Grand-Pré, Nova Scotia
Grand-Pré | |
---|---|
Community | |
Grand-Pré National Historic Site | |
Location of Grand-Pré in Nova Scotia | |
Coordinates: 45°03′43″N 64°10′32″W / 45.061814°N 64.175526°W | |
Country | Canada |
Province | Nova Scotia |
County | Kings County |
Established | 1680 |
Electoral Districts Federal |
Kings County |
Provincial | Kings County |
Elevation | 0- 92 m m (-302 ft ft) |
Time zone | AST (UTC-4) |
• Summer (DST) | ADT (UTC-3) |
Postal code(s) | B4P |
Area code(s) | 902 |
NTS Map | 021N08 |
GNBC Code | DALZZ |
Website | Société Promotion Grand-Pré - The National Historic Site |
Official name | Landscape of Grand Pré |
Type | Cultural |
Criteria | v, vi |
Designated | 2012 (36th session) |
Reference no. | 1404 |
Region | Europe and North America |
Grand-Pré is a Canadian rural community in Kings County, Nova Scotia. Its French name translates to "Great Meadow" and the community lies at the eastern edge of the Annapolis Valley several kilometres east of the town of Wolfville on a peninsula jutting into the Minas Basin surrounded by extensive dyked farm fields, framed by the Gaspereau and Cornwallis Rivers. The community was made famous by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's poem Evangeline and is today home to the Grand-Pré National Historic Site. On June 30, 2012, the Landscape of Grand-Pré was named a World Heritage Site by UNESCO.[1]
History
Grand-Pré was founded in about 1680 by Pierre Mellanson an Acadian settler who traveled east from Pierre Dugua, Sieur de Mons's original settlement at Port-Royal (see Annapolis Royal and the Habitation). Pierre, an Acadian of French Huguenot and English extraction, had arrived in Port Royal with Sir Thomas Temple in the 1650s when Acadia was under English control.[2] The fertility of the soils and wealth of other resources in the area had been known to the French since the early part of the century when Samuel de Champlain, de Mont's cartographer, had surveyed the region. The settlers quickly employed their dyke building technology to the vast salt marshes; effectively reclaiming several thousand acres of productive farm land. The farms and the population grew quickly, making Grand-Pré the principal settlement in Acadia. Settlements spread from Grand Pré around the Minas Basin, collectively becoming known as Les Mines or Minas after the copper deposits surveyed by de Mons at the entrance to the Basin. By the mid-1680s the population was sufficient to support a church and the parish of Saint-Charles de Mine was formed.[3]
Demographics
Grand-Pré has no official status, there are only specific data for subdivision D of Kings County, which includes the area between Hantsport and Wolfville, where Grand-Pré and a few other villages exist. In this area, there were 5499 inhabitants in 2006, compared to 5167 in 2001, an increase of 6.4%. The average age is 44.5, compared to 41.8 for the province. 84.8% of the population is older than 15 years, which is in the provincial average.[4]
With regard to language, 96.6% of the inhabitants are English-speaking, 1.4% are francophone and 2.0% are allophones. The francophone population is anglicized as 99.3% of the population speak English at home. With respect to knowledge of official languages, 7.2% of the population can communicate in french at various levels, the rest being unilingual anglophone.[4]
Queen Anne's War
Raid on Grand-Pré (1704)
During Queen Anne's War, New Englander Ranger Benjamin Church, in retaliation for the French Raid on Deerfield, burned the village and broke some of the dykes in the Raid on Grand Pré.[5] In this raid, Church and his rangers got stuck on the mud flats of Baie Francais (Bay of Fundy), which gave the Mi'kmaq and Acadians time to position themselves to fiercely defend the village. They were eventually overwhelmed and Church burned the village and the fields.
King George's War
Battle of Grand Pré (1747)
During King George's War, a French force led by Jean-Baptiste Nicolas Roch de Ramezay defeated a larger British force in a night raid at the Battle of Grand Pré. This battle was the most significant and bloodiest victory for the French in Acadia. The village, however, remained in British control once the French retreated.
Father Le Loutre's War
Acadian Exodus (1749-1755)
During Father Le Loutre's War, the Acadians at Grand-Pré played a significant role in supporting the Acadian Exodus out of mainland Nova Scotia, which started in 1749. Grand-Pré willingly responded to the call from Le Loutre for basic food stuffs. The bread basket of the region, they raised wheat and other grains, produced flour in no fewer than eleven mills, and sustained herds of several thousand head of cattle, sheep and hogs. Regular cattle droves made their way over a road from Cobequid to Tatamagouche for the supply of Fort Beauséjour, Louisbourg, and settlements on Ile St. Jean (Prince Edward Island). Other exports went by sea from Minas Basin to Isthmus of Chignecto or to the mouth of the Saint John River, carried in Acadian vessels by Acadian middlemen.[6] The Acadians from Grand-Pré also offered their labour to those at Isthmus of Chignecto to build a church and dykes.
