Lunenburg campaign
Part of the French and Indian War

Jean-Baptiste Moreau, buried many of the 32 killed
DateMarch–December 1758
Location
Belligerents
United Kingdom Great Britain Mi'kmaq militia
Acadian militia
Commanders and leaders
Lieut-Colonel Patrick Sutherland[1]
Dettlieb Christopher Jessen[2]
Joseph Gorham
Captain Rudolf Faesch (3rd Battalion, 60th Regiment of Foot) [3][4][5] Montgomery's regiment[6]
Naval Captain Silvanus Cobb[7]
Charles Deschamps de Boishebert
Chief Joseph Labrador[8]
Chief Paul Laurent
Strength
30 unknown
Casualties and losses
32 killed[9] none

The Lunenburg campaign was executed by the Mi'kmaq 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.[10] The campaign was so successful, by November 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.[11]

Historical context

Despite the British Conquest of Acadia in 1710, Nova Scotia remained primarily occupied by Catholic Acadians and Mi'kmaq. To prevent the establishment of Protestant settlements in the region, Mi'kmaq raided the early British settlements of present-day Shelburne (1715) and Canso (1720). A generation later, Father Le Loutre's War began when Edward Cornwallis arrived to establish Halifax with 13 transports on June 21, 1749.[12]

By the time Cornwallis had arrived in Halifax, there was a long history of the Wabanaki Confederacy (which included the Mi'kmaq) protecting their land by killing British civilians along the New England/ Acadia border in Maine (See the Northeast Coast campaigns 1688, 1703, 1723, 1724, 1745, 1746, 1747).[13][14]

The British quickly began to build other settlements. To guard against Mi'kmaq, Acadian, and French attacks on the new Protestant settlements, British fortifications were erected in Halifax (Citadel Hill) (1749), Bedford (Fort Sackville) (1749), Dartmouth (1750), Lunenburg (1753) and Lawrencetown (1754).[15] There were numerous Mi'kmaq and Acadian raids on these villages such as the Raid on Dartmouth (1751).[16]

After the Raid on Lunenburg (1756), Governor Lawrence sought to protect the area by establishing blockhouses at the LaHave River, Mush-a-Mush (at present day Blockhouse, Nova Scotia) and at the Northwest Range (present day Northwest, Nova Scotia).[17] Despite the protection of these blockhouses, Indians and Acadians continued raiding the area, executing eight such raids over the next three years.[18] A total of 32 people from Lunenburg were killed in the raids with more being taken prisoner.[19] The British reported that most of these raids were by the Mi'kmaq and Acadians at Cape Sable.[20] (The Argyle, Nova Scotia region was formerly known as Cape Sable and encompassed a much larger area than it does today. It extended from Cape Negro (Baccaro) through Chebogue.)

Following the raid of 1756, Mi'kmaq made eight more raids on the Lunenburg Peninsula over the next three years. In 1757, the Mi'kmaq raided Lunenburg and killed six people from the Brissang family.[21] That same year, the Lunenburg settlers were compelled to do "much militia duty".[22] During the winter, 300 soldiers under the command of former governor, now Major General, Hopson's were stationed at Lunenburg.[23] In April 1757, a band of Acadian and Mi'kmaq partisans raided a warehouse near-by Fort Edward, killing thirteen British soldiers and, after taking what provisions they could carry, setting fire to the building. A few days later, the same partisans also raided Fort Cumberland.[24] Because of the strength of the Acadian militia and Mi'kmaq 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."[25][26]

By year end, Governor Charles Lawrence wrote, "More inhabitants were killed and taken prisoner, by which many were too much exposed, and others apprehensive of danger. The people much discouraged, and in great distress."[27] (By June 1757, the settlers of another Halifax satellite settlement, Lawrencetown, had to be withdrawn completely again from the settlement because the number of Mi'kmaq and Acadian raids eventually prevented settlers from leaving their houses).[28] Of the 151 settlers who arrived in Dartmouth in August 1750, after Mi'kmaq and Acadia raids half of the settlers left the community within two years later.[29] By the end of war (1763), Dartmouth was only left with 78 settlers.[30]

Campaign

The following year, March 1758, the Mi'kmaq raided the Lunenburg Peninsula at the Northwest Range (present-day Blockhouse, Nova Scotia) and killed five people from the Ochs and Roder families.[23] On 15 May 1758, Captain Faesch left Halifax for Lunenburg with troops of the 60th Regiment and an order was given for Sutherland to join the forces en route to Louisbourg.[31] Acadian privateers attacked shipping off of Lunenburg.[32] By the end of May 1758, most of those on the Lunenburg Peninsula abandoned their farms and retreated to the protection of the fortifications around the town of Lunenburg, losing the season for sowing their grain.[33] For those that did not leave their farms for the town, the number of raids intensified.

