The Mi’kmaq had attacked on two more…
May 1751 CE
Three months later, on May 13, 1751, Acadian Joseph Broussard leads sixty Mi'kmaq and Acadians to attack Dartmouth again, in what will become known as the "Dartmouth Massacre".
The raiding party comes down the Shuebenacadie River from Chignecto.
Broussard and the others kill twenty settlers and more are taken prisoner.
They burn thirty-six homes.
Captain William Clapham and sixty soldiers are on duty and fire from the blockhouse, which is located at the point overlooking Dartmouth Cove.
The raiding party tortures and mutilates the sergeant and wounds three other soldiers.
Captain Alexander Murray together with about forty soldiers leaves Halifax in three vessels and tries to track them down for miles but most of the raiding party has dispersed.
The British report they had killed six Mi'kmaq warriors, but were only able to retrieve one scalp that they took to Halifax.
Those at a camp at Dartmouth Cove, led by John Wisdom, assist the settlers.
Upon returning to their camp the next day they find the Mi'kmaq had also raided their camp and taken a prisoner.
The Mi'kmaq have scalped all the settlers.
The British take the settlers' remains to Halifax for burial in the Old Burying Ground. (John George Pyke had survived the raid but his father of the same name did not.)
Locations
Groups
Abenaki people (Amerind tribe)
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Maliseet, or Wolastoqiyik, people (Amerind tribe)
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Mi'kmaq people (Amerind tribe)
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Christians, Roman Catholic
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Wabanaki Confederacy
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Passamaquoddy (Amerind tribe)
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New France (French Colony)
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Anglicans (Episcopal Church of England)
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France, (Bourbon) Kingdom of
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Massachusetts, Province of (English Crown Colony)
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Britain, Kingdom of Great
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Nova Scotia (British Colony)
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