force was "inferiour to the strength of the enemy", and that they would "quit it [Port Royal] wholly and go about [their] other business".[2] The expedition then sailed back up the Bay of Fundy to Chignecto, where the village of Beaubassin was raided. Its inhabitants had by then been alerted to the English activities, and under the leadership of Father Claude Trouve[33] had removed their possessions and as much livestock as possible from the village to Chedabucto (Guysborough, Nova Scotia). Church, after some ineffectual skirmishing with villagers hiding in the woods, burned the village's houses and barns and slaughtered 100 head of cattle, before sailing for Boston. Church reported that six of his men were killed over the course of the expedition.[2]

Aftermath edit

The prisoners that Church took were brought to Boston, where they were at first given relatively free access to the town. The town selectman complained, and the Acadians were then confined to Castle William. They were exchanged in 1705 and 1706 for prisoners taken in the Deerfield raid, although the negotiations were complicated by Dudley's initial refusal to release the noted French privateer Pierre Maisonnat dit Baptiste, who was ultimately exchanged, along with Noel Doiron and other captives, for Deerfield's minister John Williams.[34]

The direct effects of the raid were fairly short-lived. Because of the destruction of the crop and stored grain, the colony suffered a flour shortage that winter, although it was not severe enough to cause significant hardship. Grand Pré was rebuilt, the dykes were repaired, and there was a successful harvest in 1706.[35] The memory of the raid however, lasted in the population. As late as the 1740s (after Acadia had become British Nova Scotia) Grand Pré's inhabitants worried about a return of English raiders, and were cautious in their dealing with British authorities.[36]

Dudley's decision to deny Church permission to attack Port Royal had political ramifications: his opponents in Massachusetts accused him of protecting Port Royal because he was benefiting from illicit trade with Acadia. These allegations continued for several years, and Dudley eventually chose to deal with them by launching the failed attacks on Port Royal in 1707.[37]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ English records, including Church's accounts, record the dates of these events in the Julian calendar, while French records have them in the Gregorian calendar. At the time, the Gregorian dates were 11 days later than the Julian dates; dates in this article are in the Julian calendar unless both dates are provided.

References edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Grenier (2005), p. 35.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Griffiths (2005), p. 208.
  3. ^ Drake (1897), p. 141.
  4. ^ Drake (1897), p. 150.
  5. ^ Drake (1897), pp. 142, 153.
  6. ^ Drake (1897), pp. 154–168.
  7. ^ Haefeli & Sweeney (2003), p. 92.
  8. ^ Drake (1897), p. 193; Haefeli & Sweeney (2003), p. 122.
  9. ^ Griffiths (2005), pp. 189, 198–201.
  10. ^ Herbin (1907), pp. 32–34.
  11. ^ Herbin (1907), pp. 30–32, 165.
  12. ^ Griffiths (2005), p. 187.
  13. ^ Peckham (1982).
  14. ^ Faragher (2005), p. 109.
  15. ^ Plank (2001), p. 37.
  16. ^ a b Griffiths (2005), p. 206.
  17. ^ Acts and Resolves (1895), p. 332.
  18. ^ Griffiths (2005), p. 206; Murdoch (1865), p. 272.
  19. ^ Chard (1974).
  20. ^ MacNutt (1974).
  21. ^ a b Griffiths (2005), p. 207.
  22. ^ a b Rawlyk (1973), p. 98.
  23. ^ Church (1825), p. iii.
  24. ^ Church (1825), p. 271.
  25. ^ Church (1825), p. 272.
  26. ^ a b Church (1825), p. 273.
  27. ^ a b c Church (1825), p. 274.
  28. ^ Weeks & Bacon (1911), p. 108.
  29. ^ a b c Church (1825), p. 275.
  30. ^ Church (1825), p. 276.
  31. ^ Scott & Scott (2008), p. 53.
  32. ^ Baudry (1982).
  33. ^ Baillargeon (1982).
  34. ^ Scott & Scott (2008), p. 53; Drake (1897), p. 212.
  35. ^ Griffiths (2005), p. 209.