D.C. Jessen led the militia – The Jessen Bell, St. John's Anglican Church (Lunenburg), Nova Scotia

During the summer of 1758, in response to the British Siege of Louisbourg (1758), Mi'kmaq conducted four raids on the Lunenburg Peninsula. On July 13, 1758, a member of the Labrador family killed two boys on the LaHave River.[34] The next raid happened at Mahone Bay, Nova Scotia on August 24, 1758, when eight Mi'kmaq attacked the family homes of Lay and Brant. While they killed three people in the raid, the Mi'kmaq were unsuccessful in taking their scalps, which was the common practice for payment from the French.[35] Two days, later, two soldiers were killed in a raid on the blockhouse at LaHave, Nova Scotia.[35] On August 27, Joseph Stye along with Conrad Halty and his wife were buried after being scalped.[36]

On September 8, D.C. Jessen led 60 militia and forty troops from the 60th Regiment around the peninsula for a week to scout for Mi'kmaq, which they did not find.[2] During that time, on September 11, Mi'kmaq captured a child in a raid on the Northwest Range.[37]

After the Siege of Louisbourg (1758), Gorham's Rangers were stationed at Lunenburg for the winter.[38] (Joseph Gorham owned 300 acres of land at Lunenburg: land still named Gorham Point at the end of present-day Second Peninsula, two islands nearby, a peninsula leading from the community of Mahone Bay as well as the Seven Islands, near Sacrifice Island in Mahone Bay.[39]) Despite the presence of Gorham's Rangers and the 60th Regiment, in December Lawrence wrote to the Lords of Trade, that the Mi'kmaq "had just destroyed a whole family remarkable for their industry, and that in so bloody and barbarous a manner as to terrify and drive three parts of the people from their county lots into the town for protection."[40]

Afterward

The raids continued the following spring. One raid happened on March 27, 1759, in which three members of the Oxner family were killed.[21] The last raid happened on April 20, 1759. The Mi'kmaq killed four settlers at Lunenburg who were members of the Trippeau and Crighton families.[20] In a letter to the Lords of Trade dated 20 September 1759, Lawrence continued to comment on the raids by Mi'kmaq and Acadians slowing the development of the community.[41] Again, Acadian privateers attacked shipping off of Lunenburg.[20]

Rev. Jean-Baptiste Moreau was the minister at Lunenburg who buried many of the dead. He reported that the Mi'kmaq killed 32 people in the campaign.[42]

Chief Paul Laurent of the LaHave Tribe arrived in Halifax after surrendering to the British at Fort Cumberland on 29 February 1760 and signed a Halifax Treaty on 10 March 1760.[43][44]

References

  1. Canadian Biography
  2. 1 2 Journal of Captain Christopher Jessen
  3. "The German soldier in the wars of the United States". 2010-07-21. Retrieved 2020-01-28.
  4. Desbraisey, p. DesBrisay, 50
  5. Bell (1961), p. 517, note 33a.
  6. p. 55
  7. Desbraisey, p. 28
  8. The Labrador family of Lunenburg were metis and were present still at Lunenburg in 1753 and 1755. They were also among the Acadians deported from Piziquid in 1755. (Bell (1961), p. 510) (See History of Lunenburg County, p. 343)
  9. According to Rev. Jean-Baptiste Moreau
  10. "Regular" refers to a professional British soldier, paid by the British Crown.
  11. Bell (1961), p. 512, note 44.
  12. Grenier, John. The Far Reaches of Empire. War in Nova Scotia, 1710-1760. Norman: U of Oklahoma P, 2008; Thomas Beamish Akins. History of Halifax, Brookhouse Press. 1895. (2002 edition). p 7
  13. 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.
  14. Grenier, John. The Far Reaches of Empire. War in Nova Scotia, 1710-1760. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, 2008.
  15. John Grenier. The Far Reaches of Empire: War in Nova Scotia, 1710-1760. Oklahoma University Press.
  16. Grenier pp. 154–155. For the Raids on Dartmouth see the Diary of John Salusbury (diarist): Expeditions of Honour: The Journal of John Salusbury in Halifax; also 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. Also see http://www.blupete.com/Hist/NovaScotiaBk1/Part5/Ch07.htm
  17. Bell (1961), p. 507.
  18. Bell (1961), pp. 504–513.
  19. Bell (1961), p. 515.
  20. 1 2 3 Bell (1961), p. 513.
  21. 1 2 Archibald McMechan, Red Snow of Grand Pre. 1931. p. 192
  22. Desbresaie, p. 49
  23. 1 2 Bell (1961), p. 509.
  24. John Faragher. Great and Noble Scheme. Norton. 2005. p. 398.
  25. Knox. Vol. 2, p. 443; Bell (1961), p. 514
  26. An historical journal of the campaigns in North America for the years 1757, 1758, 1759 and 1760 [microform] : containing the most remarkable occurrences of that period particularly the two sieges of Quebec, &c., & c., the orders of the admirals and general officers : descriptions of the countries where the author has served, with their forts and garrisons, their climates, soil, produce and a regular diary of the weather, as also several manifesto's, a mandate of the late Bishop of Canada, the French orders and disposition for the defence of the colony, &c., &c., &c. 2010-07-21. ISBN 9780665364563. Retrieved 2020-01-28.
  27. p. 54
  28. Bell (1961), p. 508.
  29. Harry Chapman, p. 31
  30. Harry Chapman, p. 32
  31. Sutherland did not return to Lunenburg until September 6 (see Bell (1961), p. 509)
  32. Bell, p. 513, note 50
  33. Bell (1961), pp. 510, 513.
  34. Bell (1961), p. 510.
  35. 1 2 Bell (1961), p. 511.
  36. p. 84
  37. Bell (1961), p. 512.
  38. Loescher, Burt Garfield (1969). The History of Rogers' Rangers: The First Green Berets. San Mateo, California. p. 35.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  39. George Bates. John Gorham 1709-1751. Collections of the Nova Scotia Historical Society, p. 87
  40. Desbraisey, p. 52
  41. p. 53
  42. Bell (1961).
  43. See Beamish Murdoch, Vol. 2, p. 385
  44. Chief Francis Mius of La Heve signed a peace treaty on 9 Nov. 1761. (See Desbrasiey, p. 55

Sources

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