Scotia
Historical Society, vol. iv, p. 41.] These savages pitched their
habitations not far from the fort, and thereafter the garrison suffered
less from the Micmac and Abnaki allies of the French.
The Acadians were in revolt; and as long as they cherished the belief
that their countrymen would recover Acadia, all attempts to secure their
allegiance to Queen Anne proved unavailing. At length, in April 1713,
the Treaty of Utrecht set at rest the question of the ownership of the
country. Cape Breton, Ile St Jean (Prince Edward Island), and other
islands in the Gulf were left in the hands of the French. But
Newfoundland and 'all Nova Scotia or Acadia, with its ancient
boundaries, as also the city of Port Royal, now called Annapolis Royal,'
passed to the British crown.
CHAPTER III
THE OATH OF ALLEGIANCE
We have now to follow a sequence of events leading up to the calamity
to be narrated in a later chapter. By the Treaty of Utrecht the old king,
Louis XIV, had obtained certain guarantees for his subjects in Acadia.
It was provided that 'they may have liberty to remove themselves
within a year to any other place with all their movable effects'; and that
'those who are willing to remain therein and to be subject to the
kingdom of Britain are to enjoy the free exercise of their religion.' And
these terms were confirmed by a warrant of Queen Anne addressed to
Nicholson, under date of June 23, 1713. [Footnote: 'Trusty and
Well-beloved, We greet you Well! Whereas Our Good Brother the
Most Christian King hath at Our desire released from imprisonment on
board His Galleys, such of His subjects as were detained there on
account of their professing the Protestant religion, We being willing to
show by some mark of Our Favour towards His subjects how kindly we
take His compliance therein, have therefore thought fit hereby to
Signifie Our Will and Pleasure to you that you permit and allow such
of them as have any lands or Tenements in the Places under your
Government in Acadie and Newfoundland, that have been or are to be
yielded to Us by Vertue of the late Treaty of Peace, and are Willing to
Continue our Subjects to retain and Enjoy their said Lands and
Tenements without any Lett or Molestation as fully and freely as other
our Subjects do or may possess their Lands and Estates or to sell the
same if they shall rather Chuse to remove elsewhere--And for so doing
this shall be your Warrant, And so we bid you fare well. Given at our
Court at Kensington the 23rd day of June 1713 in the Twelfth Year of
our Reign.'--Public Archives, Canada. Nova Scotia A, vol. iv, p. 97.]
The status of the Acadians under the treaty, reinforced by this warrant,
seems to be sufficiently clear. If they wished to become British subjects,
which of course implied taking the oath of allegiance, they were to
enjoy all the privileges of citizenship, not accorded at that time to
Catholics in Great Britain, as well as the free exercise of their religion.
But if they preferred to remove to another country within a year, they
were to have that liberty.
The French authorities were not slow to take advantage of this part of
the treaty. In order to hold her position in the New World and assert her
authority, France had transferred the garrison which she had formerly
maintained at Placentia, Newfoundland, to Cape Breton. This island
she had renamed Ile Royale, and here she was shortly to rear the great
fortress of Louisbourg. It was to her interest to induce the Acadians to
remove to this new centre of French influence. In March 1713,
therefore, the French king intimated his wish that the Acadians should
emigrate to Ile Royale; every inducement, indeed, must be offered them
to settle there; though he cautioned his officers that if any of the
Acadians had already taken the oath of allegiance to Great Britain,
great care must be exercised to avoid scandal.
Many Acadians, then, on receiving attractive offers of land in Ile
Royale, applied to the English authorities for permission to depart. The
permission was not granted. It was first refused by Governor Vetch on
the ground that he was retiring from office and was acting only in the
absence of Colonel Nicholson, who had been recently appointed
governor. The truth is that the English regarded with alarm the removal
of practically the entire population from Nova Scotia. The governor of
Ile Royale intervened, and sent agents to Annapolis Royal to make a
formal demand on behalf of the Acadians, presenting in support of his
demand the warrant of Queen Anne. The inhabitants, it was said,
wished to leave Nova Scotia and settle in
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