The French Period

Similar documents
Part 5 War between France and Great Britain

Part 5 War between France and Great Britain

The Settlement of A New Land : Canada

Fort Carillon/Ticonderoga

The Battle of Quebec: 1759

The Age of European Expansion

Major Battles During WWII Events that Changed the Course of the War

MILITARY GEOGRAPHY An Historical Geography of NYS: Strategic Location

Military Geography. MILITARY GEOGRAPHY and the Strategic Nature of New York. Landforms and Elevations. Strategic Passages 10/8/2013.

Chapter 25 Geography and the Settlement of Greece. How did geography influence settlement and way of life in ancient Greece?

Spanish Missions History and Purpose

Spanish Colonies on the Borderlands

Chapter 6 The Spanish Colonial Period

The Battle for Louisbourg- 1758

ters, a chapel, a bakery, a gun powder magazine and storerooms for supplies. The fort

Section 1: Vocabulary. Be able to determine if the word in bold is used correctly in a sentence.

9/28/2015. The Gallipoli Campaign (Dardanelles Campaign) Including the Armenian Genocide. February December 1915

Content Statement: Explain how Enlightenment ideals influenced the French Revolution and Latin American wars for independence.

The Age of Exploration. It all began with Prince Henry the Navigator.

Guided Notes - Persian & Peloponnesian Wars

Reading Informational Medford 549C Work Sample Effective February 2010 Informational Text Title:

Canada s Contributions Abroad WWII

Mission Atlas Project. South Georgia and South Sandwich Islands. Country Name: South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands

STEEL RIBBON OF MAKING TRACKS FEATURE STORY. The railway helped to make Canada a country, but along the way there were winners and losers, shady

The Spanish-American War

Exploring Canada by Profile Van

Lost Colony of Roanoke

SS Grade 7 Unit 04: Spanish Colonial _Edited

Loudoun papers : Americana

NEW ULSTER - Ulster Scots settlement of Nova Scotia. By Brian McConnell*

STAGE I READING FORM 2. Copyright 2015 Centre for Education & Training

History Alive. The Lake Champlain Region is rich with history, all within 50 miles of your hotel door. For google map:

Unit 3: Exploration and Early Colonization (Part 2) Spanish Colonial Era

National Historic Park

In some ways missions were like small towns. They provided for the spiritual and physical needs of the people that lived within their protective

The Alliance System. Pre-WWI. During WWI ENTENTE ALLIANCE. Russia Serbia France. Austria-Hungary Germany. US Canada. Italy CENTRAL POWERS

Chapter 4. Daily Focus Skills

The Lost Colony of Roanoke

How Spain Colonized Texas

Louis Jolliet French Explorer and Cartographer Explored the Mississippi River with Jacques Marquette

Freedom Project. American Revolution, DK Eyewitness Books, DK Publishing written by Stuart. Course/Grade level: Guided Reading/Social Studies 5 th

Please DO NOT start here without completing the other four stations...

The Windrush. Page 1 of 2. visit twinkl.com

Greece and Persia. The Persian Wars Greece s Finest Hours

Stories from Maritime America

A New Kind of War. Chapter 11 Section 2

Thomas Waterman. For Educational Use Only Copyright 2007

Sparta & Athens. IMPORTANT!!! All answers should be in the form of short-answer response. Part 1: Geography

The Tanska Resort and Family Tanska Auto Camp

Section 2. Objectives

INCLUDES 7 NIGHT MARITIMES CRUISE

The Lost Settlement of Roanoke

Bell Ringer Which was NOT an area of discontent (being unhappy) in the Georgia Colony?

NOVA SCOTIA CANADIAN MARITIME ADVENTURE YOUR NAME HERE September 17 25, 2017

The North African Campaign. War in the Desert Expands 12 July May 1943

3/29/2017. The North African Campaign. War in the Desert Expands 12 July May The Battle of El Alamein. Torch.

