was stationed in Dartmouth during the Raid. After the British
Conquest of Acadia in 1710, the British laid claim to all of peninsular Acadia, renaming it Nova Scotia. Its population was primarily Catholic French Acadians and the Mi'kmaq. The Mi'kmaq never ceded this land by treaty or surrender. In response to British settlement, the Mi'kmaq raided the early British settlements of present-day
Shelburne (1715) and
Canso (1720), prior to entering into a Peace and Friendship Treaty with the British in 1726. A generation later,
Father Le Loutre's War began when
Edward Cornwallis arrived to establish
Halifax with 13 transports on June 21, 1749. By the time Cornwallis had arrived in Halifax, there was a long history of the
Wabanaki Confederacy (which included the Mi'kmaq) defending themselves from British encroachment and invasion along the New England/Acadia border in Maine (See the Northeast Coast Campaigns
1688,
1703,
1723,
1724,
1745,
1746,
1747). The British quickly began to build other settlements. To guard against Mi'kmaq, Acadian and French attacks on the new Protestant settlements, British fortifications were erected in Halifax (
Citadel Hill) (1749),
Bedford (
Fort Sackville) (1749),
Dartmouth (1750),
Lunenburg (1753) and
Lawrencetown (1754). There were numerous Mi'kmaq and Acadian raids on these villages such as the Raid on Dartmouth (1751). There was a
raid on those in the Dartmouth area in 1749. In response to the raid, Governor
Edward Cornwallis issued an
extirpation proclamation against the Miꞌkmaq on peninsular Nova Scotia and those that supported them. To carry out this task, two companies of rangers were raised, one led by Captain Francis Bartelo and the other by Captain William Clapham. These two companies served alongside that of
John Gorham's company. The three companies scoured the land around Halifax unsuccessfully looking for Mi'kmaq. In July 1750, the Mi'kmaq killed and scalped seven men who were at work in Dartmouth. In August 1750, 353 people arrived on the ship Alderney and began the town of Dartmouth. The town was laid out in the autumn of that year. The following month, on September 30, 1750, Dartmouth was attacked again by the Miꞌkmaq and five more residents were killed. In October 1750 a group of about eight men went out "to take their diversion; and as they were fowling, they were attacked by the Indians, who took the whole prisoners; scalped ... [one] with a large knife, which they wear for that purpose, and threw him into the sea ..." In March 1751, the Mi'kmaq attacked on two more occasions, bringing the total number of raids to six in the previous two years. ==Raid==