Fort Beauséjour, also referred to as Fort Cumberland, is a National Historic Site located in Aulac, New Brunswick, Canada. It is approximately 8 kilometres east of the town of Sackville on a ridge overlooking the Tantramar Marshes.
The region comprising the Tantramar Marshes on the Isthmus of Chignecto had been settled by French colonists during the 17th and 18th centuries - giving the name Beaubassin to this part of Acadia. Following the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713, the part of Acadia which is known today as peninsular Nova Scotia changed from French to British control, becoming the 14th British colony on the eastern seaboard and reverting to the name Nova Scotia used during British occupation.
The western limits between Nova Scotia and Acadia were not clear, although it was generally understood to be in the vicinity of Beaubassin. As tensions between France and Britain escalated in the 1740s, the territorial dispute over colonial limits became an important issue.
Lawrence's troops retreated but returned in September 1750 in greater numbers and began construction of a palisade fort on a ridge immediately east of the Missaguash River, believed to be the historic dividing line between Acadia and Nova Scotia since the Treaty of Utrecht was signed. The work on the fort proceeded rapidly and the facility was completed within weeks.
Work on the French fortress did not begin until the following spring, but by April 1751 construction was underway. When it was completed, Fort Beauséjour was a more substantial construction, given its earthworks. Together with Fort Beauséjour, Fort Lawrence guarded the frontier between French and British territory on the Isthmus of Chignecto until the Seven Years' War commenced in the middle part of the decade.
On June 4, 1755 the British conquest of all of France's North American territory began when a force of British regulars and New England militia attacked Fort Beauséjour from Fort Lawrence under command of Lt. Col. Robert Monckton. The British-led force took control of Fort Beauséjour by June 16, 1755, after which they changed the name to Fort Cumberland.
Acadian homes at Beaubasssin and elsewhere in the vicinity of the fort were burnt by British forces to prevent their return. As the British army was now using the more substantial facility at Fort Cumberland, the abandoned Fort Lawrence was burned on October 12, 1756 for this very reason.
In 1776, during the American Revolutionary War, Fort Cumberland and its British garrison repelled rebel attacks from local guerillas led by the American sympathizer Jonathan Eddy.
Acadia | Forts in Canada | History of New Brunswick | History of Nova Scotia
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"Fort Beauséjour".
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