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<h1> THE GREAT FORTRESS </h1>
<h2> A Chronicle of Louisbourg 1720-1760 </h2>
<h3> CHRONICLES OF CANADA </h3>
<h2> Edited by George M. Wrong and H. H. Langton </h2>
<h4>
In thirty-two volumes
</h4>
<h4>
Volume 8
</h4>
<h2> By William Wood </h2>
<h4>
Toronto, 1915
</h4>
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<p><b>CONTENTS</b></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_PREF"> PREFACE </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I — THE LAST SEA LINK WITH FRANCE</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II — THE SEA LINK LOST </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III — THE LINK RECOVERED </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV — LOST FOR EVER </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V — ANNIHILATION </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0007"> BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE </SPAN></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> PREFACE </h2>
<p>Louisbourg was no mere isolated stronghold which could be lost or won
without affecting the wider issues of oversea dominion. On the contrary,
it was a necessary link in the chain of waterside posts which connected
France with America by way of the Atlantic, the St Lawrence, the Great
Lakes, and the Mississippi. But since the chain itself and all its other
links, and even the peculiar relation of Louisbourg to the Acadians and
the Conquest, have been fully described elsewhere in the Chronicles of
Canada, the present volume only tries to tell the purely individual tale.
Strange to say, this tale seems never to have been told before; at least,
not as one continuous whole. Of course, each siege has been described,
over and over again, in many special monographs as well as in countless
books about Canadian history. But nobody seems to have written any
separate work on Louisbourg showing causes, crises, and results, all
together, in the light of the complete naval and military proof. So
perhaps the following short account may really be the first attempt to
tell the tale of Louisbourg from the foundation to the fall.</p>
<p>W. W.</p>
<p>59 GRANDE ALLEE,</p>
<p>QUEBEC, 2nd January 1915.</p>
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<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER I — THE LAST SEA LINK WITH FRANCE </h2>
<h3> 1720-1744 </h3>
<p>The fortress of Louisbourg arose not from victory but from defeat; not
from military strength but from naval weakness; not from a new,
adventurous spirit of attack, but from a half-despairing hope of keeping
one last foothold by the sea. It was not begun till after the fortunes of
Louis XIV had reached their lowest ebb at the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713.
It lived a precarious life of only forty years, from 1720 to 1760. And
nothing but bare ruins were left to mark its grave when it finally passed,
unheeded and unnamed, into the vast dominions of the conquering British at
the Peace of Paris in 1763.</p>
<p>The Treaty of Utrecht narrowed the whole French sea-coast of America down
to the single island of Cape Breton. Here, after seven years of official
hesitation and maritime exhaustion, Louisbourg was founded to guard the
only harbour the French thought they had a chance of holding. A medal was
struck to celebrate this last attempt to keep the one remaining seaway
open between Old France and New. Its legend ran thus: Ludovicoburgum
Fundatum et Munitum, M.DCC.XX ('Louisbourg Founded and Fortified, 1720').
