The 'Isthmus of Chignecto' is an
isthmus bordering the
Maritime provinces of
New Brunswick and
Nova Scotia which connects the
Nova Scotia peninsula with
North America.
The isthmus separates the waters of
Chignecto Bay, a sub-basin of the
Bay of Fundy, from those of the
Northumberland Strait, an arm of the
Gulf of St. Lawrence. The isthmus is generally acknowledged to stretch from its northerly point at an area in the
Petitcodiac River valley near the city of
Dieppe, New Brunswick to its southerly point at an area near the town of
Amherst, Nova Scotia. At its narrowest point between
Amherst and
Tidnish, the isthmus measures 24 kilometres wide.
Geography
The majority of the lands comprising the isthmus have very low elevation above sea level with a large portion comprising the
Tantramar Marshes, as well as tidal rivers, mud flats, inland freshwater marshes, coastal saltwater marshes, and mixed forest. Several prominent ridges rise above the surrounding low land and marshes along the Bay of Fundy shore, namely the Fort Lawrence Ridge (in Nova Scotia), the Aulac Ridge, the Sackville Ridge, and the Memramcook Ridge (in New Brunswick).
History
Prior to British control of present-day mainland Nova Scotia (after
1713), the isthmus was host to a growing
Acadian farming community called Beaubassin. The isthmus became the location of the historic dividing line between the British colony of Nova Scotia and the French territory. French military forces established
Fort Beausejour on the Aulac Ridge in
1749 in response to the British construction of an outpost called
Fort Lawrence on the ridge immediately to the east - between the two ridges was a tidal stream called the
Missaquash River which France generally accepted to be the boundary between the French and British territories, despite the fact that an official boundary had never been determined. France also constructed
Fort Gaspereau on the shores of the Northumberland Strait to effectively control travel on the isthmus.
On
May 22,
1755 a fleet of three warships and thirty-three transports carrying 2,100 soldiers sailed from
Boston, Massachusetts, landing at Fort Lawrence on
June 3,
1755. The following day the British forces
attacked Fort Beausejour and on
June 16,
1755 the French forces evacuated to Fort Gaspereaux, arriving on
June 24,
1755 and onward to
Fortress Louisbourg where they were re-garrisoned on
July 6,
1755. This battle proved to be one of the key victories in the
Seven Years' War which saw Britain gain control of all of
Nouvelle France and
l'Acadie.
Fort Beausejour was renamed Fort Cumberland and replaced Fort Lawrence due to its substantial construction over the British post. The British forces set about burning the French villages at Beaubassin and rounded up the settlers as part of the
1755 Acadian expulsion (the
Great Upheaval).
In
1758 Governor Lawrence issued a proclamation inviting
New Englanders to come to Nova Scotia and settle on vacated Acadian lands and take up free land grants. He also extended this invitation to New England soldiers whose enlistments had expired and were planning on returning home. These people became known as the
New England Planters.
Following the war in
1763 the isthmus saw three 100,000 acre (400 km²) townships created which took the names of Amherst,
Sackville and Cumberland.
The New England settlement drive was not immediately successful, and after a few small groups arrived and 1760 and 1761 some families returned home and the British government decided to look elsewhere for settlers. Between
1772 and
1775 over twenty ships carried upwards of 1,000 settlers from
Yorkshire,
England to the new townships. The descendants of the
Yorkshire Emigration continue to be prominent in the areas development and history.
Eddy Rebellion
:''See more at
Battle of Fort Cumberland.''
The
American Revolutionary War saw a semi-organized, yet unsuccessful, attempt by local
guerrilla and American forces led by Jonathan Eddy and John Allan to take Fort Cumberland and the Tantramar region in October and November
1776. Supported by
George Washington, but with only limited personnel, Eddy's attacking force consisted of "about twenty" Americans from Machias, 27 Yankee settlers from the Saint John River valley, 140 Malisseet and four Mi'kmaq, 21 Acadians from the Memramcook Valley and from the Allen family farm, and about 120 farmers from Cumberland, Onslow, and Pictou.
[1]
After a three-week-long siege of Fort Cumberland, the invaders were routed by British forces dispatched from
Halifax and
Windsor. The Eddy Rebellion proved to be disastrous for the Acadians rebels. Eight of their houses and barns at Inverma Farm, Jolicoeur, were put to the torch. They had been tenants of Willian Allan since their release as prisoners from Fort Cumberland in 1764. William Allan was the father of John Allan, leader of the Nova Scotia rebels. With winter coming, the Acadians were forced to relocate with their families to Memramcook.
[2] Eddy and Allan and many of the other English-speaking rebels were also expelled, but they were rewarded for their efforts by the American government with land grants in Maine and Ohio.
Transportation
A key surface transportation route, the Isthmus of Chignecto was host to French and later British military roads across the Tantramar Marshes and along the strategic ridges since the
1600s.
In
1872, construction of the
Intercolonial Railway of Canada saw the mainline between
Halifax, Nova Scotia and
Moncton, New Brunswick built across the southern portion of the isthmus, skirting the edge of the Bay of Fundy while crossing the Tantramar Marshes between
Amherst, Nova Scotia and
Sackville, New Brunswick.
In the
1880s a railway line was built from Sackville across the isthmus to
Port Elgin and on to
Cape Tormentine which played host to an
iceboat service and in
1917 a ferry service to
Prince Edward Island was established to connect with the
Prince Edward Island Railway.
The isthmus also saw one of Canada's earliest mega-projects in the
1880s when a broad
gauge railway was built from the port of Amherst to the Northumberland Strait at
Tidnish for carrying small cargo and passenger ships. This ship railway was never successfully operational and construction was abandoned shortly before completion.
In the
1950s, while construction of the
St. Lawrence Seaway was underway, a group of industrialists and politicians from the Maritimes called for a
Chignecto Canal to be built as a shortcut for ocean-going ships travelling between
Saint John and U.S. ports to the
Great Lakes to avoid travelling around Nova Scotia. The project never progressed beyond the survey stage.
The
Trans-Canada Highway was built on the isthmus in the early
1960s, connecting with Nova Scotia and
Prince Edward Island, parallelling existing
Canadian National Railway trackage.
References
1. Ernest Clarke, ''The siege of Fort Cumberland, 1776'', McGill Queen's University Press, 1995. pp. 215-
2. Régis Brun, De Grand Pré à Kouchibougouac, Éditions d'Acadie,Moncton, 1982, p. 59-60
External links
★
History of Chignecto
★
The Eddy Rebellion - Chignecto and the American Revolutionary War
★
Acadian Ancestral Home - The Acadians who fought under Jonathan Eddy in the American Revolution - repository for Acadian history & genealogy
★
The Chignecto Ship Railway