Louisburgh--The Great French Fortress--Incidents of the Old French
War--Relics of the Siege--Description of the Town--The two Expeditions--A
Yankee ruse de guerre--The Rev. Samuel Moody’s Grace--Wolfe’s
Landing--The Fisherman’s Hutch--The Lost Coaster--The Fisheries--Picton
tries his hand at a fish-pugh.
Nearly a century has elapsed since
the fall of Louisburgh. The great American fortress
of Louis XV. surrendered to Amherst, Wolfe, and Boscawen
in 1758. A broken sea-wall of cut stone; a vast
amphitheatre, inclosed within a succession of green
mounds; a glacis; and some miles of surrounding ditch,
yet remain the relics of a structure for
which the treasury of France paid Thirty Millions
of Livres!
We enter where had been the great
gate, and walk up what had been the great avenue.
The vision follows undulating billows of green turf
that indicate the buried walls of a once powerful
military town. Fifteen thousand people were gathered
in and about these walls; six thousand troops were
locked within this fortress, when the key turned in
the stupendous gate.
A hundred years since, the very air
of the spot where we now stand, vibrated with the
chime of the church-bells and the roll of the stately
organ, or wafted to devout multitudes the savor of
holy incense. Here were congregated the soldiers,
merchants, artisans of old France; on these high walls
paced the solemn sentry; in these streets the nun stole
past in her modest hood; or the romantic damsel pressed
her cheek to the latticed window, as the young officer
rode by and, martial music filled the avenues with
its inspiring strains; in yonder bay floated the great
war-ships of Louis; and around the shores of this
harbor could be counted battery after battery, with
scores of guns bristling from the embrasures.
The building of this stronghold was
a labor of twenty-five years. The stone walls
rose to the height of thirty-six feet. In those
broken arches, studded with stalactites, those casemates,
or vaults of the citadel, you still see some evidence
of its former strength. You will know the citadel
by them, and by the greater height of the mounds which
mark the walls that once encompassed it. Within
these stood the smaller military chapel. Think
of looking down from this point upon those broad avenues,
busy with life, a hundred years ago!
Neither roof nor spire remain now;
nor square nor street; nor convent, church, or barrack.
The green turf covers all: even the foundations
of the houses are buried. It is a city without
an inhabitant. Dismantled cannon, with the rust
clinging in great flakes; scattered implements of war;
broken weapons, bayonets, gun-locks, shot, shell or
grenade, unclaimed, untouched, corroded and corroding,
in silence and desolation, with no signs of life visible
within these once warlike parapets except the peaceful
sheep, grazing upon the very brow of the citadel, are
the only relics of once powerful Louisburgh.
Let us recall the outlines of its
history. In the early part of the last century,
just after the death of Louis XIV., these foundations
were laid, and the town named in honor of the ruling
monarch. Nova Scotia proper had been ceded, by
recent treaty, to the filibusters of Old and New-England,
but the ancient Island of Cape Breton still owned allegiance
to the lilies of France. Among the beautiful
and commodious harbors that indent the southern coast
of the island, this one was selected as being most
easy of access. Although naturally well adapted
for defence, yet its fortification cost the government
immense sums of money, insomuch as all the materials
for building had to be brought from a distance.
Belknap thus describes it: “It was environed,
two miles and a half in circumference, with a rampart
of stone from thirty to thirty-six feet high, and a
ditch eighty feet wide, with the exception of a space
of two hundred yards near the sea, which was inclosed
by a dyke and a line of pickets. The water in
this place was shallow, and numerous reefs rendered
it inaccessible to shipping, while it received an
additional protection from the side-fire of the bastions.
There were six-bastions and eight batteries, containing
embrasures for one hundred and forty-eight cannon,
of which forty-five only were mounted, and eight mortars.
