Canso, Nova Scotia

Last updated

Canso
Canso11.jpg
Canso as seen from the harbour
Nickname: 
Oldest Fishing Port on Mainland North America
Motto(s): 
"Heritage, Heart & Home"
Canada Nova Scotia location map 2.svg
Red pog.svg
Canso
Location of Canso, Nova Scotia
Coordinates: 45°20′2″N60°59′43″W / 45.33389°N 60.99528°W / 45.33389; -60.99528
CountryFlag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada
ProvinceFlag of Nova Scotia.svg  Nova Scotia
County Guysborough County
French Settlement1600's
British Settlement1720
IncorporatedMay 14, 1901
DissolvedJuly 1, 2012
Government
  Type District Municipality
  Body Municipality of the District of Guysborough
  CouncillorFin Armsworthy
  WardenPaul Long
   MLA Greg Morrow (Conservative)
   MP Mike Kelloway (Liberal)
Area
  Land5.42 km2 (2.09 sq mi)
Highest elevation
14 m (46 ft)
Lowest elevation
0 m (0 ft)
Population
 (2016)
  Total
739
  Density136.4/km2 (353/sq mi)
Time zone UTC-4 (AST)
  Summer (DST) UTC-3 (ADT)
Canadian Postal code
B0H 1H0
Area code 902
Telephone Exchange 366
Median Earnings*$30,502
NTS Map 11F7 Cape Canso
GNBC CodeCAGBW
Website http://www.municipality.guysborough.ns.ca/
Historical population
YearPop.±%
19011,479    
19111,617+9.3%
19211,623+0.4%
19311,575−3.0%
19411,418−10.0%
19511,313−7.4%
19561,261−4.0%
19611,151−8.7%
19811,255+9.0%
19861,285+2.4%
19911,228−4.4%
19961,127−8.2%
2001992−12.0%
2006911−8.2%
2011806−11.5%
[1] [2]

Canso is an unincorporated community and former incorporated town in Guysborough County, Nova Scotia, Canada. Canso lies on the far north eastern tip of mainland nova Scotia at the mouth of Chedabucto Bay. It was incorporated as a town in 1901. In January 2012, it ceased to be a separate town, and was amalgamated into the Municipality of the District of Guysborough in July 2012. [3] The area was first settled as a fishing settlement in the 1600's. The construction of a British fort in the village in 1720 was instrumental in contributing to the outbreak of Dummer's War in 1722. The town is of national historic importance because it was one of only two British settlements in Nova Scotia prior to the establishment of Halifax (1749). Canso played a key role in the defeat of Fortress of Louisbourg. Today, the town attracts people internationally for the annual Stan Rogers Folk Festival.

Contents

Geography

The community is located on the southern shore of Chedabucto Bay. The southern limit of the bay is at Cape Canso, a headland approximately 3 km (1.9 mi) southeast of the community.

Canso is the southeastern terminus of Trunk 16, an important secondary highway in Antigonish and Guysborough counties.

As the community is situated on the end of a peninsula jutting into the Atlantic Ocean, Canso frequently experiences fog, particularly during the warmer summer months when continental air temperatures collide with cooler ocean temperatures offshore.

Canso Islands

Canso Harbour is protected by the Canso Islands, a small archipelago lying immediately north and east of the mainland, with Durells Island (named after Philip Durell), Piscataqui Island, George Island, and Grassy Island being the largest.

The islands were designated a National Historic Site of Canada in 1925 due to their role as an important fishing base for French in the 16th century and the British during the 18th century, and as the staging point for the 1745 expedition against Louisbourg. [4] "Grassy Island Fort", the remains of early 18th-century British fortifications (a 1720 redoubt, 1723–24 fort, and a 1745 blockhouse) on Grassy Island, was also individually designated as a National Historic Site in 1962. [5]

History

The Mi'kmaq are known to have had seasonal camps in the area, with archeological finds dating to 400AD.

Since the 16th century, Canso has been a strategically important fishery base. It is said that the harbour of Canso was frequented by European fur traders and fishermen within a dozen years of the arrival of Columbus in America, and an attempt at settlement was made here as early as 1518.

