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{{Infobox military person
[[File:Marquis de Boishébert - Charles Deschamps de Boishébert et de Raffetot (1753) McCord Museum McGill.jpg|thumb|right|400px|Marquis de Boishébert - Charles Deschamps de Boishébert et de Raffetot (1753)]]'''Charles Deschamps de Boishébert''' ([[b]] February 7, 1727 &ndash; [[d]] January 9, 1797), was the leader of the Acadian resistance to the [[Expulsion of the Acadians]]. He settled and tried to protect Acadians refugees along the rivers of New Brunswick.<ref>Phyllis E. Leblanc ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online''</ref> [[Fort Boishebert]] is named after him. Beaubears National Park on [[Beaubears Island]], New Brunwick is named in his honour for settling refugee Acadians there during the [[Expulsion of the Acadians]].
|name=Charles Deschamps de Boishébert et de Raffetot
|image=[[File:Marquis de Boishébert - Charles Deschamps de Boishébert et de Raffetot (1753) McCord Museum McGill.jpg|180px]]
|caption=Charles Deschamps de Boishébert]]
|born=February 7, 1727
|died= January 9, 1797 {{death year and age|1797|1727}}
|placeofbirth=
|placeofdeath=
|placeofburial=
|placeofburial_label= Place of burial
|nickname=
|allegiance=France
|branch= [[French Army]]
|serviceyears=
|rank=
|battles=[[King George's War]]
*[[Siege of Annapolis Royal]]
*[[Battle of Grand Pre]]
[[Father Le Loutre's War]]
[[French and Indian War]]
*[[Raid on Lunenburg (1756)]]
*[[Battle of Petiticodiac]]
|awards=
|relations=
|laterwork=representative
}}

'''Charles Deschamps de Boishébert''' ([[b]] February 7, 1727 &ndash; [[d]] January 9, 1797), was the leader of the Acadian resistance to the [[Expulsion of the Acadians]]. He settled and tried to protect Acadians refugees along the rivers of New Brunswick.<ref>Phyllis E. Leblanc ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online''</ref> [[Fort Boishebert]] is named after him. Beaubears National Park on [[Beaubears Island]], New Brunwick is named in his honour for settling refugee Acadians there during the [[Expulsion of the Acadians]].


== King Georges War ==
== King Georges War ==

Revision as of 18:21, 1 April 2011

Charles Deschamps de Boishébert et de Raffetot
Charles Deschamps de Boishébert]]
AllegianceFrance
Service/branchFrench Army
Battles/warsKing George's War

Father Le Loutre's War French and Indian War

Other workrepresentative

Charles Deschamps de Boishébert (b February 7, 1727 – d January 9, 1797), was the leader of the Acadian resistance to the Expulsion of the Acadians. He settled and tried to protect Acadians refugees along the rivers of New Brunswick.[1] Fort Boishebert is named after him. Beaubears National Park on Beaubears Island, New Brunwick is named in his honour for settling refugee Acadians there during the Expulsion of the Acadians.

King Georges War

Siege of Annapolis Royal

From October until November 3, 1746, Boishebert took part in the unsuccessful Siege of Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia (N.S.), the British administrative and military headquarters in Acadia.[2]

Battle of Grande Pre

Boishébert fought in the Battle of Grand Pre. In the winter of 1747, Ramezay marched from Quebec to fight against Arthur Noble who was stationed at Grand Pré. Boishébert was wounded in the battle fought there on 11 Feb. 1747. Following this French victory he returned to Quebec with the rest of the troops.[3]

Father Le Loutre's War

During Father Le Loutre's War, he contested the arrival of senior British naval officer John Rous when he arrived at the mouth of the Saint John River to claim it for Britain. In response, Boishébert rebuilt Fort Menagouèche at the mouth of the river, and, disguised as a fisherman, went up and down the coasts of Acadia in order to assess the Acadians’ loyalty to France.[4]

French and Indian War

In 1754 he became the commandant of Fort La Tour, at the mouth of the Saint John, and there he resisted British efforts to establish themselves. The victory of the British in the Battle of Fort Beauséjour on 16 June 1755 by Monckton’s forces marked a turning-point in Boishébert’s career. Immediately after the fort fell, the British commander dispatched a large detachment against the handful of militiamen at Fort La Tour. As there was no hope of a successful outcome, Boishébert burned his fort before the enemy arrived and sought refuge among the local populace, continuing meanwhile to fight the enemy.[5]

Battle of Petiticodiac

Shortly after the Battle of Fort Beauséjour Boishébert learned that the British intended to attack the villages of Chipoudy (Shepody), Petitcodiac (near Hillsborough), and Memramcook; he immediately left for Chipoudy but arrived too late to prevent the village from being destroyed. On 3 Sept. 1755, however, he confronted a British detachment at Petitcodiac. After three hours of desperate struggle, during which they suffered heavy losses (50 killed and 60 wounded), [6]the British fled. Boishébert, who had lost only one man, returned to the Saint John River with 30 of the most destitute families. [7] However, in all, 200 families were able to escape the deportation, and resettle between Shédiac and Cocagne.[6]