Its obverse bore the profile of the young Louis XV, whose statesmen hoped
they had now established a French Gibraltar in America, where French
fleets and forts would command the straits leading into the St Lawrence
and threaten the coast of New England, in much the same way as British
fleets and forts commanded the entrance to the Mediterranean and
threatened the coasts of France and Spain. This hope seemed flattering
enough in time of peace; but it vanished at each recurrent shock of war,
because the Atlantic then became a hostile desert for the French, while it
still remained a friendly highway for the British.</p>
<p>The first French settlers in Louisbourg came over from Newfoundland, which
had been given up to the British by the treaty. The fishermen of various
nations had frequented different ports all round these shores for
centuries; and, by the irony of fate, the new French capital of Cape
Breton was founded at the entrance to the bay which had long been known as
English Harbour. Everything that rechristening could do, however, was done
to make Cape Breton French. Not only was English Harbour now called
Louisbourg, but St Peter's became Port Toulouse, St Anne's became Port
Dauphin, and the whole island itself was solemnly christened Ile Royale.</p>
<p>The shores of the St Lawrence up to Quebec and Montreal were as entirely
French as the islands in the Gulf. But Acadia, which used to form the
connection by land between Cape Breton and Canada, had now become a
British possession inhabited by the so-called 'neutral French.' These
Acadians, few in numbers and quite unorganized, were drawn in opposite
directions, on the one hand by their French proclivities, on the other by
their rooted affection for their own farms. Unlike the French
Newfoundlanders, who came in a body from Plaisance (now Placentia), the
Acadians preferred to stay at home. In 1717 an effort was made to bring
some of them into Louisbourg. But it only succeeded in attracting the
merest handful. On the whole, the French authorities preferred leaving the
Acadians as they were, in case a change in the fortunes of war might bring
them once more under the fleurs-de-lis, when the connection by land
between Quebec and the sea would again be complete. A plan for promoting
the immigration of the Irish Roman Catholics living near Cape Breton never
got beyond the stage of official memoranda. Thus the population of the new
capital consisted only of government employees, French fishermen from
Newfoundland and other neighbouring places, waifs and strays from points
farther off, bounty-fed engages from France, and a swarm of camp-following
traders. The regular garrison was always somewhat of a class apart.</p>
<p>The French in Cape Breton needed all the artificial aid they could get
from guns and forts. Even in Canada there was only a handful of French,
all told, at the time of the Treaty of Utrecht—twenty-five thousand;
while the British colonists in North America numbered fifteen times as
many. The respective populations had trebled by the time of the Cession of
Canada to the British fifty years later, but with a tendency for the vast
British preponderance to increase still more. Canada naturally had neither
men nor money to spare for Louisbourg; so the whole cost of building the
fortress, thirty million livres, came direct from France. This sum was
then the equivalent, in purchasing power, of at least as many dollars now,
though the old French livre was only rated at the contemporary value of
twenty cents. But the original plans were never carried out; moreover, not
half the money that actually was spent ever reached the military chest at
all. There were too many thievish fingers by the way.</p>
<p>The French were not a colonizing people, their governing officials hated a
tour of duty oversea, and Louisbourg was the most unpopular of all the
stations in the service. Those Frenchmen who did care for outlandish
places went east to India or west to Canada. Nobody wanted to go to a
small, dull, out-of-the-way garrison town like Louisbourg, where there was
no social life whatever—nothing but fishermen, smugglers, petty
traders, a discontented garrison, generally half composed of foreigners,
and a band of dishonest, second-rate officials, whose one idea was how to
get rich and get home. The inspectors who were sent out either failed in
their duty and joined the official gang of thieves, or else resigned in
disgust. Worse still, because this taint was at the very source, the royal
government in France was already beset with that entanglement of weakness
and corruption which lasted throughout the whole century between the
decline of Louis XIV and the meteoric rise of Napoleon.</p>
<p>The founders of Louisbourg took their time to build it. It was so very
profitable to spin the work out as long as possible. The plan of the
fortress was good. It was modelled after the plans of Vauban, who had been
the greatest engineer in the greatest European army of the previous
generation. But the actual execution was hampered, at every turn, by want
of firmness at headquarters and want of honest labour on the spot. Sea
sand was plentiful, worthless, and cheap. So it was used for the mortar,
with most disastrous results. The stone was hewn from a quarry of
porphyritic trap near by and used for the walls in the rough. Cut stone
and good bricks were brought out from France as ballast by the fishing
fleet. Some of these finer materials were built into the governor's and
the intendant's quarters. Others were sold to New England traders and
replaced by inferior substitutes.</p>
<p>Of course, direct trade between the opposing colonies was strictly
forbidden by both the French and British navigation acts. But the
Louisbourg officials winked at anything that would enrich them quickly,
while the New Englanders pushed in eagerly wherever a profit could be made
by any means at all. Louisbourg was intended to be the general rendezvous
of the transatlantic French fishing vessels; a great port of call between
France, Canada, and the French West Indies; and a harbour of refuge in
peace and war. But the New England shipping was doing the best trade at
Louisbourg, and doing it in double contraband, within five years of the
foundation. Cod caught by Frenchmen from Louisbourg itself, French wines
and brandy brought out from France, tobacco and sugar brought north from
the French West Indies, all offered excellent chances to enterprising
Yankees, who came in with foodstuffs and building materials of their own.
