Long before the Fort: Acadian settlement
Fort Beauséjour – Fort Cumberland National Historic Site
Long before the French erected a fort at Beauséjour, Acadians established themselves in the Chignecto region, which they called Beaubassin. The earliest settlers arrived in 1672-1674, relocating there from Port-Royal. This was the first of several voluntary out-migrations of Acadians from the Port-Royal area.
Similar movements began in the 1680s for the Minas Basin area - Grand-Pré, Pisiquid and environs - and in 1686 for Cobequid. At Beaubassin, as in other areas, the Acadians dyked and farmed large tracts of marshland.
Seigneurial grant
In 1676, Michel Leneuf de la Vallière received a seigneurial grant in the Beaubassin region and established himself on a height of land not far from Beauséjour, known as Île de la Vallière (later Tonge's Island). As of 1686, there were more than 22 Acadian farms on the two ridges where 65 years later Forts Beauséjour and Lawrence would be erected.
Next part: First warfareRelated links
- First warfare
- Zone of contention, place of growth
- The construction of a fort at Beauséjour
- Life inside the Fort during the French regime
- The Acadians and the fort
- Tensions of the 1750s
- The siege of 1755
- The deportation of the Acadians
- The start of the British occupation
- Settlers from Yorkshire
- The 1776 siege of Fort Cumberland
- Changes to the fort after the second siege
- Creation of the national historic site
- Archeological digs
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