FORTRESS
OF LOUISBOURG NATIONAL HISTORIC SITE OF CANADA (N.S.)
FORTRESS
HISTORY
Step back in time to 1744! Experience Louisbourg, a thriving seaport and capital of Ile
Royale (Cape Breton Island).The Fortress of Louisbourg was one of the busiest
harbours in North America and one of France's key centres of trade and military strength in
the New World. Today, the Site is an exciting and entertaining lesson in history. Discover
its many secrets!
The French came to Louisbourg in 1713, after ceding Acadia and Newfoundland to the
British by the terms of the Treaty of Utrecht, which ended the War of the Spanish
Succession. France's only remaining possessions in what is now AtlanticCanada were the
islands of Cape Breton and Prince Edward, which were then called Isle Royale and Isle
Saint-Jean. The French used these islands as a base to continue the lucrative cod fishery
of the Grand Banks. In 1719 they began to construct at Louisbourg a fortified town which
was only completed on the eve of the first siege in 1745. The town and settlement along
the harbour shore soon became a thriving community.
The cod fishery accounted for
most of Isle Royale's prosperity. Dried before export, the fish was salted and laid on
stages which lined the beaches of Louisbourg and its outports. Louisbourg became a hub of
commerce, trading in manufactures and various materials imported from France, Quebec, the
West Indies and New England.
One might think that the fortress would be prepared for any onslaught. Yet, while the
harbour was well defended, the main landward defences were commanded by a series of low
hills, some dangerously close to the fortifications; all provided excellent locations for
siege batteries.
The first attack came in 1745 following a declaration of war between Britain and
France. Charged with the fervour of a religious crusade, and informed that the fortress
was in disrepair with its poorly supplied troops on the verge of mutiny, the New
Englanders mounted an assault on Louisbourg. Within 46 days of the invasion the fortress
was captured. To the chagrin of the New Englanders, only three years later the town was
restored to the French by the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle. In 1758 Louisbourg was besieged a
second time. Without a strong navy to patrol the sea beyond its walls, Louisbourg was
impossible to defend. Attacking with 16,000 troops supported by 150 ships, a British army
captured the fortress in seven weeks. Determined that Louisbourg would never again become
a fortified French base, the British demolished the fortress walls.
In 1961 the Government of Canada began a $25 million dollar project aimed at
reconstructing approximately one-quarter of the original town and fortifications. Within
this area the buildings, yards, gardens and streets are being recreated as they were
during the 1740s, immediately preceding Louisbourg's first siege.
The work at Louisbourg has required an inter-disciplinary research effort.
Archaeological excavation has yielded millions of artifacts as well as the ruins of
fortifications and buildings. Some 750,000 pages of documents and 500 maps and plans have
been copied from archives in France, England, Scotland, the United States and Canada. The
historical evidence reveals much about life at Louisbourg and provides an excellent base
for the study of the French in North America.
-
Our Interpretation Is Based On Those Aspects Of a Site's History That
Are Of National Significance
-
Louisbourg in the Anglo-French Rivalry in North America, 1713- 68
From its establishment by the French in 1713 until the withdrawal of the last British
troops in 1768, Louisbourg played an important role in the Anglo-French struggle for
hegemony in North America. For three decades after its founding Louisbourg enjoyed peace
and prosperity, though the threat of war always hung over the fortified town. In 1745 an
army of New Englanders, supported by a British naval squadron, captured Louisbourg after a
46-day siege. The town was returned to the French by treaty, and then besieged again in
1758. The assault lasted seven weeks, pitting a combined British army and naval force of
27,000 against 7,000 French defenders (soldiers and sailors). In the end the French
stronghold and naval base fell again, opening the way for the British conquest of the rest
of New France.
-
The Louisbourg Fisheries, 1713-58
The cod fishery was the foundation on which the economy of Louisbourg and Ile Royale
(Cape Breton) rested. The fishery, conducted both in shore and offshore, and organized
into two seasons, dominated the colonial economy and was of great significance
internationally. Fish, preserved by salting and drying, was an important foodstuff in
Europe. Competition for fish stocks often led to international rivalries. The per capita
value of Ile Royale's dried cod exports in 1737 was about eight times greater than the
value of Canada's fur trade during the same period. Major export markets were in France
and the West Indies.
-
Louisbourg and Its Trade, 1713-58
Thanks to its spacious, ice-free and well-protected harbour, its lucrative fishery, and
its near-perfect location on the Atlantic edge of North America, Louisbourg quickly
developed into an important centre of merchant trade. Ocean-going vessels from France, the
West Indies, and Canada - and coastal ships from New England and Acadia - used Louisbourg
as a trade and transshipment centre. An average of 150 vessels a year sailed into
Louisbourg harbour, making it the busiest seaport in New France and one of the busiest in
North America. Louisbourg's importance as a trading centre was demonstrated by its many
warehouses,careening wharf, admiralty court, harbour defences and what was Canada's first
lighthouse.
-
Society and Culture at Louisbourg, 1713-68
In its heyday Louisbourg was a town of several thousand inhabitants. It was a major
colonial settlement on the Atlantic edge of North America. Though part of New France,
Louisbourg society differed from that of the French communities along the St. Lawrence
River. Its economic orientations, demographic compositions, and geographical location
created a society that was distinctive within the context of New France. There was no
seigneurial regime, the fur trade was negligible, the institutional power of the church
was minimal, males greatly outnumbered females, and there were numbers of non-French
peoples (mostly Basques, German and Swiss) living and working alongside the French
majority. Nonetheless, the colony's cultural life was very much a part of overall French
civilization. Louisbourg was not in the hands of the French for this entire period,
however. Twice, the English occupied the fortress, from 1745-1749 and 1758-1768. They too
brought their societal traditions and culture with them.
-
Preservation and Commemoration, 1767-1980
In the nearly two and one-half centuries since Louisbourg was captured in 1758 the
fortress' history has been officially commemorated more than a dozen times, and in many
different ways. The first monument was erected in 1767 by the British. In the years that
followed, a series of plaques, cairns and other statuary have been erected to mark
different aspects of the history of the place. Various private societies have raised
monuments and the Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada has, at different times,
put up six different plaques. During the 1930s a museum was built and ruins and streets
were uncovered. Beginning in the 1960s, nearly one-quarter of the original walled town was
fully reconstructed. This initiative required in-depth, inter-disciplinary research, is a
model that has had great influence on the Canadian heritage field. It has also produced an
historical and archaeological data base on one particular 18th-century settlement that
offers an unrivalled "window on the past".

Site
Policy/Policy du Site/Copyright/© |