On an island at the entrance of the harbor was planted
a battery of thirty cannon, carrying twenty-eight pound
shot; and at the bottom of the harbor was a grand,
or royal battery, of twenty-eight cannon, forty-two
pounders, and two eighteen-pounders. On a high
cliff, opposite to the island-battery, stood a light
house, and within this point, at the north-east part
of the harbor, was a careening wharf, secure from
all winds, and a magazine of naval stores. The
town was regularly laid out in squares; the streets
were broad and commodious, and the houses, which were
built partly of wood upon stone foundations, and partly
of more durable materials, corresponded with the general
appearance of the place. In the centre of one
of the chief bastions was a stone building, with a
moat on the side near the town, which was called the
citadel, though it had neither artillery nor a structure
suitable to receive any. Within this building
were the apartments of the governor, the barracks
for the soldiers, and the arsenal; and, under the platform
of the redoubt, a magazine well furnished with military
stores. The parish church, also, stood within
the citadel, and without was another, belonging to
the hospital of St. Jean de Dieu, which was an elegant
and spacious structure. The entrance to the town
was over a drawbridge, near which was a circular battery,
mounting sixteen guns of fourteen-pound shot.”
This cannon-studded harbor was the
naval depot of France in America, the nucleus of its
military power, the protector of its fisheries, the
key of the gulf of St. Lawrence, the Sebastopol of
the New World. For a quarter of a century it
had been gathering strength by slow degrees: Acadia,
poor inoffensive Acadia, from time to time, had been
the prey of its rapacious neighbors; but Louisburgh
had grown amid its protecting batteries, until Massachusetts
felt that it was time for the armies of Gad to go forth
and purge the threshing-floor with such ecclesiastical
iron fans as they were wont to waft peace and good
will with, wherever there was a fine opening for profit
and edification.
The first expedition against Louisburgh
was only justifiable upon the ground that the wants
of New England for additional territory were pressing,
and immediate action, under the circumstances, indispensable.
Levies of colonial troops were made, both in and out
of the territories of the saints. The forces,
however, actually employed, came from Massachusetts,
Connecticut, and New Hampshire; the first supplying
three thousand two hundred, the second five hundred,
the third three hundred men. The cooeperation
of Commodore Warren, of the English West-Indian fleet,
was solicited; but the Commodore declined, on the ground
“that the expedition was wholly a provincial
affair, undertaken without the assent, and probably
without the knowledge, of the ministry.”
But Governor Shirley was not a man to stop at trifles.
He had a heart of lignum vitae, a rigid anti-papistical
conscience, beetle brows, and an eye to the cod-fisheries.
Higher authority than international law was pressed
into the service. George Whitefield, then an
itinerant preacher in New-England, furnished the necessary
warrant for the expedition, by giving a motto for its
banner: “Nil desperandum Christo duce” Nothing
is to be despaired of with CHRIST for leader.
The command was, however, given to William Pepperel,
a fish and shingle merchant of Maine. One of the
chaplains of the filibusters carried a hatchet specially
sharpened, to hew down the wooden images in the churches
of Louisburgh. Everything that was needed to
encourage and cheer the saints, was provided by Governor
Shirley, especially a goodly store of New England
rum, and the Rev. Samuel Moody, the lengthiest preacher
in the colonies. Louisburgh, at that time feebly
garrisoned, held out bravely in spite of the formidable
array concentrated against it. In vain the Rev.
Samuel Moody preached to its high stone walls; in
vain the iconoclast chaplain brandished his ecclesiastical
hatchet; in vain Whitefield’s banner flaunted
to the wind. The fortress held out against shot
and shell, saint, flag and sermon. New England
ingenuity finally circumvented Louisburgh. Humiliating
as the confession is, it must be admitted that our
pious forefathers did actually abandon “CHRISTO
duce,” and used instead a little worldly artifice.
Commodore Warren, who had declined
taking a part in the siege of Louisburgh, on account
of the regulations of the service, had received, after
the departure of the expedition, instructions to keep
a look-out for the interests of his majesty in North
America, which of course could be readily interpreted,
by an experienced officer in his majesty’s service,
to mean precisely what was meant to be meant.
As a consequence, Commodore Warren was speedily on
the look-out, off the coast of Cape Breton, and in
the course of events fell in with, and captured, the
“Vigilant,” seventy-four, commanded by
Captain Stronghouse, or, as his title runs, “the
Marquis de la Maison Forte.” The “Vigilant”
was a store-ship, filled with munitions of war for
the French town. Here was a glorious opportunity.
