Cornwallis, dissatisfied with the English colonists sent …
Years: 1753 - 1753
June
Cornwallis, dissatisfied with the English colonists sent to Halifax in 1749, had appealed to the Committee of Privy Council for Trade and Foreign Plantations (Board of Trade) in London to recruit more Germans and Swiss.
Over twenty-seven hundred "Foreign Protestants" had signed up for the passage and emigrated to Nova Scotia.
Most come from the Upper Rhine area of present-day Germany, from the French and German-speaking Swiss cantons and from the French-speaking principality of Montbéliard.
They have stayed in Halifax under British protection while working on the fortifications to pay off the cost of their passage.
In 1753, three years into Father Le Loutre's War, John Creighton leads the group of Foreign Protestants stationed in Halifax to resettle Mirliguèche, naming the new British colony Lunenburg.
The town is named in honor of the King of Great Britain and Ireland, George August of Hanover, who is also the duke of Braunschweig-Lüneburg.
Like Halifax, the British have established Lunenburg unilaterally, that is, without negotiating with the Mi'kmaq whose sovereign territory it has always been.
In the spring, Governor Hopson receives warnings from Fort Edward that as many as three hundred natives nearby are prepared to oppose the settlement of Lunenburg and intend to attack upon the arrival of settlers.
On June 7, 1753, supervised by Lawrence, escorted by several ships of the British Navy and accompanied by one hundred and sixty Regular soldiers, fourteen hundred and fifty-three Foreign Protestants from Halifax land at Rous' Brook.
Over twenty-seven hundred "Foreign Protestants" had signed up for the passage and emigrated to Nova Scotia.
Most come from the Upper Rhine area of present-day Germany, from the French and German-speaking Swiss cantons and from the French-speaking principality of Montbéliard.
They have stayed in Halifax under British protection while working on the fortifications to pay off the cost of their passage.
In 1753, three years into Father Le Loutre's War, John Creighton leads the group of Foreign Protestants stationed in Halifax to resettle Mirliguèche, naming the new British colony Lunenburg.
The town is named in honor of the King of Great Britain and Ireland, George August of Hanover, who is also the duke of Braunschweig-Lüneburg.
Like Halifax, the British have established Lunenburg unilaterally, that is, without negotiating with the Mi'kmaq whose sovereign territory it has always been.
In the spring, Governor Hopson receives warnings from Fort Edward that as many as three hundred natives nearby are prepared to oppose the settlement of Lunenburg and intend to attack upon the arrival of settlers.
On June 7, 1753, supervised by Lawrence, escorted by several ships of the British Navy and accompanied by one hundred and sixty Regular soldiers, fourteen hundred and fifty-three Foreign Protestants from Halifax land at Rous' Brook.
Locations
People
Groups
- Abenaki people (Amerind tribe)
- Maliseet, or Wolastoqiyik, people (Amerind tribe)
- Mi'kmaq people (Amerind tribe)
- Christians, Roman Catholic
- Wabanaki Confederacy
- Passamaquoddy (Amerind tribe)
- Lutheranism
- New France (French Colony)
- Anglicans (Episcopal Church of England)
- Huguenots (the “Reformed”)
- Calvinists
- France, (Bourbon) Kingdom of
- Massachusetts, Province of (English Crown Colony)
- Britain, Kingdom of Great
- Nova Scotia (British Colony)
Topics
- Colonization of the Americas, French
- Colonization of the Americas, British
- Father Le Loutre's War
- Dartmouth, Raid on (1749)
