Battle of Fort Beauséjour

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Battle of Fort Beauséjour
Part of the Seven Years' War

Lewis Parker's Camp of the British 43rd Regiment at Fort Beauséjour features grenadiers and regular infantry at the siege.
Date June 3-16, 1755
Location Near Sackville, New Brunswick
Result British victory
Belligerents
Flag of France Kingdom of France Flag of the United KingdomKingdom of Great Britain
Commanders
Louis Du Pont Duchambon de Vergor Robert Monckton
Strength
Unknown 2,000
Casualties and losses
162 dead, wounded, or captured Unknown

The Battle of Fort Beauséjour can be considered as being the first major British-American offensive action of the French and Indian War (Seven Years' War in North America). Taking place from June 3-16, it was a British victory.

Contents

[edit] Battle

In June 1755, Lieutenant Colonel Robert Monckton, commanding a fleet of 31 transports and three Royal Navy warships carrying 270 British regular troops and 2,000 New England militia, entered Cumberland Basin. The ships dropped anchor at the mouth of the Missaguash River and the British forces were able to land unopposed. Using the nearby British outpost of Fort Lawrence (about three kilometres to the east) as a staging area, Monckton then proceeded to the top of Aulac Ridge. The British offensive began on June 3, with Monckton carefully and methodically advancing on the French fortification from the north. When his forces were close enough, Monckton began a bombardment with 13 inch mortars. The French capitulated on June 16, 1755.

Although the commander of Fort Beausejour, the Marquis Louis Du Pont Duchambon de Vergor, defied the British for two weeks, there was little the French could realistically do against the numerically superior British forces. On June 16, British mortar fire breached defective fortification works and badly mauled the French garrison. de Vergor had little choice but to surrender.

The next day, the French abandoned nearby Fort Gaspareaux, severing communications with Acadia. The British forces now controlled the frontier of Nova Scotia.

[edit] Aftermath

The campaign of 1755 was not strategically decisive and did little to threaten New France's overall territorial integrity in North America since Edward Braddock's simultaneous thrust into the Ohio Valley ending in disaster at the Battle of the Monongahela. However the impact of the Battle of Fort Beausejour upon the local Acadian population was catastrophic. Some French-speaking Acadians (who had previously declared neutrality in the conflict between France and Britain) unwisely had participated in the Battle of Fort Beausejour on the side of the French. This open breach of neutrality was viewed by the British officials in Halifax as being unacceptable. Governor Charles Lawrence of Nova Scotia used the presence of these Acadian irregulars at Fort Beausejour as a pretense and excuse which allowed him to order the deportation of the Acadian population from the colony. Robert Monckton and his expeditionary force were placed in charge of executing the directive. The effects of the deportation resonate to the present day throughout Atlantic Canada and as far afield as Louisiana in the United States.

[edit] See also

[edit] Further reading

  • Chris M. Hand, The Siege of Fort Beausejour 1755, Fredericton: Goose Lane Editions/New Brunswick Military Heritage Project, 2004.
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