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Massachusetts State Seal
Commonwealth Museum   Secretary of the Commonwealth William Francis Galvin

Le Grand D'erangement:
Prelude to War

The boundaries of Acadia or Nova Scotia had long been at contest, the presence of the French in supposed British territory increasing the apprehension of many.

Acadians had remained in the colony following the assumption of British control in 1713.Their refusal to take an unqualified oath of allegiance earned them the title “French Neutrals” and the contempt of British authorities. Massachusetts had always taken an interest in the affairs of Nova Scotia and feared that the French presence there threatened its safety, and perhaps that of all the British North American colonies. Governor William Shirley began voicing such an opinion in 1749.

In 1750 he entered into uneasy negotiations with the French when they established Fort Beausejour on the Chignecto Peninsula. These having proved unsuccessful, Shirley began recruiting forces in 1755 to expel the French from Nova Scotia, appointing Colonel John Winslow as second in command. Troops left Boston Harbor in May. By June, they had captured Fort Beausejour.

War loomed ahead.

Nova Scotia, 1755

The location of Fort Beausejour in Nova Scotia, 1755

William Shirley, Governor of Massachusetts (1741—1757)

William Shirley, Governor of Massachusetts (1741—1757)

Concern about the Settlement of the Boundary of Nova Scotia

Concern about the Settlement of the Boundary of Nova Scotia

Diagram of Fort Beausejour, 1755

A plan of Fort Beausejour obtained from a French spy, 1755

Portrait of Spencer Phipps, Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts (1732-1757)

Spencer Phipps, Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts (1732-1757)

Petition to the King, by the Massachusetts legislature, 1751

Petition to the King, 1751