One vessel sailed for New York with a cargo of claret and brandy that
netted her owners a profit of a hundred per cent, even after paying the
usual charges demanded by the French custom-house officials for what
really was a smuggler's licence.</p>
<p>Fishing, smuggling, and theft were the three great industries of
Louisbourg. The traders shared the profits of the smuggling. But the
intendant and his officials kept most of the choice thieving for
themselves.</p>
<p>The genuine settlers—and a starveling crew they were—wrested
their debt-laden livelihood from the local fishing. This was by no means
bad in itself. But, like other fishermen before and since, they were in
perpetual bondage to the traders, who took good care not to let accounts
get evened up. A happier class of fishermen made up the engages, who were
paid by government to 'play settler' for a term of years, during which
they helped to swell the official census of uncongenial Louisbourg. The
regular French fishing fleet of course returned to France at the end of
every season, and thus enjoyed a full spell of French delights on shore.</p>
<p>The Acadians supplied Louisbourg with meat and vegetables. These were
brought in by sea; for there were no roads worth mentioning; nor, in the
contemporary state of Cape Breton, was there any need for roads. The
farmers were few, widely scattered, and mostly very poor. The only
prosperous settlement within a long day's march was situated on the
beautiful Mira river. James Gibson, a Boston merchant and militiaman, who
served against Louisbourg in 1745, was much taken by the appearance of an
establishment 'at the mouth of a large salmon fishery,' by one 'very
handsome house, with two large barns, two large gardens, and fine fields
of corn,' and by another with 'six rooms on a floor and well furnished.'
He adds that 'in one of the barns were fifteen loads of hay, and room
sufficient for sixty horses and cattle.' In 1753 the intendant sent home a
report about a proposed 'German' settlement near the 'Grand Lake of Mira.'
A new experiment was then being tried, the importation of settlers from
Alsace-Lorraine. But five years afterwards Cape Breton had been lost to
France for ever.</p>
<p>The fact is that the French never really colonized Cape Breton at large,
and Louisbourg least of all. They knew the magnificent possibilities of
Sydney harbour, but its mere extent prevented their attempting to make use
of it. They saw that the whole island was a maritime paradise, with
seaports in its very heart as well as round its shores. But they were a
race of gallant, industrious landsmen at home, with neither the wish nor
the aptitude for a nautical life abroad. They could not have failed to see
that there was plenty of timber in some parts of the island, and that the
soil was fit to bear good crops of grain in others. A little prospecting
would also have shown them iron, coal, and gypsum. But their official
parasites did not want to see smuggling and peculation replaced by
industry and trade. Nothing, indeed, better proves how little they thought
of making Ile Royale a genuine colony than their utter failure to exploit
any one of its teeming natural resources in forest, field, or mine.</p>
<p>What the French did with extraneous resources and artificial aids in the
town of Louisbourg is more to the purpose in hand. The problem of their
position, and of its strength and weakness in the coming clash of arms,
depended on six naval, military, and governmental factors, each one of
which must be considered before the whole can be appreciated. These six
factors were—the government, the garrison, the militia, the Indians,
the navy, and the fortress.</p>
<p>Get rich and go home. The English-speaking peoples, whose ancestors once
went to England as oversea emigrants, and two-thirds of whom are now
themselves the scions of successive migrations across the Seven Seas,
cannot understand how intensely the general run of French officials
detested colonial service, especially in a place like Louisbourg, which
was everything the average Frenchman hated most. This British failure to
understand a national trait, which is still as strongly marked as ever,
accounts for a good deal of the exaggerated belief in the strength of the
French position in America. The British Americans who tried to think out
plans of conquest were wont to under-estimate their own unorganized
resources and to over-estimate the organized resources of the French,
especially when they set their minds on Louisbourg.</p>
<p>The British also entertained the erroneous idea that 'the whole country
was under one command.' This was the very thing it was not. The French
system was the autocratic one without the local autocrat; for the
functions of the governor and the intendant overlapped each other, and all
disputes had to be referred to Quebec, where the functions of another
governor and another intendant also overlapped each other. If no decision
could be reached at Quebec, and the question at issue was one of
sufficient importance, the now double imbroglio would be referred to the
Supreme Council in France, which would write back to Quebec, whence the
decision would be forwarded to Louisbourg, where it would arrive months
after many other troubles had grown out of the original dispute.</p>
<p>The system was false from the start, because the overlapping was
intentional. The idea was to prevent any one man from becoming too strong
and too independent. The result was to keep governors and intendants at
perpetual loggerheads and to divide every station into opposing parties.