Northeast US and Atlantic Canada - Exploring Canadian Maritimes (Southbound)

Text 3: The Battles of Lexington and Concord. Topic 3: The Revolutionary Era Lesson 3: Taking Up Arms

EPIRB STATISTICS SUMMARY OF INCIDENTS TOTAL 1279 TOTAL 1279

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. World War I on Many Fronts

Victoria, the only ship of Magellan s fleet to complete the circumnavigation (from a 1590 map by cartographer Abraham Ortelius).

Atlantic Treasures Self Drive 6N/7D

Brazilian Revolution

Day 12 - Tuesday, May 10

4/29/14. Video: Haiti s Indigenous People. Haiti this place just can t seem to get a. v=pmh53kxkj14 29 minutes

Hudson Valley Vernacular Architecture Dutch Barn Preservation Society Field Trip to the Palatine Region of the Mohawk Valley May 18, 2013

THE CAMPBELLS FROM COUNTY CAVAN - Ulster Scots who settled in Canada * By Brian McConnell

California Explorer Series

Sebastian Vizcaiňo

Narragansett School The History of the Murals at Narragansett School

Use pages to answer the following questions

Diving Subic Bay. San Quintin Dive Site Subic Bay. History of the Armed Transport San Quintîn

Bell work- p 60 of comp book- Maka your paper looka like mine Write What are we doing this week in the agenda. Peloponnesian Wars- Athens vs Sparta

Document #1 The Construction of the Suez Canal. Document #2 The Suez Canal: ABC-CLIO

LATIN AMERICAN INDEPENDENCE MOVEMENTS : An Age of Revolutions

Down Under. Leggi e ascolta.

World War II. Major Events and U.S. Role

THINGS TO REMEMBER CARIBBEAN STUDIES

Fall of the Aztec & Incan Empires. Unit Seven Notes

Theodore Roosevelt As President, Teddy believed in fair play and was suspicious of big business, particularly trusts or monopolies.

3.2.5: Japanese American Relations U.S. Entry into WWII. War in the Pacific

A journey through the history of the Sapphire Coast Part 1 Introduction

Canada's Atlantic Maritimes. 11 Days

ENVIRONMENTAL SYSTEMS LESSONS High School level DRAFT

On this day in the Canadian Navy! JUNE

1st battle of the marne By: Jacob

History of the Mexican Revolution

North Africa and Italy Campaigns

Canada's Atlantic Maritimes. 11 Days

ST. PETERS COMMEMORATIVE INTEGRITY STATEMENT NATIONAL HISTORIC SITE OF CANADA. St. Peter s, Nova Scotia

Peraltas and Native Americans, Dance of the Californians, Mission Dolores, Louis Choris, Courtesy of the Bancroft Library

LUKA AND THE EARL OF DUDLEY Based on the story of Puss in Boots

(1) The keywords from the statements are marked yellow. (2) The paragraphs that you should do close reading are: PARAGRAPHS D, G, H, I, J, K

Our Ocean Playground. A Nova Scotia History Manual

Important Peace Treaties from European History.

Alan Pratt, Barrister & Solicitor Alan Pratt Law Firm Dunrobin Ontario. November 2017

Chapter 4 : Ancient Egypt and Kush

The Persian Empire 550 BCE-330 BCE

Parks Canada. Pares Canada. Atlantic. Guide to the Atlantic Provinces

The Best of Atlantic Canada! 19 Days June 19 th to

Transcription:

The French Period 1500-1763

The Beginning On June 29 th 1534 Jacques Cartier arrived on the Island. He explored for two days from Malpeque to Tignish. Cartier commented on the lack of good harbors. Cartier stated that it was the most beautiful land possible to see but never named the Island.

The settlement of the island along with other French possessions was left to private individuals. The private sector however was looking to make a quick profit on their investment. For this reason many of the French settlement attempts would fail. The Beginning

The Beginning In 1604 Ile St. Jean (most likely named by Samuel de Champlain) was included in a land grant to Sieur des Monts. He was to develop a fishery and settle pioneers but spent most of his time on mainland Acadia and ignored the island.