If the saints could only intimate to Duchambon, the
Governor of Louisburgh, that his supplies had been
cut off, Duchambon might think of capitulation.
But unfortunately the French were prejudiced against
the saints, and would not believe them under oath.
But when probity fails, a little ingenuity and artifice
will do quite as well. The chief of the expedition
was equal to the emergency. He took the Marquis
of Stronghouse to the different ships on the station,
where the French prisoners were confined, and showed
him that they were treated with great civility; then
he represented to the Marquis that the New England
prisoners were cruelly dealt with in the fortress
of Louisburgh; and requested him to write a letter,
in the name of humanity, to Duchambon, Governor, in
behalf of those suffering saints; “expressing
his approbation of the conduct of the English, and
entreating similar usuage for those whom the fortune
of war had thrown in his hands.” The Marquis
wrote the letter; thus it begins: “On board
the ‘Vigilant,’ where I am a prisoner,
before Louisburgh, June thirteen, 1745.”
The rest of the letter is unimportant. The confession
of Captain Stronghouse, that he was a prisoner, was
the point; and the consequences thereof, which had
been foreseen by the filibustering besiegers, speedily
followed. In three days Louisburgh capitulated.
Then the Rev. Samuel Moody greatly
distinguished himself. He was a painful preacher;
the most untiring, persevering, long-winded, clamorous,
pertinacious vessel at craving a blessing, in the provinces.
There was a great feast in honor of the occasion.
But more formidable than the siege itself, was the
anticipated “grace” of Brother Moody.
New England held its breath when he began, and thus
the Reverend Samuel: “Good Lord, we have
so many things to thank Thee for, that time will be
infinitely too short to do it; we must therefore leave
it for the work of eternity.”
Upon this there was great rejoicing,
yea, more than there had been upon the capture of
the French stronghold. Who shall say whether Brother
Moody’s brevity may not stretch farther across
the intervals of time than the longest preaching ever
preached by mortal preacher?
In three years after its capture,
Louisburgh was restored to the French by the treaty
of Aix-la-Chapelle. Ten years after its restoration,
a heavier armament, a greater fleet, a more numerous
army, besieged its almost impregnable walls.
Under Amherst, Boscawen, and Wolfe, no less than twenty-three
ships of war, eighteen frigates, sixteen thousand land
forces, with a proportionable train of cannon and mortars,
were arrayed against this great fortress in the year
1758. Here, too, many of our own ancestral warriors
were gathered in that memorable conflict; here Gridley,
who afterwards planned the redoubt at Bunker Hill,
won his first laurels as an engineer; here Pomeroy
distinguished himself, and others whose names are
not recorded, but whose deeds survive in the history
of a republic. The very drum that beat to arms
before Louisburgh was braced again when the greater
drama of the Revolution opened at Concord and Lexington.
The siege continued for nearly two
months. From June 8th until July 26th, the storm
of iron and fire of rocket, shot, and shell swept
from yonder batteries, upon the castellated city.
Then when the King’s, the Queen’s, the
Dauphin’s bastions were lying in ruins, the commander,
Le Chevalier de Drucour, capitulated, and the lilies
of the Bourbon waved over Louisburgh no more.
And here we stand nearly a century
after, looking out from these war-works upon the desolate
harbor. At the entrance, the wrecks of three French
frigates, sunk to prevent the ingress of the British
fleet, yet remain; sometimes visited by our still
enterprising countrymen, who come down in coasters
with diving-bell and windlass, to raise again from
the deep, imbedded in sea-shells, the great guns that
have slept in the ooze so long. Between those
two points lay the ships of the line, and frigates
of Louis; opposite, where the parapets of stone are
yet visible, was the grand battery of forty guns:
at Lighthouse Point yonder, two thousand grenadiers,
under General Wolfe, drove back the French artillerymen,
and tamed their cannon upon these mighty walls.
Here the great seventy-four blew up; there the English
boats were sunk by the guns of the fortress; day and
night for many weeks this ground has shuddered with
the thunders of the cannonade.