Did the governor want money and material for the fortifications? Then the
intendant was sure the military chest, which was in his own charge, could
not afford it. The governor might sometimes gain his ends by giving a
definite emergency order under his hand and seal. But, if the emergency
could not be proved, this laid him open to great risks from the
intendant's subsequent recriminations before the Superior Council in
Quebec or the Supreme Council in France. The only way such a system could
be worked at all was either by corrupt collusion or by superhuman
co-operation between the two conflicting parties, or by appointing a man
of genius who could make every other official discharge his proper duties
and no more. Corrupt collusion was not very common, because the governors
were mostly naval or military men, and the naval and military men were
generally honest. Co-operation was impossible between two merely average
men; and no genius was ever sent to such a place as Louisbourg. The ablest
man in either of the principal posts was the notorious intendant Bigot,
who began here on a small scale the consummate schemes that proved so
disastrously successful at Quebec. Get rich and go home.</p>
<p>The minor governmental life of Louisbourg was of a piece with the major.
There were four or five lesser members of the Superior Council, which also
had jurisdiction over Ile St Jean, as Prince Edward Island was then
called. The lucrative chances of the custom-house were at the mercy of
four under-paid officials grandiloquently called a Court of Admiralty. An
inferior court known as the bailiwick tried ordinary civil suits and
breaches of the peace. This bailiwick also offered what might be
euphemistically called 'business opportunities' to enterprising members.
True, there was no police to execute its decrees; and at one time a
punctilious resident complained that 'there was not even a common hangman,
nor a jail, nor even a tormentor to rack the criminals or inflict other
appropriate tortures.' But appeals took a long time and cost much money;
so even the officials of the bailiwick could pick up a living by threats
of the law's delay, on the one hand, and promises of perverted local
justice, on the other. That there was money to be made, in spite of the
meagre salaries, is proved by the fact that the best journeyman wig-maker
in Louisbourg 'grew extremely rich in different branches of commerce,
especially in the contraband,' after filling the dual position of judge of
the admiralty and judge of the bailiwick, both to the apparent
satisfaction of his friend the intendant.</p>
<p>The next factor was the garrison of regulars. This was under the direct
command of the king's lieutenant, who took his orders from the governor.
The troops liked Louisbourg no better than the officials did. True, there
were taverns in plenty: even before Louisbourg was officially founded they
had become such a thriving nuisance that orders for their better control
had been sent out from France. But there was no other place for the
ordinary soldier to go to in his spare time. The officers felt the want of
a larger outlook even more than the men did; and neither man nor officer
ever went to Louisbourg if he could help it. When Montcalm, the greatest
Frenchman the New World ever saw, came out to Canada, there was eager
competition among the troops at home to join his army in the field.