The Beginning In 1653 the island was granted to Nicholas Denys. He would visit the island and write a book describing the land and the Micmac who inhabited it. He would not, however, establish a permanent settlement and the island would be transferred to another individual named Sieur Francois Doublet.

Acadia Acadia was founded in 1604 by Samuel de Champlain and consisted of the whole of the Maritimes. The capital was at Port Royale and from 1604 to 1670 immigrants flooded into the area establishing successful farms along the rivers and inlets.

Acadia The French and English had long been at war in Europe and those wars were now spreading to the New World. In 1713 France lost the War of Spanish Succession and according to the treaty of Utrecht, would lose mainland Acadia and Newfoundland but would keep Ile Royale, Ile St. Jean, and Quebec.

Louisbourg In 1713, to protect their remaining possessions the French would build the super fortress, Louisbourg on Ile Royale. Built on what is now Cape Breton Island it would guard the mouth of the St. Lawrence which served as the gateway to New France (Quebec.)

The Acadians After 1713 and the loss of mainland Acadia the Acadians were encouraged by the French government to move to Isle Royale or Isle St. Jean. Compte de St.Pierre convinced some Acadians to move to Isle St. Jean in 1719 with the plan of using the Island to supply food to Louisbourg.

Ile St. Jean

Settlement on the Island Michel-Hache Gallant arrived on the Island in 1719 from Amherst to be the first permanent settler on Isle St. Jean. Michel-Hache Gallant is the ancestor to all of the Gallants on the Island today.

St. Pierre In August of 1720 St. Pierre would arrive on the Island with 250 settlers from France and settled at Port la Joye ( present day Charlottetown Harbour). The first things they did were clear land, build a few rough houses and create a place for a cemetery.

Early Settlement People would spread to St. Pierre, Tracadie, Malpeque, Savage Harbor, Trois Riviers, Pisquid, and South Lake. In 1725 St. Pierre would get his grant revoked for not meeting the conditions of his lease. He was replaced by a French Governor named DePensens who brought a garrison of 30 French soldiers to protect the Island from invasion.

Life For Early French Settlers Isle St. Jean was covered with dense old forest. It would be 3-5 years before enough land could be cleared to grow crops. The settlers came unprepared for the hardships of pioneer life. Many had never cleared land and did not even have axes or saws with them. Stumps were almost impossible to remove from the ground and would be planted around during cropping season.

Life For Early French Settlers The early Islanders grew wheat,peas and oats and raised oxen, cows, pigs, sheep and chickens. They ate; pea soup, bread, porridge, salted beef, pork, mutton, poultry, maple syrup, garden vegetables, fish, and wild game.

Questions 1. Date Jacques Cartier landed on the island. 2. The island was given in a land grant to this man in 1604. 3. He was to do these two things according to his lease. 4. 5. In 1653 the Island was granted to this man. 6. Acadia was founded by this man. 7. The capital of Acadia.

Questions 8. War that ended in 1713. 9. Treaty that ended the war. 10. Land kept by the French in the Maritimes. 11. 12. Fortress built by the French. 13. Convinced Acadians to settle on the Island in 1719. 14. First permanent settler on the island. 15. The island s first capital.

Questions 16. Seven places settled on the island by the French. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. In 1725 this man would become Governor of the island.

Questions 24. It took this long to clear a piece of land. 25. These were almost impossible to remove from the ground. 26. Three things early islanders ate. 27. 28.

Jean-Pierre Roma Jean-Pierre Roma and three partners formed the Company of the East and were granted the eastern part of the Island. Roma was given the task of settling 80 people the first year and 30 every year after or his company would lose the grant.