Siege of Grand-Pré (1749)
The British built Fort Vieux Logis in the area during Father Le Loutre’s War, which was attacked by the Acadians and Mi'kmaq in the Siege of Grand Pre. The siege lasted for a week and the 300 natives took prisoners who remained in captivity for almost two years. Eventually the Mi'kmaq retreated.
French and Indian War
Bay of Fundy Campaign (1755)
During the French and Indian War (the North American theatre of the Seven Years' War), the Acadians were expelled from Grand-Pré during the Bay of Fundy Campaign (1755). There were various British soldiers who kept a journal of the deportation from Grand-Pré such as Lt. Col. John Winslow and Jeremiah Bancroft. The site of Grand-Pré during the expulsion was later immortalized by American poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow with his epic poem Evangeline.[7]
Acadians from Grand Pré were dispersed in many locations and some eventually returned to other parts of the Canadian Maritimes such as Nova Scotia, Newfoundland and New Brunswick. Many Acadians expelled from the Grand Pré area eventually settled in the New England States and travelling overland to South Louisiana in the United States after being dropped on the Atlantic coast. In Louisiana, the term Cajun evolved from the name Acadian.
New England Planters
After the deportation of the Acadians, the vacant lands were resettled by New England Planters in 1760 and renamed Horton Township. A large rectilinear grid was laid out at Grand-Pré but the local farming population preferred to settle along the upland ridge in a spread out fashion, much like the previous residents of the area, the Acadians, had done. Over time, merchants and shop owners congregated at nearby Wolfville instead, leaving Grand-Pré to continue as a farming community. One of the Planter descendants was Sir Robert Borden, the eighth Prime Minister of Canada, who was born in Grand-Pré in 1854. Grand-Pré continued as a rich and productive but small farming community until the 1920s when the Dominion Atlantic Railway developed the Grand-Pré memorial park to attract tourists. While agriculture remained Grand-Pré's major industry, the park made the community a tourism destination as well as a memorial to the Acadian people. The Park eventually became a National Historic Site and in 1957 was purchased by the Canadian Park Service.[8]
Today
Today, Grand-Pré is the home the Grand-Pré National Historic Site which is now a national park administered by Parks Canada to commemorate the Acadian people and their deportation. The Covenanter Church at Grand-Pré is the oldest existing Presbyterian church in Nova Scotia.[9] One of Nova Scotia's best known wineries, Domaine de Grand-Pré, is located in the community. Grand-Pré is also Canada's first designated Historic Rural District. The Just Us! coffee company headquarters is located in the village and is something of a tourist attraction. Evangeline Beach is a famous stopover for thousands of migrating shore birds and is also a fine vantage point for watching the ebb and flow of the world's highest tides.
References
- ↑ http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/1404 UNESCO World Heritage Sites entry for Grand-Pré
- ↑ Edmé Rameau de Saint-Père. Une Colonie Féodale en Amérique (L'Acadie, 1604-1610). Paris, Librairie Plan, 1889.
- ↑ Stephen Bujold. Saint-Joseph de la rivière aux Canards: deuxième ou dernière pariosse fondée avant le Grand dérangement par les Acadiennes du basin des Mines (Minas Basin, NS)?. In Acadiensis. Université du Nouveau-Brunswick, Fredericton, 2002.
- 1 2 (French) Statistique Canada - Profils des communautés de 2006 - Kings, Subd. D
- ↑ Johnston, A.J.B. (2004). Grand-Pré, Heart of Acadie. Halifax, NS: Nimbus Publishing. p. 22. ISBN 1-55109-479-7.
- ↑ Patterson, in John Ried. (ed)Atlantic Canada Before Confederation. 1994, p. 141
- ↑ Johnston, A.J.B. (2004). Grand-Pré, Heart of Acadie. Halifax, NS: Nimbus Publishing. pp. 33–69.
- ↑ Johnston, A.J.B. (2004). Grand-Pré, heart of Acadie. Halifax, NS: Nimbus Publishing. pp. 71–75.
- ↑ http://www.htns.ca/quarterly/articles/church.html
Attractions and external links
- Société Promotion Grand-Pré - The National Historic Site
- Grand-Pré National Historic Site
- Landscape of Grand Pré World Heritage Site
- Acadian Ancestral Home - a Repository for Acadian History & Genealogy including Grand-Pré
Coordinates: 45°6′18.14″N 64°17′55.26″W / 45.1050389°N 64.2986833°W