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Soldiers rounding up terrified civilians, expelling them from their land, burning their homes
and crops - it sounds like a 20th century nightmare in one of the world's trouble spots, but it
describes a scene from Canada's early history, the Deportation of the Acadians.
The Acadians had lived in Nova Scotia since the founding of Port-Royal in 1604. They
established a small, vibrant colony around the Bay of Fundy, building dykes to tame the high
tides and to irrigate the rich fields of hay. Largely ignored by France, the Acadians grew
independent minded. With their friends and allies the Mi' kmaq, they felt secure, even when
sovereignty over their land passed to Britain after 1713.
In 1730 the British authorities persuaded the Acadians to swear, if not allegiance, at least
neutrality in any conflict between Britain and France. But over the years the position of the
Acadians in Nova Scotia became more and more precarious. France raised the stakes by building
the great fortress of Louisbourg on Cape Breton Island. In 1749 the English countered this threat
by establishing a naval base at Halifax. In 1751 the French built Fort Beauséjour on the Isthmus
of Chignecto and the English responded with Fort Lawrence, a stone's throw away.
While previous British governors had been conciliatory towards the Acadians, Governor
Charles Lawrence was prepared to take drastic action. He saw the Acadian question as a strictly
military matter. After Fort Beauséjour fell to the English forces in June 1755, Lawrence noted
that there were some 270 Acadian militia among the fort's inhabitants - so much for their
professed neutrality.
In meetings with Acadians in July 1755 in Halifax, Lawrence pressed the delegates to take
an unqualified oath of allegiance to Britain. When they refused, he imprisoned them and gave the
fateful order for deportation.
Lawrence had strong support in his Council from recent immigrants from New England,
who coveted Acadian lands. Traders from Boston frequently expressed wonder that an "alien"
people were allowed to possess such fine lands in a British colony. On Friday, September 5, 1755 Colonel John Winslow ordered that all males aged 10 years and up in the area were to gather in the Grand-Pré Church for an important message from His Excellency, Charles Lawrence, the Lieutenant-Governor of Nova Scotia. The decree that was read to the assembled and stated in part: "That your Land & Tennements, Cattle of all Kinds and Livestocks of all Sorts are forfeited to the Crown with all other your effects Savings your money and Household Goods, and you yourselves to be removed from this Province."
It was a New Englander, Charles Morris, who devised the plan to surround the Acadian
churches on a Sunday morning, capture as many men as possible, breach the dykes and burn the
houses and crops. When the men refused to go, the soldiers threatened their families with
bayonets. They went reluctantly, praying, singing and crying. By the fall of 1755 some 1100
Acadians were aboard transports for South Carolina, Georgia and Pennsylvania.
Lawrence urged his officers not to pay the least attention "to any remonstrance or Memorial
from any of the inhabitants." When Colonel John Winslow read the deportation order, he
admitted that although it was his duty, it was "very disagreeable to my nature, make and temper."
In a phrase that would not be out of place in many more recent atrocities he added "But it is not
my business to animadvert, but to obey such orders as I receive."
Some Acadians resisted, notably Joseph Beausoleil Brossard, who launched a number of
retaliatory raids against the British troops. Many escaped to the forests, where the British
continued to hunt them down for the next five years. A group of 1500 fled for New France,
others to Cape Breton and the upper reaches of the Peticoudiac River. Of some 3100 Acadians
deported after the fall of Louisbourg in 1758, an estimated 1649 died by drowning or disease, a
fatality rate of 53%.
Between 1755 and 1763, approximately 10 000 Acadians were deported. They were
shipped to many points around the Atlantic. Large numbers were landed in the English colonies,
others in France or the Caribbean. Thousands died of disease or starvation in the squalid
conditions on board ship. To make matters worse, the inhabitants of the English colonies, who
had not been informed of the imminent arrival of disease-ridden refugees, were furious. Many
Acadians were forced, like the legendary Evangeline of Longfellow's poem, to wander
interminably in search of loved ones or a home.
Although the Acadians were not actually shipped to Louisiana by the British, many were
attracted to the area by the familiarity of the language and remained to develop the culture now
known as "Cajun."
Back in Nova Scotia, the vacated Acadian lands were soon occupied by settlers from New
England. When the Acadians were finally allowed to return after 1764, they settled far from their
old homes, in St Mary's Bay, NS, Chéticamp, Cape Breton, PEI and the north and east of
present-day New Brunswick.
The expulsion proved to have been as unnecessary on military grounds as it was later
judged inhumane. Lawrence's lack of imagination played as big a part as greed, confusion,
misunderstanding, and fear.
The migrations of the Acadians to a new Acadie continued into the 1820s. Throughout the
ordeal they maintained their sense of identity, as indeed they do today - a remarkable
demonstration of human will in the face of cruelty.
James H. Marsh is editor in chief of The Canadian Encyclopedia.
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