And what of all this? we may ask.
What of the ships that were sunk, and those that floated
away with the booty? What of the soldiers that
fell by hundreds here, and those that lived?
What of the prisoners that mourned, and the captors
that triumphed? What of the flash of artillery,
and the shattered wall that answered it? Has
any benefit resulted to mankind from this brilliant
achievement? Can any man, of any nation, stand
here and say: “This work was wrought to
my profit?” Can any man draw such a breath here
amid these buried walls, as he can upon the humblest
sod that ever was wet with the blood of patriotism?
I trow not.
A second time in possession of this
stronghold, England had not the means to maintain
her conquest; the fortification was too large for any
but a powerful garrison. A hundred war-ships
had congregated in that harbor: frigates, seventy-fours,
transports, sloops, under the Fleur-de-lis.
Although Louisburgh was the pivot-point of the French
possessions, yet it was but an outside harbor for
the colonies. So the order went forth to destroy
the town that had been reared with so much cost, and
captured with so much sacrifice. And it took
two solid years of gunpowder to blow up these immense
walls, upon which we now sadly stand, O gentle reader!
Turf, turf, turf covers all! The gloomiest spectacle
the sight of man can dwell upon is the desolate, but
once populous, abode of humanity. Egypt itself
is cheerful compared with Louisburgh!
“It rains,” said Picton.
It had rained all the morning; but
what did that matter when a hundred years since was
in one’s mind? Picton, in his mackintosh,
was an impervious representative of the nineteenth
century; but I was as fully saturated with water as
if I were living in the place under the old French
regime.
“Let us go down,” said
Picton, “and see the jolly old fishermen outside
the walls. What is the use of staying here in
the rain after you have seen all that can be seen?
Come along. Just think how serene it will be if
we can get some milk and potatoes down there.”
There are about a dozen fishermen’s
huts on the beach outside the walls of the old town
of Louisburgh. When you enter one it reminds you
of the descriptive play-bill of the melo-drama “Scene
II.: Interior of a Fisherman’s Cottage
on the Sea-shore: Ocean in the Distance.”
The walls are built of heavy timbers, laid one upon
another, and caulked with moss or oakum. Overhead
are square beams, with pegs for nets, poles, guns,
boots, the heterogeneous and picturesque tackle with
which such ceilings are usually ornamented. But
oh! how clean everything is! The knots are fairly
scrubbed out of the floor-planks, the hearth-bricks
red as cherries, the dresser-shelves worn thin with
soap and sand, and white as the sand with which they
have been scoured. I never saw drawing-room that
could compare with the purity of that interior.
It was cleanliness itself; but I saw many such before
I left Louisburgh, in both the old town and the new.
We sat down in the “hutch,”
as they call it, before a cheery wood-fire, and soon
forgot all about the outside rain. But if we had
shut out the rain, we had not shut out the neighboring
Atlantic. That was near enough; the thunderous
surf, whirling, pouring, breaking against the rocky
shore and islands, was sounding in our ears, and we
could see the great white masses of foam lifted against
the sky from the window of the hutch, as we sat before
the warm fire.
“You was lucky to get in last
night,” said the master of the hutch, an old,
weather-beaten fisherman.
“Yes,” replied Picton,
surveying the grey head before him with as much complacency
as he would a turnip; “and a serene old place
it is when we get in.”
To this the weather-beaten replied
by winking twice with both eyes.
“Rather a dangerous coast,”
continued Picton, stretching out one thigh before
the fire. “I say, don’t you fishermen
often lose your lives out there?” and he pointed
to the mouth of the harbor.
“There was only two lives lost
in seventy years,” replied the old man
(this remarkable fact was confirmed by many persons
of whom we asked the same question during our visit),
“and one of them was a young man, a stranger
here, who was capsized in a boat as he was going out
to a vessel in the harbor.”
“You are speaking now of lives
lost in the fisheries,” said Picton, “not
in the coasting trade.”
“Oh!” replied the old
man, shaking his head, “the coasting trade is
different; there is a many lives lost in that.
