A
Rose Across The Ocean -
The Yorkshire Emigration
The Tantramar
region of Eastern Canada has a deep connection
to our part of the world. Between 1772 and
1776 over 1000 people left Yorkshire for a
new life in the new world.
A descendant
of these pioneers AL SMITH tells the history
of the region, and the story of Governor Michael
Franklin and family ties that live on today.
_____________________
The
early settlement history of Tantramar is a
fascinating tapestry of human struggle dating
back more than 300 years for people of European
descent and more that 3000 years for aboriginal
peoples. Prince Henry Sinclair, from the Orkney
Islands off northern Scotland, may have been
the first European to visit the area. Scanty
evidence suggests that Prince Henry traveled
through Chignecto in the summer of 1398 following
traditional travelways connecting the Northumberland
Strait and the Bay of Fundy.
Trading between native communities at Chignecto
and the french settlement at Port Royal was
initiated by Father Baird in 1612, but it
was not until 1672 that french farmers first
established a permanent settlement at the
village of Beaubassin - now Fort Lawrence.
By the mid 1700's the french Acadian population
of Chignecto had grown to 3000-4000. British
forces captured Fort Beausejour in June of
1755 and shortly thereafter most Acadian
residents
were expelled from the area.
Continuing harassment of British military
installations continued by French guerillas
and their Micmac allies until the fall of
Quebec in 1759 which ended all hopes that
Acadians may have been able to repossess their
lands. The end of guerilla warfare thus lead
to a greater sense of security for potential
settlers.
Nova Scotia's Governor Lawrence issued
a proclamation in 1758 inviting New Englanders
to come to Nova Scotia and take up free land
grants. Military personnel completing their
enlistments at Forts Cumberland and Lawrence
were offered land grants in 1760 and some
stayed to establish homesteads. The first
major wave of English settlement occurred
in 1760-61 when 25 families arrived from New
England. Family names such as Tower, Estabrooks,
Cole, Finney, Briggs, Seaman, Robinson, Brownell,
Casey , Ward and others came to Chignecto
- largely from Rhode Island. Additional waves
of immigrants from New England arrived in
1762-63 (Oulton, Tingley, Ayer, Richardson
and others) plus a group of 13 Baptists from
Swansea Massachusetts.
The Townships of Sackville, Cumberland and
Amherst were laid out in 1763 each containing
100,000 acres. The first formal land grants
were issued in 1765. The Township of Sackville
had a population of 349 persons in 1767, nearly
all from New England.
Settlement
of the granted lands did not proceed as quickly
as hoped by British authorities and some
New Englanders were wanting to sell their
properties to return home. Thus in 1771 Lt.
Governor Michael Franklin went to north Yorkshire
to seek immigrants for Nova Scotia. During
the following four years (1772-1775) over
20 ships carrying more than a 1000 settlers
left Yorkshire bound for Nova Scotia. In contrast
to the New Englanders, the Yorkshiremen were
mostly tenant farmers in old England and left
for Nova Scotia "in order to seek a better
livelihood" or "due to rents being
raised by my landlord".
England
was in an economic depression at the time
and tenant farmers received very low wages
and had no hope of purchasing their own lands.
Thus the attractiveness of purchasing lands
in the new world was a -2- powerful inducement
to uprooting family and possessions and making
the perilous 6-8 week crossing to Nova Scotia.
For the most part Yorkshiremen did not receive
grants from the government, but they came
with money and purchased their lands from
New England settlers who were beginning to
leave the Province.
The first shipload of Yorkshire immigrants
to arrive was in 1772 on board the Duke
of Yorke which left Liverpool on 16 March
with 62 passengers on board, arriving at Fort
Cumberland on 21 May 1772. On board were Charles
Dixon, Thomas Anderson, George Bulmer, John
Trenholm and others. During the period 1773-1775
additional vessels arrived with the largest
number coming in 1774 when 9 passenger vessels
carried settlers from old England to Nova
Scotia.
Undoubtedly
the immigration would have been larger had
it not been for the uprising in the American
colonies in 1776. Nonetheless, the entry of
1000+ Yorkshiremen into Nova Scotia, at a
time when the entire population of the province
(which included all of present day New Brunswick)
was just 17,000, had a major impact on the
early settlement history of the region.
The Chignecto Isthmus felt the greatest
impact of the immigration. Settling at
Amherst were: Black, Freeze, Robinson, Lusby,
Oxley, Foster and others; at Nappan, Maccan,
River Philip: Brown, Ripley, Shepley, Pipes,
Coates, Harrison, Fenwick & others: Westmorland
Point, Point de Bute and Fort Lawrence: Keilor,
Siddall, Wells, Smith Lowerson, Truemen, Chapman,
Donkin (actually from Northumberland), Read,
Carter, King, Trenholm, Dobson and others;
and at Sackville: Dixon, Bowser, Atkinson,
Anderson, Bulmer, Harper, Patterson, Fawcett,
Richardson, Humphrey, Wry, and others. Aside
from the Chignecto region up to 15% of the
families settled in Annapolis County and included
the names: Clark, Wilson, Oliver, Milner,
Mills, Halliday, Jefferson and others.
The settlement generally known as "the
Yorkshire Immigration" has had a profound
effect on settlement patterns in eastern Canada,
and may have significantly contributed to
the political landscape of the Maritimes.
Loyal Yorkshiremen helped British forces at
Fort Cumberland (now Fort Beausejour National
Historic Park) quell the Eddy Rebellion of
1776. A monument at Fort Beausejour, erected
in 1927 by the Historic Sites and Monuments
Board, pays tribute to role played by these
early settlers (see picture below).
The
Yorkshire pioneers were staunch Wesleyan Methodists
and were responsible for establishing the
first Methodist chapels in Canada. The establishment
of Mount Allison University is directly linked
to the Immigration. Thus was fitting that
in August, 2000 over 3000 descendants gathered
on the Tantramar to celebrate this historic
event, 225 years after the completion of the
migration.
AL
SMITH

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Suggested
Reading
The Chignecto Isthmus and Its First Settlers
- Howard Trueman, 1902
History
of Sackville - W.C. Milner, 1934 (reprinted
1994)
Tamped
Clay and Saltmarsh Hay - R Cunningham and
J Prince, 1976
A
History of Fort Lawrence - G Trenholm, M Norden,
J Trenholm,
1985
The Chignecto Connexion - P Penner, 1990
Here
Stays Good Yorkshire- Will R Bird, 1945
A
Century at Chignecto - Will R Bird, 1928
Planters
and Pioneers - E C Wright,1978
Footprints
in the Marsh Mud - James Snowdon
A Stranger In A Strange Place (letters of
Nathaniel Smith) - Tantramar Heritage Trust,
Aug. 2000
BUY
TASTES OF THE TANTRAMAR COOKBOOK
