Edward Cornwallis, made a Groom of the…
June 1749 CE
He had sailed from England aboard HMS Sphinx on May 14, 1749, followed by a settlement expedition of fifteen vessels and about twenty-five hundred settlers.
Cornwallis arrives on June 21, 1749, at the harbor called Jipugtug by the Mi'kmaq and anglicized as Chebucto.
The rest of the fleet follows five days later.
There had been only one death during the passage due to careful preparations, good ventilation and good luck, a remarkable feat at a time when Transatlantic expeditions regularly lose large numbers to disease.
Cornwallis is immediately faced with a difficult decision: where to site the town.
Settlement organizers in England had recommended Point Pleasant due to its close access to the ocean and ease of defense.
His naval advisers opposed the Point Pleasant site due to its lack of shelter and shallows which would not allow ocean-going ships to dock.
They want the town located at the head of Bedford Basin, a sheltered location with deep water.
Others favor Dartmouth.
Cornwallis makes the decision to land the settlers and build the town at the site of present-day Downtown Halifax halfway up the harbor with deep water, protected by a defensible hill (later to be known as Citadel Hill).
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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