The Castine Historical Society has a raft of events planned for this weekend and the two days next week when the Hermione will be in the harbor. Those include museum exhibits, Revolutionary War reenactments, musical concerts, art projects, and parades on both land and water. (Plus that Gene Kelly movie again.)
The lectures over the course of those days include:
- Liam Riordan, University of Maine, “Why the French Were Essential for the American Revolution, and Why We Should Care.”
- Lou McNally, University of Maine, “Sailing and Surviving in the Weather of the 1780s.”
- Laura Auricchio, author, “The Marquis: Lafayette Revisited.”
- Paul Mayewski, University of Maine, “Timing Is Everything: Weather, Climate and the Course of Civilization.”
- Curt Viebranz, Mount Vernon, “The Marquis de Lafayette and General Washington.”
Didn't the French already get booted from Nova Scotia? :)
ReplyDeleteCastine also used to be part of France’s Acadian colony.
ReplyDeleteIt's hard indeed to believe that there's nothing whatsoever happening to welcome l'Hermione to Lunenburg, but you're right that there is nothing online to indicate such.
ReplyDeleteBut modern Nova Scotia has a significant Acadian minority (a number of exiles trickled back after 1763) living in the western side of the peninsula. Indeed, the Province's tourism website describes this French-origin community as one of its "founding cultures."
So ignoring l'Hermione's visit would seem to be an ill-judged move by official Nova Scotia from a cultural-political standpoint!
I don't get it.....why would L'Hermione go to Nova Scotia ?? The vessel was part of a cavalcade of ships that attacked & ransacked many NS towns between 1776 and 1782. Its attack on Louisbourg in 1781 was one of the worst of that campaign. And many Acadians had just trickled back into NS from the U.S., only to have American warships attacking the towns they were returning to...
ReplyDeleteAmericans have a love for the French because of their assistance in the Revolution, but for the Acadians in the Maritimes things are far more complicated. Now I'm curious about why its going there......
At least according to the Wikipedia article on l'Hermione, the action in question took place off present-day Sidney, Cape Breton Island, and a British convoy was the target, not Louisbourg.
ReplyDeleteThe old French port was by then a depopulated ghost town, its population having been deported and its fortifications demolished in the early 1760s, so there wouldn't have been much to attack there anyway, perhaps at most a scratch British garrison. And I doubt there were any Acadians in the vicinity.
I know that, but it was all part of a greater campaign and a much larger context. The history of the revolution for Americans is very linear, very black and white. In NS its complicated by changing political events, unfortunate migrations and delicate loyalties. The Acadians just wanted to be left alone.....from EVERYBODY.
ReplyDeleteWhen Lunenburg was attacked in 1782 it was filled w/ people of French ancestry, since they were some of the original settlers in 1753. So you have a French ship siding w/ the Americans attacking a town w/ many French settlers !
It's possible that the Hermione voyage organizers chose a stop in Lunenburg because of the region's French roots, but locals turned out to feel more ambivalance about that history and specifically the French role in the American War for Independence than expected. That might explain why the stop there has comparatively few events planned.
ReplyDeleteIt’s also possible that the stop was chosen simply because it seemed wise to stop in a port before the ship headed back across the ocean.