French nobleman
Pierre Du Gua de Mons made a first attempt at settlement of Acadia during the disastrous winter of 1604–1605 in
Île-Saint-Croix,
Saint Croix Island in the
St. Croix River on the boundary between present-day
Maine and
New Brunswick. De Mons,
Samuel de Champlain,
Louis Hébert (this is disputed in the French archives which indicate Hébert did not sail until 1606) and
Jean de Biencourt de Poutrincourt et de Saint-Just decided to move the settlement to the north shore of the present-day
Annapolis Basin, a sheltered bay on the south shore of the
Bay of Fundy that had been recorded by Champlain earlier in the spring of 1605 during a coastal reconnaissance. Poutrincourt asked
King Henri IV to become the owner of the
seigneurie that encompassed the settlement. Nestled against the
North Mountain range, they set about constructing a log stockade fortification. With assistance from members of the
Mi'kmaq Nation and a local chief named
Membertou, coupled with the more temperate climate of the fertile
Annapolis Valley, the settlement, also known as "the habitation" prospered. Mindful of the disastrous winter of 1604–05 at the Île-Saint-Croix settlement, Champlain established ''l'Ordre de Bon Temps
(the Order of Good Cheer'') as a social club ostensibly to promote better nutrition and to get settlers through the winter of 1606–07. Supper every few days became a feast with a festive air supplemented by performances and alcohol and was primarily attended by the prominent men of the colony and their Mi'kmaq neighbours while the Mi'kmaq women, children, and poorer settlers looked on and were offered food.
Marc Lescarbot's
The Theatre of Neptune in New France, the first work of theater written and performed in North America, was performed on November 14, 1606. In 1607, Dugua had his fur trade monopoly revoked by the Government of France, forcing most of the settlers to return to France that fall, although some remained with the natives. Poutrincourt converted Membertou and local Mi'kmaq to
Catholicism, hoping to gain financial assistance from the French government. As a result,
Jesuits became financial partners with Poutrincourt, although this caused division within the community. In May 1613, the Jesuits moved on to the
Penobscot River valley.
Battle of Port Royal (1613) In July 1613 Acadia settlements were attacked by the English, led by the Admiral of Virginia
Samuel Argall. The invasion began with the Saint-Saveur mission (
Mount Desert Island, Maine) and then St. Croix Island. In October 1613, Argall surprised the settlers at Port-Royal and sacked every building. The battle destroyed the Habitation but it did not fully destroy the colony. Argall returned in November that same year and finally burned the Habitation to the ground while settlers were away nearby. == Informal period (1613–1629) ==