  36. ^ Faragher (2005), p. 112.
  37. ^ Griffiths (2005), pp. 213–217.

Bibliography edit

  • The Acts and Resolves, Public and Private, of the Province of the Massachusetts Bay. Vol. 8. Boston: Commonwealth of Massachusetts. 1895. OCLC 174120967.
  • Axelrod, Alan (2009). Little-Known Wars of Great and Lasting Impact. Bevery, Massachusetts: Fair Winds. ISBN 978-1-59233-375-2.
  • Baillargeon, Noël (1982) [1969]. "Trouvé, Claude". Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. 2 (online ed.). Toronto: University of Toronto. Retrieved 31 October 2021.
  • Baudry, René (1982) [1969]. "Monbeton de Brouillan, Jacques-François de". Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. 2 (online ed.). Toronto: University of Toronto. Retrieved 31 October 2021.
  • Chard, Donald F. (1974). "Southack, Cyprian". In Halpenny, Francess G. (ed.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. 3 (online ed.). Toronto: University of Toronto Press. Retrieved 26 January 2011.
  • Church, Benjamin (1825). Church, Thomas; Drake, Samuel Gardner (eds.). The History of King Philip's War; Also of Expeditions Against the French and Indians in Its Eastern Parts of New England, in the Years 1689, 1692, 1696 and 1704. Boston: Howe & Norton.
  • Drake, Samuel Adams (1897). The Border Wars of New England, Commonly Called King William's and Queen Anne's Wars. New York: C. Scribner's Sons.
  • Faragher, John Mack (2005). A Great and Noble Scheme: The Tragic Story of the Expulsion of the French Acadians from Their American Homeland. New York: W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0-393-05135-3.
  • Grenier, John (2005). The First Way of War: American War Making on the Frontier, 1607–1814. New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-139-44470-5.
  • Griffiths, N. E. S. (2005). From Migrant to Acadian: A North American Border People, 1604–1755. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 978-0-7735-2699-0.
  • Haefeli, Evan; Sweeney, Kevin (2003). Captors and Captives: The 1704 French and Indian Raid on Deerfield. Amherst, Massachusetts: University of Massachusetts Press. ISBN 978-1-55849-503-6.
  • Herbin, John Frederic (1907). The History of Grand-Pré. Toronto: W. Briggs.
  • MacNutt, W. S. (1974). "Gyles, John". In Halpenny, Francess G. (ed.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. 3 (online ed.). Toronto: University of Toronto Press. Retrieved 31 October 2021.
  • Murdoch, Beamish (1865). A History of Nova-Scotia, Or Acadie. Vol. 1. Halifax, Nova Scotia: James Barnes.
  • Peckham, Howard H. (1982) [1969]. "Church, Benjamin". Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. 2 (online ed.). Toronto: University of Toronto. Retrieved 26 January 2011.
  • Plank, Geoffrey (2001). An Unsettled Conquest: The British Campaign Against the Peoples of Acadia. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 978-0-8122-0710-1.
  • Rawlyk, George A. (1973). Nova Scotia's Massachusetts. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 978-0-7735-8404-4.
  • Scott, Shawn; Scott, Tod (2008). . Journal of the Royal Nova Scotia Historical Society. 11: 45ff. Archived from the original on 2 July 2011. Retrieved 27 January 2011.
  • Weeks, Lyman Horace; Bacon, Edwin M. (1911). An Historical Digest of the Provincial Press... Massachusetts Series. Vol. 1. Boston: Society for Americana.

