Le Loutre moved his base of operation in 1749 from Shubenacadie to Pointe-à-Beauséjour on the
Isthmus of Chignecto. When Le Loutre arrived at Beauséjour, France and England were disputing the ownership of present-day New Brunswick. A year after they established Halifax in 1749, the British built forts in the major Acadian communities:
Fort Edward (at Piziquid),
Fort Vieux Logis at Grand Pré and
Fort Lawrence (at
Beaubassin). They were also interested in building forts in the various Acadian communities to control the local populations. Le Loutre wrote to the minister of the Marine, "As we cannot openly oppose the English ventures, I think that we cannot do better than to incite the Mi'kmaq to continue warring on the English; my plan is to persuade the Mi'kmaq to send word to the English that they will not permit new settlements to be made in Acadia. … I shall do my best to make it look to the English as if this plan comes from the Mi'kmaq and that I have no part in it." Governor General
Jacques-Pierre de Taffanel de la Jonquière, Marquis de la Jonquière, wrote in 1749 to his superior in France, "It will be the missionaries who will manage all the negotiation, and direct the movement of the savages, who are in excellent hands, as the Reverend Father Germain and Monsieur l'Abbe Le Loutre are very capable of making the most of them, and using them to the greatest advantage for our interests. They will manage their intrigue in such a way as not to appear in it." (1750); he retrieved the bell again from the Beausejour Cathedral during the
Battle of Fort Beauséjour. As an official peace existed between France and Britain, Le Loutre led the
guerrilla resistance to the British building forts in the Acadian villages, because the French army was unable to fight the British, who possessed the territory. Le Loutre and the French were established at Beauséjour, just opposite Beaubassin.
Charles Lawrence first tried to establish control over Beauséjour and then at Beaubassin early in 1750, but his forces were repelled by Le Loutre, the Mi'kmaq, and Acadians. On 23 April, Lawrence was unsuccessful in setting a base at Chignecto because Le Loutre burned the village of Beaubassin, preventing Lawrence from using its supplies to establish a fort. Defeated at Beaubassin, Lawrence went to Piziquid where he built
Fort Edward; he forced the Acadians to destroy their church and replaced it with the British fort. Lawrence eventually returned to the area of Beaubassin to build
Fort Lawrence. He encountered continued resistance there, with the Mi'kmaq and Acadians dug in before Lawrence's return to defend the remains of the village. Le Loutre was joined by the Acadian militia leader
Joseph Broussard. They were eventually overwhelmed by force, and the New Englanders erected Fort Lawrence at Beaubassin. In the spring of 1751, the French countered by building
Fort Beauséjour. Le Loutre saved the bell from Notre Dame d'Assumption Church in Beaubassin and put it in the cathedral he had built beside Fort Beauséjour. In 1752 he proposed a plan to the French court to destroy Fort Lawrence and return Beaubassin to the Mi'kmaq and Acadians. Both New England and New France military officials made allies of the aboriginal tribes in their struggles for control. The aboriginal allies also engaged independently in warfare against the colonists and opposing tribes, without their British or French allies. Often aboriginal allies fought on their own while the imperial powers tried to conceal their involvement in such initiatives, to prevent igniting large-scale warfare between England and France. Le Loutre worked with the Mi'kmaq to harass British settlers and prevent the expansion of their settlements. By the time Cornwallis had arrived in Halifax, there was a long history of conflict between the
Wabanaki Confederacy (which included the Mi'kmaq) and the British. Governor
Edward Cornwallis was informed in August that two vessels were attacked by the Indians at
Canso whereby "three English and seven Indians were killed." Council believed the attack had been orchestrated by an Abbe Le Loutre. In this Cornwallis followed the example set in New England. He set the price at the same rate that the Mi'kmaq received from the French for British scalps. Rangers scoured the area around Halifax looking for Mi'kmaq, but never found any.
Acadian exodus (1750–52) With the founding of Halifax, Le Loutre led the Acadians who lived in the
Cobequid region of mainland Nova Scotia to New Brunswick and
Prince Edward Island. Cornwallis tried to prevent the Acadians from leaving as he preferred to retain their substantial economic value in farming. However, deputies of the Acadian communities presented him with a petition to allow them to refuse to take arms against fellow Frenchmen or they would leave. Cornwallis strongly refused their request and directed them that if they left, they could not take any belongings, and warned them that if they went to the area north of the
Missaguash River they would still be in British-held territory and be British subjects. The Cobequid Acadians wrote to the people in Beaubassin that British authorities "came furtively during the night to take our pastor [Girard] and our four deputies... [A British officer] read the orders by which he was authorized to seize all the muskets in our houses, thereby reducing us to
the condition of the Irish... Thus we see ourselves on the brink of destruction, liable to be captured and transported to the English islands and to lose our religion." Despite Cornwallis' threats, most Acadians in the Cobequid followed Le Loutre. The priest tried to establish new communities, but found it difficult to supply the new settlers, the Mi'qmaq, and the garrisons at Fort Beauséjour and
Île Saint-Jean (now Prince Edward Island) with food and other necessities. Finding the living conditions deplorable at New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island, he made repeated appeals in 1752 for aid from the authorities in
Quebec. He returned to France to seek funds, which he gained in 1753 from the courts, for the purpose of building
dykes in Acadia. Protecting low-lying lands from the tides would enable their use as pasture for cattle and development with cultivation for crops, so the Acadians could escape the risk of starvation. Granted additional monies, Le Loutre sailed back to Acadia with other missionaries in 1753.
Battle of Fort Beauséjour (1755) In 1754 Bishop
Henri-Marie Dubreil de Pontbriand of Quebec appointed Le Loutre
vicar-general of Acadia. He continued to encourage the Mi'kmaq to harass the British. He directed Acadians from Minas and Port Royal to assist in building a cathedral at Beauséjour. It was an exact replica of the original
Notre-Dame de Québec Cathedral. A month after the cathedral was completed, British forces launched an
attack on Fort Beauséjour. Upon the imminent fall of Fort Beauséjour, Le Loutre burned the cathedral to the ground to prevent it from falling into British hands. He had the bell removed and saved. Not only were such cast bells expensive, that particular bell was a symbolic act of hope for rebuilding, as he had brought it from the church at Beaubassin when that village was burned. The defeat was the catalyst for the
Deportation of the Acadians. The bell is held at the Fort Beauséjour National Historic Site. == Imprisonment, death and legacy ==