Phips also ordered the Acadian peasantry to swear an oath of allegiance to
William III and
Mary II of England. Phips then determined to install a new government; he organized a provisional government by personally selecting French Acadian leaders to form a council. The council's government did not last long.
Joseph Robineau de Villebon, one of Meneval's assistants, returned to Port Royal from France in June, and reestablished French authority. He moved the capital to
Fort Nashwaak on the
Saint John River for defensive purposes, and to better coordinate military activities with the
Abenaki. Port Royal was subjected to a pirate raid not long after the Phips expedition left. The pirates captured the ship that delivered Villebon, destroyed homes and cattle, and allegedly killed some of the inhabitants. Phips detached
Cyprian Southack, commander of the
Porcupine, with orders to raid a French fishing port on the Atlantic coast of the Acadian peninsula. Southack went on to conquer Fort St. Louis in the
Battle of Chedabucto. Phips returned to Boston, where he was chosen to lead a larger expedition against
Quebec later that year, which was
a disastrous failure. Phips retained his popularity in New England, and was appointed governor of the
Province of Massachusetts Bay in 1692 by King William. He continued to be involved in the war until he was recalled in late 1694. The expedition marked the climax of a period of steadily worsening relations between New Englanders and the French imperial authorities, and reconfigured relations between New England and Acadia. Trade was affected, since those who wanted profitable trade with the
Mi'kmaq and Acadians, led by
John Nelson, failed to gain control of the expedition. The following year, after the English lost a
naval battle off St. John, Villebon tried unsuccessfully to negotiate the freedom of 60 French prisoners taken in the siege. ==References==