Simon Denys Fort: Difference between revisions
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== History == | == History == | ||
[[File:Sainte Anne Port Dauphin National Historic Site of Canada 3.jpg|300px|thumb|left|The plaque reads: Presented by the Fortress of Louisbourg to the Englishtown Historical Society in July 1996. This gun commemorates Fort Sainte Anne 1629., the first permanent settlement and Jesuit Mission on Cape Breton Island, also Fort Dauphin 1713, secondary strong place on the Island which was captured in 1745 and abandoned in 1758 after the final capitulation of Louisbourg.]] Simon Denys Fort | [[File:Sainte Anne Port Dauphin National Historic Site of Canada 3.jpg|300px|thumb|left|The plaque reads: Presented by the Fortress of Louisbourg to the Englishtown Historical Society in July 1996. This gun commemorates Fort Sainte Anne (2) 1629., the first permanent settlement and Jesuit Mission on Cape Breton Island, also Fort Dauphin 1713, a secondary strong place on the Island which was captured in 1745 and abandoned in 1758 after the final capitulation of Louisbourg.]] Simon Denys Fort was built on the site of the former [[Fort Sainte Anne]]. From the Biography at the Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online: <blockquote>DENYS (Denis) DE LA TRINITÉ, SIMON, member of the Conseil Souverain, second son of Jacques Denys de La Thibaudière and Marie Cosnier; younger brother of Nicolas Denys; ennobled by Louis XIV; b. 1599 at Tours, France; buried 11 Nov. 1678 in the parish of Saint-Barthélemy in La Rochelle, France. | ||
In 1632 Simon accompanied his brother, Nicolas, to Acadia. Nicolas established a fishery at Port Rossignol (near the present-day Liverpool, N.S.) and put Simon in command of a vessel purchased for the trade. When the ship was unloading its first cargo of cod at Oporto, hostilities broke out between France and Spain, of which Portugal was then a part, with the result that the ship was lost and Simon was imprisoned in Madrid. On his release he returned to France, bearing confidential messages from the French ambassador to Cardinal Richelieu. As compensation for his sufferings, the cardinal gave Simon command of one of the king’s ships. | In 1632 Simon accompanied his brother, Nicolas, to Acadia. Nicolas established a fishery at Port Rossignol (near the present-day Liverpool, N.S.) and put Simon in command of a vessel purchased for the trade. When the ship was unloading its first cargo of cod at Oporto, hostilities broke out between France and Spain, of which Portugal was then a part, with the result that the ship was lost and Simon was imprisoned in Madrid. On his release he returned to France, bearing confidential messages from the French ambassador to Cardinal Richelieu. As compensation for his sufferings, the cardinal gave Simon command of one of the king’s ships. |
Revision as of 12:23, 26 March 2022
Simon Denys Fort (1650-1659) - A French colonial fort located at present-day Englishtown, Victoria County, Nova Scotia, Canada.
History![]() The fort was occupied from 1650 to 1659. One other military fort was later built adjacent to the fort, Fort Dauphin (1713-1758).
Current StatusA National Historic Site. No visible remains of any fort structures. An existing roadside carin with a plaque which reads: Plaque date: 1950
See Also: Sources:
Links: Visited: No
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