45°6′18.14″N 64°17′55.26″W / 45.1050389°N 64.2986833°W / 45.1050389; -64.2986833

raid, grand, pré, confused, with, battle, grand, pré, part, queen, anne, warcolonel, benjamin, church, father, american, ranging, date24, june, july, style, 1704, locationgrand, pré, acadia, present, nova, scotia, resultenglish, allied, victorybelligerents, ki. Not to be confused with Battle of Grand Pre Raid on Grand PrePart of Queen Anne s WarColonel Benjamin Church the Father of American ranging 1 Date24 26 June 3 5 July New Style 1704 a LocationGrand Pre Acadia present day Nova Scotia ResultEnglish and allied victoryBelligerents Kingdom of France AcadiaIndian allies Mi kmaq Tribe Kingdom of England New EnglandIndian alliesCommanders and leadersUnknownBenjamin Church John Gorham Grandfather of John Gorham Winthrop HiltonCyprian SouthackStrengthUnknown500 volunteers and warriorsCasualties and lossesAbout 6 killed unknown wounded 2 45 captured6 killed unknown wounded 2 The Raid on Grand Pre was the major action of a raiding expedition conducted by the New England militia Colonel Benjamin Church against French Acadia in June 1704 during Queen Anne s War The expedition was allegedly in retaliation for a French and Indian raid against the Massachusetts frontier community of Deerfield earlier that year Departing Boston on 25 May 1704 with 500 provincial militia and some Indian allies the expedition reached the Minas Basin on 24 June after raiding smaller settlements at Penobscot Bay and Passamaquoddy Bay Although he lost surprise due to the famously high tides of the Bay of Fundy Church quickly gained control of Grand Pre and spent three days destroying the town and attempting to destroy the dikes and levees that protected its croplands The croplands were flooded by salt water but the local Acadians quickly repaired the dikes after the raiders left and the land was returned to production Church continued his raiding expedition striking at Beaubassin and other communities before finally returning to Boston in late July Contents 1 Context 2 Start of the expedition 3 Grand Pre 3 1 Day 1 Arrival 3 2 Day 2 Inhabitants driven off 3 3 Day 3 Destruction of the harvest 4 End of the expedition 5 Aftermath 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 Footnotes 8 2 BibliographyContext editMain articles Queen Anne s War and Raid on Deerfield When the War of the Spanish Succession also called Queen Anne s War widened to include England in 1702 it spawned conflict between the colonies of England and France in North America 3 Joseph Dudley the governor of the English Province of Massachusetts Bay which then included present day Maine sought in June 1703 to ensure the neutrality of the Abenakis who occupied the frontier between Massachusetts and New France 4 In this he was unsuccessful because New France s Governor Philippe de Rigaud Vaudreuil knowing he would have to rely on Indian support for defense against the more numerous English had already encouraged the Indians to take up the hatchet 5 Following the Wabanaki Confederacy of Acadia military campaign against the New England frontier during the summer of 1703 the English colonists embarked on largely unsuccessful retaliatory raids against Abenaki villages 6 This prompted the Abenakis to participate in a raid on Deerfield Massachusetts under French leadership in February 1704 7 The severity of this raid more than 50 villagers killed and more than 100 captured prompted calls for revenge and the veteran Indian fighter Benjamin Church offered his services for an expedition against the French colony of Acadia roughly present day Nova Scotia New Brunswick and eastern Maine 8 Acadia was at the time dominated by a series of settlements dotting the shores of the Bay of Fundy and its adjacent bays Its principal settlement and capital Port Royal was the only significantly fortified community defended by a star fort with a modest garrison 9 The land at the top of the bay on the shores of the Minas and Cumberland Basins was one of the major seats of food production in the colony and Grand Pre was one of the largest and most successful communities on the Minas Basin with a population of about 500 in 1701 10 French settlers to the area had brought with them knowledge on the constructions of dikes and levees which they used to drain marshlands for agriculture and to protect those lands from the inflow of the exceptionally high tides over 6 meters or 20 feet in some places for which the Bay of Fundy is well known 11 The community of Beaubassin was the largest of several towns situated on the Isthmus of Chignecto and elsewhere on the shores of the Cumberland Basin 12 Start of the expedition edit nbsp Grand Pre was raided in retaliation