The area was used as a fishing settlement by the French fishery based at present-day Guysborough intermittently from 1632-1718.

The Squirrel Affair

Shortly after Cyprian Southack established himself at Shelburne, Nova Scotia in 1715, the Mi'kmaq raided the station and burned it to the ground. [6] In response, on September 17–24, 1718, Southack led a raid on Canso and Chedabucto (present-day community of Guysborough) in what became known as the Squirrel Affair. Leading HMS Squirrel, Southack first destroyed the French fishery at Canso before laying siege to Fort St. Louis at Chedabucto, defended primarily by Acadians led by Bernard Lasonde. [7] Fort St. Louis fell and the nearby village was destroyed.

The following day, September 24, Southack released his Acadian prisoners onto the Canso Islands without any provisions or clothing. [8] Others fled to Isle Madame and Petit-de-Grat, Nova Scotia. [9] He seized two French ships, and encouraged Governor of Nova Scotia Richard Philipps to fortify Canso. [6] The English began establishing a presence at Canso, replacing the French.

Raid on Canso (1720)

On August 7, 1720, 60–75 Mi'kmaq joined French fishermen from Petit de Grat, and attacked the fortification as it was being built. The Mi'kmaq killed three men, wounded four more and caused significant damage. [10] [11] [12] The New Englanders took 21 prisoners which they transported to Annapolis Royal. The raid on Canso was significant because of the involvement of the Mi'kmaq and was a chief factor leading up to Father Rale's War. [13]

In the Fall of 1720, the New Englanders finished building Fort William Augustus (also known as Fort Phillips after Richard Philipps, the then Governor of Nova Scotia). [14] Construction of such a permanent facility was a violation of long-standing agreements between the Mi'kmaq and the fishermen, and also helped to precipitate Father Rale's War. [15]

In 1721, the governor of Massachusetts took a proprietary attitude toward the Canso fisheries, and sent HMS Seahorse to patrol the waters off Nova Scotia. With the arrival of British colonial troops to the region, the Mi'kmaq were discouraged from attacking until the following year. [16] HMS Seahorse was replaced in 1721 by the first naval ship of Nova Scotia, William Augustus, under the command of Cyprian Southack. [17]

Father Rale's War

Raid on Canso (1722)

In the lead up to Father Rale's War, in July 1722, the Mi'kmaq and some Abenakis began a major offensive against New England fishermen and traders in an attempt to blockade the Nova Scotia capital of Annapolis Royal. Natives captured eighteen trading vessels in the Bay of Fundy and an additional eighteen New England fishing schooners between Cape Sable and Canso. [16] As a result, the New England Governor declared war on the Mi'kmaq which lasted three years.

The ship William Augustus led ships from Canso to protect the fisheries, which resulted in the battle at Jeddore Harbour, Nova Scotia. [18] Only five native bodies were recovered from the battle and the New Englanders decapitated the corpses and set the severed heads on pikes surrounding Canso's new fort. [19]

Raid on Canso (1723)

On July 23, 1723, the village was raided again by the Mi'kmaq and they killed three men, a woman and a child. [20] [21] In this same year, the New Englanders built a twelve-gun blockhouse to guard the village and fishery. [22] [23]

Raid on Canso (1725)

In 1725, sixty Abenakis and Mi'kmaq launch another attack on Canso, destroying two houses and killing six people. [24] [25]

King George's War

Raid on Canso (1744)

At the outbreak of King George's War, the French destroyed the flourishing fishing village during the Raid on Canso (1744).

Siege of Louisbourg

A year later, the village Canso was used as a staging area for the 1745 siege of Louisbourg. The British built a blockhouse, which they named Fort Prince William (Nova Scotia). [26] General Sir William Pepperell arrived at Canso, Nova Scotia, with four thousand and seventy troops, April 4, 1745, and, in three weeks was joined by Commodore Warren, with four ships from England.