Officers paid large sums for the honour of exchanging into any one of the
battalions ordered to the front; and when volunteers were called for from
the ranks every single man stepped forward. But no Montcalm came out to
Louisbourg, and nothing but bounties could get a volunteer. There were
only between five and six hundred regulars in the whole garrison during
the first siege, twenty-five years after the foundation, and nearly half
of these were foreigners, mostly 'pay-fighting Swiss.'</p>
<p>The third factor was the militia. Every able-bodied man, not specially
exempt for other duties, was liable for service in time of war; and the
whole island could be drawn upon for any great emergency at Louisbourg.
Between thirteen and fourteen hundred men were got under arms for the
siege of 1745. Those who lived in Louisbourg had the advantage of a little
slack discipline and a little slack drill. Those in the country had some
practice in the handling of firearms. But, taken all round, it would be an
exaggeration to call them even quarter-trained soldiers.</p>
<p>The fourth factor was the Indians. They belonged to the Micmac tribe of
the great Algonquin family, and probably numbered no more than about four
thousand throughout the whole French sphere of influence in what are now
the Maritime Provinces. A few hundred braves might have been ready to take
the war-path in the wilds of Cape Breton; but sieges were not at all in
their line, except when they could hang round the besiegers' inland
flanks, on the chance of lifting scalps from careless stragglers or
ambushing an occasional small party gone astray. As in Canada, so in Cape
Breton, the Indians naturally sided with the French, who disturbed them
less and treated them better than the British did. The British, who
enjoyed the inestimable advantage of superior sea-power, had more goods to
exchange. But in every other respect the French were very much preferred.
The handful of French sent out an astonishingly great number of heroic and
sympathetic missionaries to the natives. The many British sent out
astonishingly few. The Puritan clergy did shamefully little compared with
the wonderful Jesuits. Moreover, while the French in general made the
Indian feel he was at all events a fellow human being, the average British
colonist simply looked on him as so much vermin, to be destroyed together
with the obstructive wilds that harboured him.</p>
<p>The fifth factor, the navy, brings us into contact with world-wide
problems of sea-power which are too far-reaching for discussion here
[Footnote: See in this Series The Winning of Canada and The Passing of New
France, where they are discussed.] Suffice it to say that, while
Louisbourg was an occasional convenience, it had also peculiar dangers for
a squadron from the weaker of two hostile navies, as squadrons from France
were likely to be. The British could make for a dozen different harbours
on the coast. The French could make for only this one. Therefore the
British had only to guard against this one stronghold if the French were
in superior force; they could the more easily blockade it if the French
were in equal force; and they could the more easily annihilate it if it
was defended by an inferior force.</p>
<p>The last factor was the fortress itself. This so-called 'Gibraltar of the
West,' this 'Quebec by the sea,' this 'Dunkirk of New France,' was
certainly first of its kind. But it was first only in a class of one;
while the class itself was far from being a first among classes. The
natural position was vastly inferior to that of Quebec or Gibraltar; while
the fortifications were not to be compared with those of Dunkirk, which,
in one sense, they were meant to replace. Dunkirk had been sold by Charles
II to Louis XIV, who made it a formidable naval base commanding the
straits of Dover. When the Treaty of Utrecht compelled its demolition, the
French tried to redress the balance a little by building similar works in
America on a very much smaller scale, with a much more purely defensive
purpose, and as an altogether subsidiary undertaking. Dunkirk was 'a
pistol held at England's head' because it was an integral part of France,
which was the greatest military country in the world and second to England
alone on the sea. Louisbourg was no American Dunkirk because it was much
weaker in itself, because it was more purely defensive, because the odds
of population and general resources as between the two colonies were
fifteen to one in favour of the British, and because the preponderance of
British sea-power was even greater in America than it was in Europe.</p>
<p>The harbour of Louisbourg ran about two miles north-east and south-west,
with a clear average width of half a mile. The two little peninsulas on
either side of the entrance were nearly a mile apart. But the actual
