le grand dérangement de 1755

46
Le Grand Le Grand Dérangement Dérangement de 1755 de 1755

Upload: turner

Post on 21-Jan-2016

35 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Le Grand Dérangement de 1755. The Great Upheaval The Great Expulsion The Deportation The Great Uprooting The Great Diaspora. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

Le Grand Le Grand DérangementDérangement

de 1755de 1755

Page 2: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

The Great UpheavalThe Great ExpulsionThe DeportationThe Great UprootingThe Great Diaspora

Page 3: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

“In the catalog of North American horrors, the destruction of Acadia can seem slight alongside the dispossession of Indian peoples and the enslavement of Africans, but it resonates deeply in our world of ethnic cleansing.”

Richard White, professor of American History, Stanford University

Page 4: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755
Page 5: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755
Page 6: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

First Settlement 1604 - Pierre Du Gua, Sieur de Monts &

Samuel de Champlain Saint Croix Island Harsh winter: half of the 75 men died Settlers relocate to Port Royal in spring

1605

Page 7: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755
Page 8: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

French Settlement on Saint Croix Island, 1604-05

                                                                                                                  

                         

Page 9: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

“Habitation de Port Royal” by Samuel de Champlain

Page 10: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755
Page 11: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

L’Ordre de Bon-Temps by Charles William Jefferys (1926)

Page 12: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

1630 War between France & England British attempt to invade Port Royal

Acadia goes to France Must increase presence on their land

Page 13: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

“Repairing a dyke” by Azor Vienneau

Page 14: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

“Saltmarsh haying” by Azor Vienneau

Page 15: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

“Building a home” by Azor Vienneau

Page 16: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

“Trading” by Azor Vienneau

Page 17: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755
Page 18: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

1710 - 1713 1710 - British take Port Royal 1713 - British take Grand-Pré

Treaty of Utrecht Most of Acadia to British (Nova Scotia)

Page 19: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

1713 – Treaty of Utrecht

Leave colony or remain on land and enjoy “the free exercise of their Religion, according to the Usage of the Church of Rome, as far as the Laws of Great Britain do allow the same."

Page 20: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

Conditional Oath

“We will take up arms neither against his Britannic Majesty, nor against France, nor against any of their subjects or allies.”

Page 21: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

“Signing of the Oath” by Nelson Surette

                                           

Page 22: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

1730s - Prosperity Acadian Population

1703 – 1450 1730 – 6,000 1750 – 13,000 to 15,000

Rich diet, no epidemics Still trading Conditional oath is a victory

Page 23: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755
Page 24: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

“Reading the Order of Expulsion”by Charles William Jefferys

Page 25: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

“The Great Diaspora of 1755” by Claude Picard

Page 26: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

“We are now upon a great and noble Scheme of sending the neutral French out of this Province, who have always been secret Enemies, and have encouraged our Savages to cut our throats. If we effect their Expulsion, it will be one of the greatest Things that ever the English did in America; for by all Accounts, that part of the Country they possess, is as good Land as any in the World: In case therefore we could get some good English Farmers in their Room, this Province would about with all Kinds of Provisions.”

- Pennsylvania Gazette, 4 September 1755

Page 27: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

“The Expulsion” by Nelson Surette

Page 28: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

“Many families were separated, parents from children, and children from parents”

Jean-Baptiste Galerne, exile

First Acadian response to the deportation, Philadelphia 1756

Page 29: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755
Page 30: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

“Burn and Lay Waste” by Nelson Surette

Page 31: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755
Page 32: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755
Page 33: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

1763 End of the French and Indian War

Treaty of Paris: All of France’s North American possessions to England

End of the Great Deportation Allowed to return to Nova Scotia

First Acadians to arrive in Louisiana: 20 people made of 4 families from New York in Mobile, AL

Page 34: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

“The Return” by Nelson Surette

Page 35: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755
Page 36: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755
Page 37: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

“The Arrival of the Acadians in Louisiana”mural by Robert Dafford

Page 38: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

What to make of this? Ethnic cleansing: the removal of one people by

another from a geographic region through violence and terror

Genocide: the destruction of one people by another

Or Should one be allowed to claim neutrality in the

clash of empires? Should one have to choose or the choice will be made for them?

Page 39: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

Events The Royal Proclamation of 2003 July 28 - Day of Commemoration of the

Great Upheaval 400th Anniversary of Acadia Congrès Mondial Acadien, Caraquet NB

7-23 August 2009

Page 40: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

Historical Sites Grand-Pré Park, NS Historical Acadian Village of Nova Scotia,

West Pubnico, NS Fortress of Louisbourg, NS Acadian Memorial, St-Martinville LA

Page 41: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755
Page 42: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

Literature Évangeline, A Tale of Acadie, poem by

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1847) Pélagie-la-Charrette by Antonine Maillet

(1979)

Page 43: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

Music “Acadian Driftwood” by The Band Grand Dérangement Blou Feufollet Zachary Richard (LA) Wilfred Le Bouthiller (Tracadie-Sheila, NB) Roch Voisine (Edmunston, NB) Edith Butler (Paquetville, NB)

Le grain de mil Oh cher, veux-tu venir danser?

Page 44: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

People Last names – millions of descendants Family reunions Acadian flag

Page 45: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755
Page 46: Le Grand Dérangement de 1755

Where is Acadia?“From the 1630s to 1755, Acadia was a region in

what is now Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick and eastern Maine.

Now, Acadia is anywhere Acadians live, and Acadians live throughout the world. Acadia is a nation without a border. Patrie sans frontière.”

Canadian-American CenterUniversity of Maine