Mi'kmaq Settlement and French colony La Hève was an important centre for the
Mi'kmaq people, who traded with Europeans. Messamouet, a well-known
sakmow, or Chief, of the Mi'kmaq Nation, is reported to have been from the LaHave area.
Samuel de Champlain called there in 1604 on his first trip to
Acadia.
Henry Hudson made landfall there in 1609 on his voyage on behalf of the
Dutch East India Company. Despite being shown hospitality by the Mi'kmaq, Hudson's crew staged an unprovoked assault on the Mi'kmaq settlement. As a result, the Mi'kmaq staged a raid on the next Dutch ship to visit in 1611. La Hève was the capital of
Acadia from 1632, when
Isaac de Razilly settled on a point of land at the mouth of the LaHave River, until his sudden death in 1635. Razilly established a colony of 300 and built
Fort Ste. Marie de Grace. Razilly reported that the fort was capable of standing against all enemy action, and that he had the military supplies necessary to withstand a six-month siege. There was also a chapel, a store and houses for the workmen in the village. Within twelve months of Razilly's arrival, La Have was a thriving trading post, the centre for a small farming community in the area, and a major port of call for the large fishing fleet. At one point there were five hundred transient fishermen in the settlement. Upon Razilly's death in 1635, the new Governor
Charles de Menou d'Aulnay moved the Acadians from La Hève to
Port Royal, Nova Scotia, which had been given up by the Scottish also in 1632. His wife Jeanne Motin, "daughter of Louis Motin, Sieur de Courcelles, who in addition to owning shares in the Razilly-Condonnier Company, was the controller of salt stores located at one of France's colonies, perhaps in the Caribbean", was of great strategic value in the subsequent struggle with La Tour. Ironically, she became Lady de La Tour in 1653 after Aulnay's death and La Tour's triumphant return with Letters Patent as governor of Acadia.
Nicolas Denys and his brother Simon, who had come over with Razilly, in 1632, set up a "wood working plant" near present-day
Riverport, Nova Scotia and a fishing station at Port Rossignol (now
Liverpool, Nova Scotia). They stayed neutral in the war between Aulnay (at Port Royal) and La Tour (at Fort La Tour on the Saint John River). In 1652, La Hève was still a trading post and was raided by
Emmanuel Le Borgne. During
Queen Anne's War, New Englanders raided the community taking three Acadians prisoner (1705).
King George's War During
King George's War, two French officers, in a letter from Quebec, reported to the
Count of Maurepas that "the English do not dry any fish on the east coast of Acadia since the war, through fear of being surprised there and killed by the Micmacs." This fear was well founded as these same officers also advised "... a boat belonging to an English merchantman having landed at La Hève for wood and water, these Indians killed 7 of the crew and brought their scalps to
Sieur Marin,...". The site of Fort Sainte-Marie de Grace was designated a
National Historic Site of Canada in 1924.
American Revolution On 15 April 1780 the Lunenburg militia (35 men) and the British brigantine
John and Rachael captured an American privateer
prize named
Sally at the LaHave River. During the seizure, the privateers killed the head of the militia (McDonald) and wounded two of the crew members of
John and Rachael.
Ship building It was, at one time, the economic centre of fishing, trade and shipbuilding for the surrounding area. The many vessels built in the area include a famous clipper, the barque
Stag.
Light Station In 1874 LaHave Light Station was built and assisted ships navigating into the LaHave River until the 1950s, when a new
lightkeeper's house was built to replace the aging
light station. The light was decommissioned in the 1960s and replaced by a mechanical light on the opposite side of the river. In 1969, the Lunenburg County Historical Society was established to manage this historic site and turned the vacant lightkeeper's house into a community
museum and gift shop. In 2006, the society completed a Renaissance Project, which included the construction and attachment of a new building resembling the original 1874 LaHave Light Station, to the lightkeeper's house. The new museum is heated and cooled by a
geothermal system, one of the first museums in Canada to utilize this technology. The Museum hosts many community events during the year, including the
Acadian Mi'kmaq Festival, the LaHave River Folk Festival and a wide range of artistic exhibits. == Lahave River cable ferry ==