Lunenburg is protected during the war by…
October 1755 CE
These forts have been erected to protect the town from raids by French warships and from attacks by Acadians and natives.
The first church in the community, St. John's Anglican Church (Lunenburg), had been established in 1754.
During the Expulsion of the Acadians, specifically the Bay of Fundy Campaign of 1755, a contingent of Foreign Protestants under British protection rounds up Acadian cattle at Grand Pre and drives the herd back to Lunenburg, where the livestock is divided among the new settlers.
In the fall of 1755, fifty original inhabitants (likely "Old [Paul] Labrador" and his Métis family) that are still on the Lunenburg Peninsula are deported, first to Georges Island (Nova Scotia) and then on to North Carolina.
Locations
People
Groups
Germans
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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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Lutheranism
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New France (French Colony)
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Anglicans (Episcopal Church of England)
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Huguenots (the “Reformed”)
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Calvinists
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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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North Carolina, Province of (British Colony)
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