Jean-Pierre Roma In 1732 Roma arrived on the Island with 300 people. Within a year he cleared 40 acres of land, built 9 houses, leveled the shoreline, built 2 piers, planted vegetable gardens, and cut roads through the woods to Port la Joye. Roma had 5 fishing and merchant boats that he used for trading to Quebec and the Caribbean

Jean-Pierre Roma Roma s partners were becoming impatient with the lack of profits and blamed Roma. They claimed he crushed settlement enthusiasm with his tough work ethic which was probably true. Roma believed in working so hard that he passed a law that work was to continue on Sunday the priests of the settlement objected so he fired them

Jean-Pierre Roma would not just have to deal with whining priests and partners but also mice, fires and sinking ships and an inability to attract more settlers. The final blow would come when the English would invade in 1745 and burn the settlement to the ground.

The Oath of Loyalty After the English captured Acadia in 1713 they wondered where the Acadians loyalty would lie the next time war broke out between France and England. In 1744 the War of Austrian Succession broke out and England and France were once again at war. In 1745 a group of New England militia captured Louisbourg much to the surprise of the French and the English.

The Oath of Loyalty In 1748 the War of Austrian Succession would end and according to the treaty of Aix-la- Chappelle, Ile St Jean and Ile Royale would be handed back to France. The English would decide to establish a presence in Acadia permanently by establishing a fortress on Chebucto Bay.

The Oath of Loyalty In 1749 General Cornwallis would begin the construction of Halifax and life for the Acadians would become increasingly difficult. From 1749-1754 the English would pressure the Acadians to take an oath of loyalty swearing the allegiance to the English Crown. The Acadians would have a difficult time signing this as they were also accepting a monarch who was also the head of the church (Anglican). The Acadians who did not sign were deported in 1755. A total of 6,000 from mainland Acadia.

The Deportation In 1755 the English knew war was on the horizon and worried about Acadian loyalty. An incident involving Acadians at Fort Beausejour made the English believe the Acadians could not be trusted. In October of 1755 The British began loading Acadians aboard ships leaving for Louisiana, and France. A total of 6,000 Acadians were deported from mainland Acadia.

The Deportation The Seven Year War began in 1756 and the population on the Island escalated from 3,000 to 4,500 and by 1758 it reached 4,700. In August of 1758 Lord Rollo arrived on the Island after the fall of Louisbourg with orders to deport the entire population of the Island. 3,000 Acadians were deported out of 5,000 as some families hid in the woods. Two ships the Violet and the Duke William sunk on their voyage to France and most of the Acadians on the other ships died from disease aboard their ships.

Deportation Readings 1. The commander of the British forces that captured Louisbourg in 1758. 2. He was ordered to deport the residents of Ile St. Jean. 3. New fort to be built on Ile St. Jean. 4. The construction of the new fort was directed by this man.

Deportation Readings 5. The commander of the French garrison on Ile St. Jean. 6. Two ships that sank with Acadians from Ile St. Jean. 7. The number of Acadian settlers originally thought to be on the Island. 8. The actual number of settlers on the Island.

Deportation Readings 9. What happened to the buildings on Ile St. Jean at the time of the Deportation? 10.Are the deportations in the Maritimes the first of their kind? What evidence is there to support your answer? 11.What happened to the French military personnel that were stationed on Ile. St. Jean? Why was their fate different than the settlers?

The Saga of Alexis Doiron 1. What to the Acadians call the deportation? 2. Where was Alexis Doiron born? 3. Who was the first in his family to arrive in North America? 4. Who owned Acadia at the time of Alexis birth? 5. What fort was built in Alexis hometown?

6. Why did Alexis and his family leave his home? Where did they go? 7. How many people live in Grand Anse in 1752? How do we know this? 8. Who did Alexis marry in 1753? 9. What happened in 1752 that caused headaches for local administrators? 10.Whose responsibility was it for sending relief to Ile St. Jean?

11.Where did the deportees from mainland Acadia go? 12.Where did the deportees from Ile St. Jean end up going? 13.What does the author mean when he states a great many of the deportees were carried off by disease? 14.What happened to the 300 Acadians who were deported aboard the Duke William?

15.Where did the French Government send the Doiron family? Why? 16.What happened at their new community? 17.How did the Doiron family return to Ile St. Jean? What was the name of the ship? 18.Where did they settle and why? 19.Where did Alexis Doiron end up living out the rest of his life? 20.What was his occupation?

