Kirke may have stopped at
Ferryland, the colony of
George Calvert, 1st Baron Baltimore on the east coast of
Newfoundland on the
Avalon Peninsula. The Kirke expedition landed at Port Royal which they would use as a base. The force sailed up the Saint Lawrence River and occupied
Tadoussac, 160 kilometres north of
Quebec. Kirke promptly laid waste to the French settlement and then sailed on and did the same at
Cap Tourmente.
Blockade of Saint Lawrence Kirke set up a blockade to seize any French ships coming into the river that supplied Quebec. A supply ship was seized and Kirke sent Basque fishermen as emissaries to the leader
Samuel de Champlain to demand the surrender of the fortress town. Champlain rejected the demand because he was expecting relief from France, and Kirke decided against an attack. With the onset of winter Kirke's ships turned back for England, but en route they encountered the French supply fleet of four vessels under Admiral
Claude Roquemont de Brison. The English captured the French ships after a short engagement.
Invasion An English invasion fleet, of six ships and three
pinnaces, left
Gravesend in March 1629 with Jacques Michel, a deserter from Champlain, to act as pilot on the St. Lawrence River. Champlain sent a party from Quebec, whose residents were on the point of starvation, to meet an expected relief fleet under
Émery de Caën. Unknown to Champlain, de Caën was also bringing word that peace had been declared in April in Europe by the
Treaty of Susa. Although Champlain's party met de Caën in the Gulf, they were captured by the English on their way upriver to Quebec. Kirke, now aware of the desperate conditions at Quebec, sent his brothers Lewis and Thomas to demand surrender. Having no alternative, Champlain surrendered on 19 July 1629. ==Aftermath==