The Acadian Refugee Camps

For the Acadians fleeing the deportation, Boishebert created refugee camps at Shediac, Miramichi, and on the Restitgouche River. He spent part of the winter of 1755–56 at (Shediac, New Brunswick) with the 600 Acadians stationed there. The following year, Boishebert left Shediac and went to to Miramichi and established Le Camp d'Esperance (Cape Hope) at Beaubears Island. This camp was reported to have betten 1000 to 3500 Acadians.[8] By January 1757, the conditions at Campe d'Esperance were horrendous and riots began to break out over provisions.[9] In January 1757 he went to Beaubears Island on the Miramichi River and there set up his headquarters and a refuge for the Acadians. With Father Charles Germain’s help he tried to sustain the Acadians’ resistance to the British.[10]

He then established a refugee camp on the Restitgouche River at Petit-Rochelle (present-day Pointe-à-la-Croix, Quebec).[11] After Wolfe had left the area, the 1760 Battle of Restigouche led to the capture of several hundred Acadians at Boishébert's refugee camp at Petit-Rochelle.[12]

Boishébert’s was constantly vigilant over these settlements. The settlers had already been deported from the region of Beaubassin, despite Boishébert’s attempts to evacuate the most destitute families. His efforts were limited by a scarcity of supplies, which coincided from 1756 to 1758 with a period of extreme poverty for most Acadians.[13]

He ordered the Raid on Lunenburg (1756).

On January 20, 1756, Boishebert sent Francois Boucher de Niverville to Baie Verte to burn a British schooner. Niverville took the sailors by surprise, killed seven of them, took one prisoner, and burned the ship. At the same time, Boishebert himself led 120 men against Fort Cumberland.[14]

On 12 Oct. 1756 he undertook an expedition against Fort Monckton (formerly Fort Gaspereaux, near Port Elgin, N.B.), but the enemy evacuated the fort and set fire to it before he arrived..[15]

After Louisbourg fell on 26 July 1758, Boishébert withdrew, with the enemy in pursuit. He brought back a large number of Acadians from the region around Port-Toulouse (St. Peter's, Nova Scotia) to the security of his post on the Miramichi.

Ile Saint-Jean Campaign

He also oversaw the exodus of Acadians from present-day Prince Edward Island in the Ile Saint-Jean Campaign.

St. John River Campaign

He also assisted Acadians in the St. John River Campaign.

Battle at Thomaston, Maine

During the French and Indian War, on 13 August 1758 French officer Boishebert left Miramichi, New Brunswick with 400 soldiers for Fort St George (Thomaston, Maine). His detachment reached there on 9 September but was caught in an ambush and had to withdraw. This was Boishébert’s last Acadian expedition.[16]

Battle of Quebec

With a corps of Acadian volunteers Boishébert took part in the defence of Quebec in the summer of 1759, and also in the decisive battle on the Plains of Abraham. In the winter he returned for the last time to Acadia, to gather reinforcements for the defence of Canada and to restore the morale of the discouraged Acadians.[17]

In 1763 Boishébert was involved in plans for settling Acadians at Cayenne (French Guiana) and vainly tried to obtain a military appointment there. In 1774 his request for an appointment as inspector of colonial troops was turned down. His Canadian seigneury of La Bouteillerie, also known as Rivière-Ouelle, was sold that year. Until his death, on 9 Jan. 1797, he lived in France at Raffetot, a property he had acquired through his marriage.[18]

References

Secondary Sources

  • John Grenier. The Far Reaches of Empire: War in Nova Scotia, 1710-1760. Oklahoma University Press.
  • John Clarence Webster, "Memorial on Behalf of Sieur de Boishebert" (Saint John: Historical Studies No. 4, Publications of the New Brunswick Museum, 1942)

Endnotes

  1. ^ Phyllis E. Leblanc Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
  2. ^ Phyllis E. Leblanc Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
  3. ^ Phyllis E. Leblanc Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
  4. ^ Phyllis E. Leblanc Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
  5. ^ Phyllis E. Leblanc Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
  6. ^ a b ARSENAULT, Bona, Histoire des Acadiens, Bibliothèque nationale du Québec. 1978. Lemaéac p. 180
  7. ^ Phyllis E. Leblanc Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
  8. ^ John Grenier, p. 185
  9. ^ John Grenier, p. 188
  10. ^ Phyllis E. Leblanc Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
  11. ^ Faragher, p. 414; also see History: Commodore Byron's Conquest. The Canadian Press. July 19, 2008 http://www.acadian.org/La%20Petite-Rochelle.html
  12. ^ John Faragher, p. 415; In late 1761, Captain Roderick Mackenzie and his force capture over 330 Acadians at Boishebert's camp on the Resitgouche River (See John Grenier, p. 211).
  13. ^ Phyllis E. Leblanc Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
  14. ^ John Grenier, p. 186
  15. ^ John Grenier, p. 188; Phyllis E. Leblanc Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
  16. ^ Phyllis E. Leblanc Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online; Cyrus Eaton's history, p. 77
  17. ^ Phyllis E. Leblanc Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
  18. ^ Phyllis E. Leblanc Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online

External links

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