for the Raid on Deerfield depicted hereChurch had previously led expeditions against Acadia during King William s War and Governor Dudley issued him a colonel s commission for the effort 13 giving him specific orders to obtain Acadian prisoners that could be exchanged for the English prisoners taken in the Deerfield raid The expedition was also to be one of punishment Use all possible methods for the burning and destroying of the enemies houses and breaking the dams of their corn grounds and make what other spoil you can upon them 14 Dudley however specifically denied Church permission to attack Port Royal the Acadian capital citing the need to get permission from London before taking such a step 15 The force Church raised consisted of about 500 volunteers from coastal areas of Massachusetts including some Indians 16 He left Boston on 15 26 May with fourteen transports and three warships The warships include the Royal Navy vessels HMS Adventure 17 HMS Jersey 42 guns and HMS Gosport 32 18 which were also accompanied by the Massachusetts ketch Province Galley under Cyprian Southack s command 19 Church took a former prisoner of the Maliseet John Gyles as his translator 20 The expedition first sailed for Mount Desert Island near the entrance to Penobscot Bay Church sent a force to raid Pentagoet present day Castine Maine where the Frenchman Baron Saint Castin had a fortified trading post Saint Castin was absent but Church took prisoner his daughter and her children 16 He also learned that a new French settlement was being built at Passamaquoddy Bay so the expedition next sailed for that destination Church sent a small force ashore near present day St Stephen New Brunswick where they destroyed a house and raided a nearby Maliseet encampment killing one Indian Church then separated the warships sending them to blockade the Digby Gut in the hopes of capturing a French supply ship while the bulk of the expedition sailed for Grand Pre 21 The three ship captains on 24 June demanded the surrender of the garrison at Port Royal threatening a frontal assault with 1 700 New Englanders and Sauvages 22 Governor Jacques Francois de Monbeton de Brouillan despite defenses in poor conditions and a garrison of only 150 able men saw through the bluff and refused Historian George Rawlyk speculates that Governor Dudley may have intentionally asked them to make this bluff without Church s involvement 22 Grand Pre edit nbsp Detail from an 18th century map showing the English expedition s movements up to its arrival at Grand Pre and Port RoyalThe principal detailed account of these events was provided by Colonel Church in his memoirs first published in 1716 23 French military officers later summarized the damage caused by the raiders 2 Day 1 Arrival edit On 24 June 3 July 1704 Church arrived at Grand Pre on the frigate Adventure 21 Hoping to take advantage of the element of surprise Church secretly approached the village from behind the heavily wooded Boot Island His men unloaded the whaleboats to go ashore late in the day and started to move quickly toward the village Church sent Lieut Giles ahead with a flag of truce and a written notice demanding the village s complete surrender 24 We do also declare that we have already made some beginnings of killing and scalping some Canada men which we have not been wont to do or allow and are now come with a great number of English and Indians all volunteers with resolutions to subdue you and make you sensible of your cruelties to us by treating you after the same manner Proclamation of Benjamin Church 25 Church stipulated the Acadians and Mi kmaq had one hour to surrender Although he expected to reach the village by the time the hour had past Church s force became delayed by stream crossings made more difficult by the receding tide But meeting with several creeks near twenty or thirty feet deep which were very muddy and dirty so that the army could not get over them were obliged to return to their boats again 26 Because Church s forces were stuck in the mud exposed by the retreating tide they lost any element of surprise and the Acadians took the opportunity to evacuate Grand Pre with some of their cattle and the best of their goods 27 Church s forces waited in their boats for the tide to rise Church expected the high stream banks to provide some cover but when tide rose that night it was so high that the boats were exposed to gunfire from the local militia who had gathered in the woods along the banks According to Church the Acadians and Mi kmaq fired smartly at our forces 26 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 kmaq killed and several wounded Church s forces then waited out the rest of the night 27 Day 2 