The
Mi'kmaq were the first to have visited the region, as early as 4000 years ago. Objects have been discovered in the port but it is thought they used the place as a camp and not as a village. The Vikings had visited the region from the year one thousand.
Jacques Cartier explored the surrounding area in 1534. In 1713, Great Britain obtained Acadia in the
Treaty of Utrecht. Caraquet was founded around 1731 by the Breton Gabriel Giraud dit Saint-Jean. It stood on the present site of the border with
Bas-Caraquet. In 1755, the British took
Fort Beauséjour and began the deportation of the Acadians. A group of survivors led by Alexis Landry took refuge in Caraquet in 1757 at a place called
Sainte-Anne-du-Bocage. Several privateers, Captain Saint-Simon and survivors of the
Battle of the Restigouche took refuge in the village of Gabriel Giraud in 1760. The following year, Pierre du Calvet made a census of the Chaleur Bay, whose purpose was to determine where and how many Acadians were hiding there. In retaliation for the Battle,
Roderick MacKenzie captured most of the refugees, including 20 people of the 174 then in Caraquet. The rest of the population emigrated to other places in the Bay of Chaleur, especially Miscou and Bonaventure. In 1763, Great Britain finally dispossessed
Louis XV of North America in the
Treaty of Paris.
George III's
Royal Proclamation of 1763 and administrative changes the next year then allowed Acadians on land not occupied by the British. Most families returned to Caraquet from 1766. Bourdages Raymond founded a fishing station in 1762 but it was the target of attacks by American privateers in 1776 and by
Micmac in 1779. In 1784,
François Gionet walked to
Halifax where the Great Grant was obtained, legalizing the occupation of Caraquet by 34 families of 57 km2. Families of Norman fishermen had meanwhile established themselves in town and were followed by French Canadians. on
National Acadian Day in Caraquet Merchants from England, Scotland and Jersey settled in Caraquet from the early nineteenth century. Despite their small number, they would control the economy and politics of the city for a century.
Charles Robin and Company opened an important fishery in 1837, followed by that of
Robert Young in 1850. The government of
George King voted in the
Common Schools Act in 1871 which removed any religious presence in schools and made education difficult in French. The precarious economic situation of fishermen, the discontent caused by the Common Schools Act and the attempts of the Anglophones to control the board led to Acadian protests in January 1875. Following property damage from the protests, Robert Young ordered police to the city and supplemented them with a private militia. When militiamen attempted to force entry to an Acadian household on January 27, 1875, an exchange of gunfire resulted and militiaman John Gifford and Acadian Louis Mailloux were shot and killed. Calm was restored and the population got some concessions. Despite the Industrial Revolution,
Canadian Confederation hurt the Maritime Provinces. To counter the exodus of the population and control of fishing companies, new farming villages were founded. In 1864, the engineer
Sanford Fleming proposed to build the
Intercolonial Railway from Montreal to Pokesudie through Caraquet. While the final route was diverted south to
Halifax in 1868, the line was built to Caraquet in 1887 following a part of the originally proposed route. The opening of the railway increased economic development with the opening of shops and hotels as well as a change of habits. The College Sacre Coeur opened its doors in 1899 but was destroyed by fire in 1914; it moved to
Bathurst the next year. The Fifth National Acadian Convention was held in 1905. ==Demographics==