Massachusetts Governor William Shirley, in response to …
Years: 1747 - 1747
January
Massachusetts Governor William Shirley, in response to the assaults on Annapolis Royal that were being staged at Grand Pré (and Chignecto), had sent Colonel Arthur Noble and hundreds of New England soldiers to secure control over Grand Pré.
A force of one hundred men under the command of Captain Charles Morris had been sent to Grand Pré in early December 1746.
These troops had been joined eventually by troops under the command of Captains Jedidiah Preble and Benjamin Goldthwait, and Colonel Gorham's Rangers.
Colonel Noble arrives by sea with an additional one hundred men in early January 1747.
In all there are approximately five hundred New England troops stationed at Grand Pré.
Initially the troops are billeted at Grand Pré and several communities nearby.
Upon Noble's arrival, he orders the troops brought into Grand Pré, where they are billeted in twenty-four houses that extend across the village for nearly two and a half miles.
Some of the Inhabitants at Grand Pré warn the New Englanders that Ramezay has a plan to attack them.
The warning is ignored as the New Englanders feel that such an attack that would mean an impractical long march through deep snow and across frozen rivers.
Locations
People
Groups
- Abenaki people (Amerind tribe)
- Maliseet, or Wolastoqiyik, people (Amerind tribe)
- Mi'kmaq people (Amerind tribe)
- New France (French Colony)
- France, (Bourbon) Kingdom of
- Massachusetts, Province of (English Crown Colony)
- Spain, Bourbon Kingdom of
- Britain, Kingdom of Great
- Nova Scotia (British Colony)
- Sardinia, Kingdom of (Savoy)
- North Carolina, Province of (British Colony)
Topics
- Colonization of the Americas, French
- Colonization of the Americas, British
- Austrian Succession, War of the
- King George's War
- Grand Pré, Battle of