Father Le Loutre's War

Raid on Canso (1749)

During Father Le Loutre's War, in August 1749, Lieutenant Joseph Gorham was at Canso and his party was attacked by Mi'kmaq. They seized his vessel and took twenty prisoners and carried them off to Louisbourg. Three English and seven Mi'kmaq were killed. [27] After Governor Edward Cornwallis complained to the Governor of Ile Royale, the prisoners were released. [28]

Raid on Canso (1752)

Another raid happened August 4, 1752. [29] [30] [31] [32]

Attack at Canso (1753)

On February 21, 1753, 9 Mi'kmaq in canoes attacked an English vessel which had a crew of four at near-by Country Harbour, Nova Scotia. The Mi'kmaq killed two English men and took two others captive for six weeks. After seven weeks in captivity, on April 8, the two English men killed six Mi'kmaq and managed to escape. [33] In response, on the night of April 21 the Mi'kmaq attacked another English schooner in a naval battle between Outique Island and Isle Madame in which the Mi'kmaq attacked an English schooner. There were nine English men and one Acadian who was the pilot. The Mi'kmaq killed the English and let the Acadian off at Port Toulouse, where the Mi'kmaq sank the schooner after looting it. [34]

French and Indian War

Expulsion of the Acadians

During the Expulsion of the Acadians the famous ship the Duke William was in port for almost a month awaiting passage to France (1758). While in port the vessel narrowly escaped a raid by Mi'kmaq.

American Revolution

Raid on Canso (1775)

During the American Revolutionary War, Canso was subject to numerous raids by American privateers. George Washington's Marblehead Regiment raided Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island on November 17, 1775 and three days later, they raided Canso Harbour.

Raid on Canso (1776)

On September 22, 1776, Canso was attacked by American privateer John Paul Jones. The privateer sailed on USS Providence and destroyed fifteen vessels, and damaged much property on shore. There he recruited men to fill the vacancies created by manning his prizes, burned a British fishing schooner, sank a second, and captured a third besides a shallop which he used as a tender. Jones then sacked the settlements of Petit-de-Grat and Arichat, Nova Scotia on Isle Madame, Nova Scotia and then returned to Boston.

On November 22, John Paul Jones returned to Canso in USS Alfred. Boats from the ship raided the community, his crews burned a transport bound for Canada with provisions and a warehouse full of whale oil, besides capturing a small schooner. Captain Jones then went on to present-day Sydney, Nova Scotia to free Americans imprisoned in local coal mines.

Raid on Canso (1779)

Again in 1779, American privateers destroyed the Canso fisheries, worth $50,000 a year to England. [35]

In February 1780, the schooner Freemason struck a rock near Canso and sunk. They landed near Whitehead and 16 of the 19 perished in the woods because of the winter weather. The three survivors got to Canso on March 9, having survived by eating their fellow crew members. [36]

The former seal of Canso Canso ns seal.jpg
The former seal of Canso

Wilmot Town Plot

In July, 1764, a town plot was laid out at the site of the present town and named "Wilmot," in honor of Col. Montague Wilmot. Little development occurred and the area was repeatedly raided during the American Revolutionary War, as described above. By January, 1813, there were only six families in residence. The Wilmot town plot remained nearly empty until 1821 when a few houses and stores began to be erected within it. By 1844 there were 250 families resident in the area. The town became known as Canso by the mid 19th century, with the old name Wilmot falling out of use.

Canso, Nova Scotia - 1914 Canso Nova Scotia 1914.jpg
Canso, Nova Scotia – 1914

Town of Canso

A large storm in 1873 did significant damage to the community. Between 1881 and 1894 several transatlantic cables were landed here and Canso became one of the main communications links between North America and Europe. Canso was incorporated as a town in May of 1901.

