Ryeland Family Tree

The Genealogy of the Ryeland and connected Families

Port Royal, Annapolis, , Nova Scotia, Canada


 


Notes:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Port_Royal,_Nova_Scotia - January 14th 2008



Port Royal is a small rural community in the western part of the Canadian province of Nova Scotia. It is located on the north shore of the Annapolis Basin, a sub-basin of the Bay of Fundy, near the town of Annapolis Royal. Port Royal was the second permanent European settlement in North America north of Florida, having been founded in 1605 by Pierre Dugua, Sieur de Monts and Samuel de Champlain.



De Monts built the Habitation at Port-Royal in 1605 as a replacement for Champlain's initial attempt at colonising Ile Ste. Croix, located on the border between what is now Maine and New Brunswick. The Ile Ste. Croix settlement had failed due to the lack of food, water, and fuel wood on the island.



The actual buildings of the Habitation were burned to the ground in 1613 by an English invasion force from Virginia led by sea marauder Samuel Argall. In the 1930s the site of the Habitation was located and underwent archeological excavation. The results of the excavation fed public interest in the period of the original French settlement, interest that was already increasing due to the publication of Quietly My Captain Waits, an historical novel by Evelyn Eaton set in Port Royal in the early 17th century.



The discovery of a duplicate set of plans in France for the original Habitation, together with public and political interest, led to the reconstruction in 1939-1941 of the Habitation on the original site. This reconstruction made the Habitation the very first National Historic Site in Canada to have a replica structure built. Today, the replica of the Habitation is considered a milestone in the Canadian heritage movement. Open to the public and staffed by historical interpreters in period costumes, it is a major tourist attraction.



Battle of Port Royal



Port Royal was the scene of major fighting during King William's War. Port Royal served as a safe harbor for French cruisers and supply point for Indians hostile to the New England colonies. In 1690 Port Royal was attacked and destroyed by an overwhelming force sent from New England. The force was commanded by William Phips and consisted of "7 ships, armed with 78 cannon and carrying 736 men, 446 of them being militiamen." The French garrison consisted of only 80 soldiers and the fortifications were in a state of disrepair with the cannon that were available not even being mounted.



Realizing the hopelessness of the situation the local French commander negotiated an honorable surrender. Though in spite of the terms under the surrender, the New Englanders soon broke into 12 days of looting and pillaging. The cannon were removed and anything that could be deemed a fortification was leveled. William Phips also ordered the Acadian peasantry to swear an oath of allegiance to William and Mary of England. Phips then determined to install a new government, he organized a provisional government by personally selecting French Acadian leaders to form a council.



In addition to his assault on Port Royal, Phips dispatched additional forces to destroy other French posts at the head of the Bay of Fundy at Castine, La Harve, Chedabucto.

Latitude: 44.733333, Longitude: -65.516667



Birth

Matches 101 to 150 of 222

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   Last Name, Given Name(s)    Birth    Person ID 
101 DOUCET, Madeleine  1700I28298
102 DOUCET, Madeleine  15 Mar 1712I28516
103 DOUCET, Marguerite  1680I33101
104 DOUCET, Marguerite  1700I27926
105 DOUCET, Marguerite  2 Feb 1710I28314
106 DOUCET, Marguerite  24 Nov 1711I28315
107 DOUCET, Marguerite  1719I28544
108 DOUCET, Marguerite  5 Feb 1721I28539
109 DOUCET, Marguerite  1725I28252
110 DOUCET, Marie  1678I33175
111 DOUCET, Marie  1694I27590
112 DOUCET, Marie  1698I28297
113 DOUCET, Marie  1699I28511
114 DOUCET, Marie Anne  1661I26918
115 DOUCET, Marie Josephe  1698I28311
116 DOUCET, Marie Josephe  2 Oct 1722I28545
117 DOUCET, Marie Josephe  1726I31548
118 DOUCET, Marie Marthe  1694I28484
119 DOUCET, Mathieu  1685I33179
120 DOUCET, Michel  10 Apr 1703I27535
121 DOUCET, Michel  12 Oct 1710I28302
122 DOUCET, Michel  1733I27537
123 DOUCET, Pierre  1667I26185
124 DOUCET, Pierre  1685I28490
125 DOUCET, Pierre  1690I28295
126 DOUCET, Pierre  1703I27448
127 DOUCET, Pierre  1703I30155
128 DOUCET, Pierre Dit Maillard  20 Feb 1707I28313
129 DOUCET, Pierre  2 Nov 1709I33496
130 DOUCET, Pierre  28 Jan 1715I33111
131 DOUCET, Pierre Paul  23 Mar 1704I28299
132 DOUCET, Rene  1678I33178
133 DOUCET, Toussaint  Abt 1663I23660
134 DOUCET, Ursule  27 Mar 1720I28318
135 DOUCET, Ursule  17 Jun 1722I28522
136 DUGAS, Abraham  1661I32928
137 DUGAS, Anne  1654I33025
138 DUGAS, Anne Marie  22 Jun 1727I33186
139 DUGAS, Claude  1652I33024
140 DUGAS, Madeleine  1664I33026
141 DUGAS, Marie  I24114
142 DUGAS, Martin  1656I33021
143 GAUDET, Claude  1677I24131
144 GAUDET, Denis  Nov 1685I28273
145 GAUDET, Guillaume  1683I32963
146 GAUDET, Pierre  Abt 1651I24084
147 GIROUARD, Basile  25 Dec 1730I28394
148 GIROUARD, Germain  1691I27295
149 GIROUARD, Guillaume  Oct 1685I27294
150 GIROUARD, Joseph  4 Aug 1720I28393

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