Inhabitants driven off edit nbsp Raid on Grand Pre 1704 Having withdrawn from the village the next morning the Acadian and Mi kmaq 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 The raiders then entered the village and began plundering Some of the men broke into the liquor stores they found and began drinking but Colonel Church quickly put a stop to that activity They spent the rest of the day destroying much of the village 27 According to one of Church s dispatches they destroyed 60 houses 6 mills and many barns along with about 70 cattle 28 At one point some of the men noticed that some of the Acadians were nearby driving off some of their cattle Church detached Lieutenant Barker and some men to give chase warning them to advance with care However Barker was somewhat rash in pursuing the chase and he and another man were killed before the raiders retreated back to the village 29 That evening the raiders built a fortification out of logs while burning the church and the rest of the village Church reported that the whole town seemed to be on fire all at once 29 All but one home was burned 2 Day 3 Destruction of the harvest edit nbsp Detail from an 18th century map annotated to show the English expedition s movements after the raidOn the morning of the third day Church gave the orders to destroy the dykes and in turn all of the crops Seven dykes were broken destroying most of the harvest and ruining over 200 hogsheads of stored wheat 2 To give the impression to the Acadians and Mi kmaq that his forces were leaving Church had his soldiers burn the fortifications they had built the day before 29 He also had them load themselves and the whale boats back onto their transport vessels Some of the Acadians returned in the night and immediately began to mend the broken dykes However Church had anticipated this and sent men back to the town to drive the Acadians off 30 End of the expedition edit nbsp Governor of Massachusetts Joseph DudleyThe next day Church left Grand Pre and went on to raid Pisiguit present day Windsor and Falmouth Nova Scotia not far from Grand Pre where he took 45 prisoners 31 He then sailed for Port Royal to rejoin the fleet blockading Port Royal 2 According to uncorroborated French reports the blockaders had made some landings in the vicinity of Port Royal burning a few isolated houses and taking some prisoners Governor Brouillan organized defenses that successfully prevented further landings 32 After rejoining the warships Church held a council to discuss whether or not to launch a large scale attack against Port Royal The council decided that their force was inferiour to the strength of the enemy and that they would quit it Port Royal wholly and go about their other business 2 The expedition then sailed back up the Bay of Fundy to Chignecto where the village of Beaubassin was raided Its inhabitants had by then been alerted to the English activities and under the leadership of Father Claude Trouve 33 had removed their possessions and as much livestock as possible from the village to Chedabucto Guysborough Nova Scotia Church after some ineffectual skirmishing with villagers hiding in the woods burned the village s houses and barns and slaughtered 100 head of cattle before sailing for Boston Church reported that six of his men were killed over the course of the expedition 2 Aftermath editThe prisoners that Church took were brought to Boston where they were at first given relatively free access to the town The town selectman complained and the Acadians were then confined to Castle William They were exchanged in 1705 and 1706 for prisoners taken in the Deerfield raid although the negotiations were complicated by Dudley s initial refusal to release the noted French privateer Pierre Maisonnat dit Baptiste who was ultimately exchanged along with Noel Doiron and other captives for Deerfield s minister John Williams 34 The direct effects of the raid were fairly short lived Because of the destruction of the crop and stored grain the colony suffered a flour shortage that winter although it was not severe enough to cause significant hardship Grand Pre was rebuilt the dykes were repaired and there was a successful harvest in 1706 35 The memory of the raid however lasted in the population As late as the 1740s after Acadia had become British Nova Scotia Grand Pre s inhabitants worried about a return of English raiders and were cautious in their dealing with British authorities 36 Dudley s decision to deny Church permission to attack Port Royal had political ramifications his opponents in Massachusetts accused him of protecting Port Royal because he was benefiting from illicit trade with Acadia These allegations continued for several years