Recent History

In a plebiscite held on July 12, 2008, residents narrowly voted to amalgamate the town with the neighbouring Municipality of the District of Guysborough. The decision to amalgamate was put off, and after review was rejected again in March 2023 [37]

This aging cable building, now a historic site, received the first distress call from Titanic in 1912 Canso, Nova Scotia - Old cable building where first distress call from Titanic was received.jpg
This aging cable building, now a historic site, received the first distress call from Titanic in 1912

On January 19, 2012, the Nova Scotia Utility and Review Board granted the town's application to dissolve. On July 1, 2012, Canso became part of The Municipality of the District of Guysborough. [38]

In early 2017, Maritime Launch Services announced it intended to lease land near Canso to build and operate Canada's only active commercial spaceport, using the Ukrainian Cyclone-4M rocket. Construction is slated to begin in late 2021 and is expected to take three or four years. [39] [40] The first suborbital flight from Canso will be conducted via a small-lift launch vehicle in 2023, while the Cyclone-4M is expected to make its first orbital flight from the facility in 2025. [41]

Annual events

Canso is host to the Stan Rogers Folk Festival, an annual event held around the Canada Day weekend. This event attracts over 10,000 visitors, who enjoy music from all over the world on seven different stages over the 3 days.

Each year, during the second week of August, a regatta is held within the town. This week-long event includes boat races, a mid-way, parade, seaman's memorial, hootenannies as well as various activities for the youth. The regatta draws many previous generations of the town to serve the purpose of a Come Home week. Each year, the regatta has a theme which is reflected in the parade, with 2009's being The Circus Comes to Town. [42]

Transportation

Nova Scotia Trunk 16, a secondary highway important to the counties of Antigonish and Guysborough, terminates in Canso, its easternmost point.

Distance chart

DestinationDistance (km)Distance (mi)HighwaysNotes
Guysborough, Nova Scotia [43] 48.230.0Nova Scotia 16.svg Trunk 16
Port Hawkesbury, Nova Scotia 11068Nova Scotia 16.svgNova Scotia Highway 104 (TCH).svg Trunk 16  / Hwy 104 (TCH)
Antigonish, Nova Scotia 11270Nova Scotia 16.svgNova Scotia Highway 104 (TCH).svg Trunk 16  / Hwy 104 (TCH)
New Glasgow, Nova Scotia 167104Nova Scotia 16.svgNova Scotia Highway 104 (TCH).svg Trunk 16  / Hwy 104 (TCH)
Truro, Nova Scotia 225140Nova Scotia 16.svgNova Scotia Highway 104 (TCH).svg Trunk 16  / Hwy 104 (TCH)
Sydney, Nova Scotia 238148Nova Scotia 16.svgNova Scotia Highway 104 (TCH).svgNova Scotia 104.svgNova Scotia 4.svg Trunk 16  / Hwy 104 (TCH)  / Hwy 104  / Trunk 4
Amherst, Nova Scotia 326203Nova Scotia 16.svgNova Scotia Highway 104 (TCH).svg Trunk 16  / Hwy 104 (TCH)
Halifax, Nova Scotia 327203Nova Scotia 16.svgNova Scotia Highway 104 (TCH).svgNova Scotia 102.svgNova Scotia 118.svgNova Scotia 111.svg Trunk 16  / Hwy 104 (TCH)  / Hwy 102  / Hwy 118  / Hwy 111
Yarmouth, Nova Scotia 621386Nova Scotia 16.svgNova Scotia Highway 104 (TCH).svgNova Scotia 102.svgNova Scotia 101.svg Trunk 16  / Hwy 104 (TCH)  / Hwy 102  / Hwy 101

