In response to the Lunenburg raid and the earlier raids on Fort Cumberland, on May 14, 1756, Governor
Charles Lawrence created a bounty for the scalps of Mi'kmaq and Maliseet men and prisoners. Governor Lawrence also sought to protect the area by establishing
blockhouses at the
LaHave River, Mush-a-Mush (at present day
Blockhouse, Nova Scotia) and at the Northwest Range (present day
Northwest, Nova Scotia). Upon learning that the victims were French (albeit Protestant French), on August 6, 1756, the Governor of New France considered the possibility of recruiting other French settlers at Lunenburg to burn the town and join the French occupied territories of Île St. Jean (
Prince Edward Island) or Île Royale (
Cape Breton Island). While the burning of Lunenburg never took place, a number of the French and German-speaking
Foreign Protestants left the village to join Acadian communities. The Indigenous forces took Marie and her four young children to
Quebec City. Along the way they stopped at the French garrison at Ste. Anne's Point, where Boishébert, who had ordered the raid, was stationed. The Maliseet kept Marie's children for ransom at their near-by village Aukpaque (present-day
Springhill, New Brunswick and
Eqpahak Island) and forced her to go to Quebec City without them. She gave birth while a prisoner of war on December 27, 1756 to Louise Catherine, later nicknamed Lisette. The following summer, a ransom was paid and the rest of her children joined her in Quebec City. Marie and her children spent four years in captivity (1756–1760). They were released after the
Battle of Quebec and settled in present-day
Falmouth, Nova Scotia in 1761. Her daughter who was born in captivity eventually settled in
Scots Bay, Nova Scotia, Canada where there is a memorial to her. File:Payzant Family Monument, Falmouth, Nova Scotia.jpg|Jess Family Memorial in Scots Bay, Nova Scotia, Canada - includes the story of Marie Anne Payzant’s unborn baby at time of capture, Catherine Louise "Lisette" Payzant, later Jess (1756-1819) File:Lisette Payzant Monument, Falmouth, Nova Scotia, Canada.jpg|Jess Family Memorial, Scots Bay, Nova Scotia, Canada In April 1757, a band of Acadian and Mi'kmaq partisans raided a warehouse near-by Fort Edward, killing thirteen British soldiers and, after taking what provisions they could carry, setting fire to the building. A few days later, the same partisans also raided
Fort Cumberland. Because of the strength of the
Acadian militia and
Mi'kmaq militia, British officer
John Knox wrote that "In the year 1757 we were said to be Masters of the province of Nova Scotia, or Acadia, which, however, was only an imaginary possession." He continues to state that the situation in the province was so precarious for the British that the "troops and inhabitants" at
Fort Edward,
Fort Sackville and
Lunenburg "could not be reputed in any other light than as prisoners." (The militias had also contained British settlements at Dartmouth and
Lawrencetown.) The following year the militias engaged in the
Lunenburg Campaign (1758). == See also ==