and Dudley eventually chose to deal with them by launching the failed attacks on Port Royal in 1707 37 See also editMilitary history of Nova Scotia Military history of the Acadians Military history of the MiꞌkmaqNotes edit English records including Church s accounts record the dates of these events in the Julian calendar while French records have them in the Gregorian calendar At the time the Gregorian dates were 11 days later than the Julian dates dates in this article are in the Julian calendar unless both dates are provided References editFootnotes edit Grenier 2005 p 35 a b c d e f g h Griffiths 2005 p 208 Drake 1897 p 141 Drake 1897 p 150 Drake 1897 pp 142 153 Drake 1897 pp 154 168 Haefeli amp Sweeney 2003 p 92 Drake 1897 p 193 Haefeli amp Sweeney 2003 p 122 Griffiths 2005 pp 189 198 201 Herbin 1907 pp 32 34 Herbin 1907 pp 30 32 165 Griffiths 2005 p 187 Peckham 1982 Faragher 2005 p 109 Plank 2001 p 37 a b Griffiths 2005 p 206 Acts and Resolves 1895 p 332 Griffiths 2005 p 206 Murdoch 1865 p 272 Chard 1974 MacNutt 1974 a b Griffiths 2005 p 207 a b Rawlyk 1973 p 98 Church 1825 p iii Church 1825 p 271 Church 1825 p 272 a b Church 1825 p 273 a b c Church 1825 p 274 Weeks amp Bacon 1911 p 108 a b c Church 1825 p 275 Church 1825 p 276 Scott amp Scott 2008 p 53 Baudry 1982 Baillargeon 1982 Scott amp Scott 2008 p 53 Drake 1897 p 212 Griffiths 2005 p 209 Faragher 2005 p 112 Griffiths 2005 pp 213 217 Bibliography edit The Acts and Resolves Public and Private of the Province of the Massachusetts Bay Vol 8 Boston Commonwealth of Massachusetts 1895 OCLC 174120967 Axelrod Alan 2009 Little Known Wars of Great and Lasting Impact Bevery Massachusetts Fair Winds ISBN 978 1 59233 375 2 Baillargeon Noel 1982 1969 Trouve Claude Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol 2 online ed Toronto University of Toronto Retrieved 31 October 2021 Baudry Rene 1982 1969 Monbeton de Brouillan Jacques Francois de Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol 2 online ed Toronto University of Toronto Retrieved 31 October 2021 Chard Donald F 1974 Southack Cyprian In Halpenny Francess G ed Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol 3 online ed Toronto University of Toronto Press Retrieved 26 January 2011 Church Benjamin 1825 Church Thomas Drake Samuel Gardner eds The History of King Philip s War Also of Expeditions Against the French and Indians in Its Eastern Parts of New England in the Years 1689 1692 1696 and 1704 Boston Howe amp Norton Drake Samuel Adams 1897 The Border Wars of New England Commonly Called King William s and Queen Anne s Wars New York C Scribner s Sons Faragher John Mack 2005 A Great and Noble Scheme The Tragic Story of the Expulsion of the French Acadians from Their American Homeland New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 05135 3 Grenier John 2005 The First Way of War American War Making on the Frontier 1607 1814 New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 139 44470 5 Griffiths N E S 2005 From Migrant to Acadian A North American Border People 1604 1755 Montreal McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 978 0 7735 2699 0 Haefeli Evan Sweeney Kevin 2003 Captors and Captives The 1704 French and Indian Raid on Deerfield Amherst Massachusetts University of Massachusetts Press ISBN 978 1 55849 503 6 Herbin John Frederic 1907 The History of Grand Pre Toronto W Briggs MacNutt W S 1974 Gyles John In Halpenny Francess G ed Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol 3 online ed Toronto University of Toronto Press Retrieved 31 October 2021 Murdoch Beamish 1865 A History of Nova Scotia Or Acadie Vol 1 Halifax Nova Scotia James Barnes Peckham Howard H 1982 1969 Church Benjamin Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol 2 online ed Toronto University of Toronto Retrieved 26 January 2011 Plank Geoffrey 2001 An Unsettled Conquest The British Campaign Against the Peoples of Acadia Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0 8122 0710 1 Rawlyk George A 1973 Nova Scotia s Massachusetts Montreal McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 978 0 7735 8404 4 Scott Shawn Scott Tod 2008 Noel Doiron and the East Hants Acadians Journal of the Royal Nova Scotia Historical Society 11 45ff Archived from the original on 2 July 2011 Retrieved 27 January 2011 Weeks Lyman Horace Bacon Edwin M 1911 An Historical Digest of the Provincial Press Massachusetts Series Vol 1 Boston Society for Americana 45 6 18 14 N 64 17 55 26 W 45 1050389 N 64 2986833 W 45 1050389 64 2986833 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Raid on Grand Pre amp oldid 1188824814, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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