A BRIEF HISTORY
by Carl A. Brasseaux
The
term refers to both the the French pioneers who established the colony of
Acadia in the Bay of Fundy Basin in the seventeenth century and their modern-day
descendants throughout the world. The former French colony became a permanent
British possession through the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713, and the territory's
name was changed to Nova Scotia. After nearly two decades of negotiation,
the Acadians signed an unconditional oath of allegiance to Great Britain in
1730, thereby technically becoming British citizens. In 1755, the British
government of Nova Scotia deported the colony's French-speaking population,
estimated to have included 15,000 to 18,000 persons in an ethnic-cleansing
operation. Approximately one-third of the Acadian population was sent to the
English seaboard colonies. Others were dispatched to England or France. Still
others escaped into the Canadian wilderness. Exiles sent to British territories
were placed in concentration camps and treated as prisoners of war. Following
the Treaty of Paris in 1763, the Acadian prisoners were given a grave period
in which to relocate. In the ensuing period of wanderings,
Acadians
made their way to the Falkland Islands, French Guiana, the West Indies, St.
Pierre and Miquelon, Quebec, Prince Edward Island, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick,
and Louisiana. The largest group of exiles made its way to Louisiana's Bayou
Country, where their descendants are now known as Cajuns.
Perhaps one-half of the Acadian population died of malnutrition, exposure,
shipwrecks, and disease during the diaspora, known to historians as the Grand
Dérangement. The Acadian population did not regain 1755 population
levels until approximately 1810.
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