Questions 1. He would be given a grant to the eastern end of the Island in 1732. 2. Name of the company he belonged to. 3. He arrived with this many settlers. 4. Three problems this settlement dealt with. 5. 6. 7. The name of the settlement.

Questions 8. The Acadians were asked to take this to show their loyalty. 9. In 1749 many Acadians would flee to these two areas. 10. 11. Governor of the Island in 1749. 12. Number of settlers arriving on the Island in 1750. 13. Year the deportations began. 14. Number of Acadians deported from the mainland.

Questions 15. The man responsible for the deportation on the Island. 16. War that lasted from 1756-1763. 17. The Governor of the Island in 1756. 18. Year the British captured Louisbourg for the final time. 19. Two ships involved in the Island deportations. 20. 21. Ile St. Jean became this in 1763.

Questions What was the main purpose of Roma s settlement? Why did it fail? Why did the British feel they needed to deport the Acadians? How did the Oath of Loyalty affect the Island? Why was Louisbourg a key factor in the British conquest of North America? How did some Acadians escape deportation?

Review 1. June 29 th 1534 this man saw the Island. 2. In 1604 the Island was included in a grant to this man. 3. He was to do these two things with the Island. 4. 5. In 1653 he would be granted the Island and would write a book about its inhabitants. 6. In 1719 he would be granted the Island.

Review 7. Name of the French descendants living in the Maritimes. 8. This war lasted from 1701-1713. 9. Treaty ending the war. 10. France lost this piece of land as a result of the end of the war. 11. Three pieces of land kept by the French. 12. 13. 14. Fortress built by the French to protect their possessions.

Review 15. First permanent settler on the Island. 16. Area where 250 colonists settled in 1720. 17. Governor of the Island in 1725. 18. It took this long to clear land for farming. 19. Major obstacle in using land for farming after it was cleared. 20. This man was granted the Island in 1732. 21. He was a partner in this company.

Review 22. Bloodiest battle in Island history. 23. The Acadians were under pressure to sign this by the British. 24. War that lasted from 1744-48. 25. Treaty ending the war. 26. English fortress built on Chebucto Bay. 27. British General who arrived in 1749 promising to make life miserable for the Acadians. 28. French name of the Island.

Review 29. Date of the deportation of the Acadians from the mainland. 30. This many Acadians were deported from the mainland. 31. General who captured Fort Beausejour. 32. War that lasted from 1756-1763. 33. Two places Acadians were deported to. 34.

Review 35. Year the British captured Louisbourg for the final time. 36. Man responsible for the deportations on the Island. 37. This many people were deported from the Island. 38. Two ships involved in the deportation that sank. 39. 40. Many Islanders hid here to avoid deportation.

Review 41. Why was Louisbourg so strategically important? 42. What was the significance of the English building Halifax? 43. Why did the English feel the Acadians could not be trusted? 44. Why did the Acadians consider themselves neutral? 45. What main problem did the Acadians have with the Oath of Loyalty?

Review 46. What was the main problem with the French settlement plans? 47. Why didn t Cartier start a settlement when he arrived? 48. Why did Roma push his settlers so hard? Why might they have not responded so well to his work ethic? 49. Why did wars that began in Europe effect life in the Maritimes? 50. Why did the French government leave settlement up to private companies?

That is it. Review

Answers Settling 80 people the first year and 30 every year after. This failed because a) partners were becoming impatient with the lack of profit, b) crushed settlement enthusiasm with tough work ethic, c) passed a law that work was to continue on Sunday, priest objected and were fired, d) Mice, e) fires, f) sinking ships, & g) inability to attract more settlers.

The Acadians had always been neutral until the Battle at Fort Beausejour, when they fought against the English. The English didn t know where the Acadian s loyalty lay. Acadians would not swear to the Oath of Loyalty, therefore they moved to the Island and the population here rose.

It was the French s main fort and it was located on the mouth of the St. Lawrence The Acadians fled into the woods and hid. Some Acadians went to Quebec.