Notable residents

See also

References

  1. Canada, Statistics (March 31, 2008). "Canada Year Book (CYB) Historical Collection" (PDF). www66.statcan.gc.ca. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 22, 2016.
  2. "I:\ecstats\Agency\BRIAN\census2" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on October 5, 2013. Retrieved April 20, 2018.
  3. Amalgamation Decision [ permanent dead link ]
  4. Canso Islands National Historic Site of Canada . Canadian Register of Historic Places . Retrieved August 26, 2012.
  5. Grassy Island Fort National Historic Site of Canada . Canadian Register of Historic Places . Retrieved April 14, 2013.
  6. 1 2 Geoffery Plank. An Unsettled Conquest. University of Pennsylvania. 2001. pp. 76–77.
  7. Haynes, pp. 121, 125
  8. Campbell, p. 132
  9. Robinson, p. 53; Haynes, p. 111, p. 114, p. 121
  10. Geoffery Plank. An Unsettled Conquest. University of Pennsylvania. 2001. p. 77; William Williamson, History of Maine. p. 101; Ruth Holmes Whithead. The Old Man Told Us. p.94
  11. "The Province galley of Massachusetts Bay, 1694–1716: a chapter of early ..." archive.org.
  12. McLennan, J.S. (1918). Louisbourg, from Its Foundation to Its Fall, 1713-1758. London: Macmillan. p.  67.
  13. Robinson, p. 56
  14. Haynes, p. 142
  15. Geoffery Plank, An Unsettled Conquest. p. 78.
  16. 1 2 George Rawlyk. Cod, Louisbourg. and the Acadians. The Atlantic Region to Confederation: A History. p.114
  17. Haynes, p. 157
  18. Beamish Murdoch, History of Nova Scotia or Acadia, p. 399.
  19. Geoffery Plank, An Unsettled Conquest, p. 78
  20. Haynes, p. 158
  21. "Penhallow's Indian wars; a facsimile reprint of the first edition, printed in Boston in 1726, with the notes of earlier editors and additions from the original manuscript". archive.org. 1924.
  22. Benjamin Church, p. 289; John Grenier, p. 62
  23. "Documents relative to the colonial history of the state of New York". archive.org. 1853.
  24. Haynes, p. 159
  25. "The history of the wars of New-England with the eastern Indians". archive.org. 1859.
  26. Drake. Siege of Louisbourg 1745, p.77. Note: some primary sources indicate the name was Fort Cumberland.
  27. Akins, History of Halifax. p. 18
  28. Wicken, William (2002). Mi'kmaq Treaties on Trial: History, Land, and Donald Marshall Junior. University of Toronto Press. ISBN   978-0-8020-7665-6.
  29. "The Halifax Gazette - Google News Archive Search". news.google.com.
  30. "Collections of the Nova Scotia Historical Society". Halifax. 1878 via Internet Archive.
  31. "The Halifax Gazette - Google News Archive Search". news.google.com.
  32. "The Halifax Gazette - Google News Archive Search". news.google.com.
  33. Whitehead, p. , 129, 137
  34. Whitehead, p. 137
  35. Lieutenant Governor Sir Richard Hughes states in a dispatch to Lord Germaine
  36. "A History of Nova Scotia, Or Acadie". J. Barnes. January 28, 1866 via Internet Archive.
  37. "The Guysborough Journal". www.guysboroughjournal.com.
  38. "Town of Canso to dissolve July 1".
  39. "Canso Spaceport Facility Project". Government of Nova Scotia . March 19, 2021. Retrieved May 11, 2021.
  40. Golubeva, Alena (April 9, 2021). "Максим Дегтярев: "Спрос на выведение грузов на орбиту будет расти"" [Maxim Degtyarev: "The demand for placing cargo into orbit will grow"]. GMK Center (in Russian). Retrieved May 11, 2021. Компания получила разрешение, оформляет документы на получение земельного участка и уже в текущем году рассчитывает начать строительные работы. Сколько времени уйдет на строительство космодрома? – Три-четыре года. [The company has received permission, and is preparing documents for obtaining a land plot and expects to start construction work this year. How long will it take to build the cosmodrome? – Three or four years.]
  41. "Precious Payload Partners With Maritime Launch, Adding Canada's First Commercial Spaceport, Spaceport Nova Scotia, to Launch.ctrl Marketplace". Business Wire (Press release). December 8, 2022. Retrieved December 10, 2022.
  42. "The Guysborough Journal". www.guysboroughjournal.com.
  43. Distances and subsequent routes are courtesy of Google Maps' "Directions" tool.
  44. "Biography – NORRIS, HANNAH MARIA – Volume XIV (1911–1920) – Dictionary of Canadian Biography".

Sources