Mapping the Acadian deportations | Canadian Geographic
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On July 28, 1755, British Governor Charles Lawrence ordered the deportation of all Acadians from Nova Scotia who refused to take an oath of allegiance to Britain. Over the following 13 years, approximately 7,000 Acadians were sent to numerous points along the Atlantic coast of North America, some to France and others to the Caribbean. Thousands died in transit, succumbing to illness in the filthy conditions of the ships. Those that did make it to their destinations were refugees, and often unwelcome, forced to wander in search of a home (some settled in Louisiana, helping to form the Cajun culture).
Acadia, referring to the region surrounding the Bay of Fundy (or Baie Francaise, as it was known at the time) in Nova Scotia, was settled by French colonists in the 17th century. It was isolated from the larger French settlement in the St. Lawrence Valley and as such, operated mostly autonomously, receiving few immigrants from France after 1671 and forming close ties with the Mi’kmaq. As tensions mounted between the French and British for control of what is now Canada, Acadia was plundered numerous times by the British, whose New England colony was situated just on the other side of the Gulf of Maine.
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