Last year I had a brother as sailed out of this in
a shallop, on the same day as yon vessel,” pointing
to the Balaklava; “he went out in company with
your captain; he was going to his wedding, he thought,
poor fellow, for he was to bring a young wife home
with him from Halifax, but he got caught in a storm
off Canseau, and we never heard of the shallop again.
He was my youngest brother, gentlemen.”
It was strange to be seated in that
old cottage, listening to so dreary a story, and watching
the storm outside. There was a wonderful fascination
in it, nevertheless, and I was not a little loth to
leave the bright hearth when the sailors from the
schooner came for us and carried us on board again
to dinner.
The storm continued; but Picton and
I found plenty to do that day. Equipped with
oil-skin pea-jackets and sou’-westers, with a
couple of fish-pughs, or poles, pointed with
iron, we started on a cruise after lobsters, in a
sort of flat-bottomed skiff, peculiar to the place,
called a dingledekooch. And although we
did not catch one lobster, yet we did not lose sight
of many interesting particulars that were scattered
around the harbor. And first of the fisheries.
All the people here are directly or indirectly engaged
in this business, and to this they devote themselves
entirely; farming being scarcely thought of. I
doubt whether there is a plough in the place; certainly
there was not a horse, in either the old or new town,
or a vehicle of any kind, as we found out betimes.
The fishing here, as in all other
places along the coast, is carried on in small, clinker-built
boats, sharp at both ends, and carrying two sails.
It is marvellous with what dexterity these boats are
handled; they are out in all weathers, and at all
times, night or day, as it happens, and although sometimes
loaded to the gunwale with fish, yet they encounter
the roughest gales, and ride out storms in safety,
that would be perilous to the largest vessels.
“I can carry all sail,”
said one old fellow, “when the captain there
would have to take in every rag on the schooner.”
And such, too, was the fact.
These boats usually sail a few miles from the shore,
rarely beyond twelve; the fish are taken with hand-lines
generally, but sometimes a set line with buoys and
anchors is used. The fish, are cured on flakes,
or high platforms, raised upon poles from the beach,
so that one end of the staging is over the water.
The cod are thrown up from the boat to the flake by
means of the fish-pugh a sort of one-pronged,
piscatory pitchfork and cleaned, salted,
and cured there; then spread out to dry on the flake,
or on the beach, and packed for market. Nothing
can be neater and cleaner than the whole system of
curing the fish! popular opinion to the contrary
notwithstanding. The fishermen of Louisburgh are
a happy, contented, kind, and simple people.
Living, as they do, far from the jarring interests
of the busy world, having a common revenue, for the
ocean supplies each and all alike; pursuing an occupation
which is constant discipline for body and soul; brave,
sincere, and hospitable by nature, for all of these
virtues are inseparable from their relations to each
other; one can scarcely be with them, no matter how
brief the visit, without feeling a kindred sympathy;
without having a vague thought of “sometime
I may be only too glad to escape from the world and
accept this humble happiness instead;” without
a dreamy idea of “Perhaps this, after
all, is the real Arcadia!”
While I was indulging in these reflections,
it was amusing to see Picton at work! The heads
and entrails of the cod-fish, thrown from the “flakes”
into the water, attract thousands of the baser tribes,
such as sculpins, flounders, and toad-fish, who feed
themselves fat upon the offals, and enjoy a peaceful
life under the clear waters of the harbor. As
the dingledekooch floated silently over them, they
lay perfectly quiet and unsuspicious of danger, although
within a few feet of the fatal fish-pugh, and in an
element almost as transparent as air. Lobster,
during the storm, had gone off to other grounds; but
here were great flat flounders and sculpin, within
reach of the indefatigable Picton. Down went the
fish-pugh and up came the game! The bottom of
the skiff was soon covered with the spearings of the
traveller. Great flounders, those sub-marine buckwheat
cakes; sculpins, bloated with rage and wind, like patriots
out of office; toad-fish, savage and vindictive as
Irishmen in a riot. Down went the fish-pugh!
It was rare sport, and no person could have enjoyed
it more than Picton except perhaps some
of the veteran fishermen of Louisburgh, who were gathered
on the beach watching the doings in the dingledekooch.