fairway of the entrance was narrowed to little more than a clear quarter
of a mile by the reefs and islands running out from the south-western
peninsula, on which the fortress stood. This low, nubbly tongue of land
was roughly triangular. It measured about three-quarters of a mile on its
longest side, facing the harbour, over half a mile on the land side,
facing the enemy's army, and a good deal under half a mile on the side
facing the sea. It had little to fear from naval bombardment so long as
the enemy's fleet remained outside, because fogs and storms made it a very
dangerous lee shore, and because, then as now, ships would not pit
themselves against forts unless there was no rival fleet to fight, and
unless other circumstances were unusually propitious.</p>
<p>The entrance was defended by the Island Battery, which flanked the
approach with thirty-nine guns, and the Royal Battery, which directly
faced it with thirty guns. Some temporary lines with a few more guns were
prepared in time of danger to prevent the enemy from landing in Gabarus
Bay, which ran for miles south-west of Louisbourg. But the garrison, even
with the militia, was never strong enough to keep the enemy at arm's
length from any one of these positions. Moreover, the north-east
peninsula, where the lighthouse stood, commanded the Island Battery; and
the land side of Louisbourg itself was commanded by a range of low
hillocks less than half a mile away.</p>
<p>It was this land side, containing the citadel and other works, which so
impressed outsiders with the idea of impregnable strength. The glacis was
perfect—not an inch of cover wherever you looked; and the approach
was mostly across a slimy bog. The ditch was eighty feet wide. The walls
rose over thirty feet above the ditch. There were embrasures for one
hundred and forty-eight guns all round; though not more than ninety were
ever actually mounted. On the seaward face Louisbourg was not so strongly
fortified; but in the centre of this face there were a deep ditch and high
wall, with bastions on each immediate flank, and lighter defences
connecting these with the landward face. A dozen streets were laid out, so
as to divide the whole town into conveniently square little blocks. The
area of the town itself was not much more than a hundred acres altogether—rather
close quarters for several thousand men, women, and children during a
siege.</p>
<p>If reports and memoranda could defend a fortress, then Louisbourg ought
indeed to have been impregnable. Of course every official trust entails
endless correspondence. But, quite apart from the stated returns that go
through 'the usual channel of communication,' reams and reams of paper
were filled with special reports, inspections, complaints, and good
advice. The governor wrote home, most elaborately, in 1724, about the
progress of the works. Ten years later he announced the official
inauguration of the lighthouse on the 1st of April. In 1736 the chief item
was the engineer's report on the walls. Next year the great anxiety was
about a dangerous famine, with all its attendant distress for the many and
its shameless profits for the few. On November 23, 1744, reinforcements
and provisions were asked for, because intelligence had been received that
the New Englanders were going to blockade Louisbourg the following summer.
At the same time, the discontent of the garrison had come to a head, and a
mutiny had broken out because the extra working pay had not been
forthcoming. After this the discipline became, not sterner, but slacker
than ever, especially among the hireling Swiss. On February 8, 1745,
within three months of the first siege, a memorandum was sent in to
explain what was still required to finish the works begun twenty-five
years before.</p>
<p>But, after all, it was not so much the defective works that really
mattered as the defective garrison behind them. English-speaking civilians
who have written about Louisbourg have sometimes taken partial account of
the ordinary Frenchman's repugnance to oversea duty in time of peace and
of the little worth of hireling foreigners in time of war. But they have
always ignored that steady drip, drip, drip of deterioration which reduces
the efficiency of every garrison condemned to service in remote and
thoroughly uncongenial countries. Louisbourg was remote, weeks away from
exchanges with Quebec, months from exchanges with any part of France or
Switzerland. And what other foreign station could have been more
thoroughly uncongenial, except, perhaps, a convict station in the tropics?
Bad quarters were endurable in Paris or even in the provinces, where five
minutes' walk would take one into something pleasanter. Bad fortifications
would inspire less apprehension anywhere in France, where there was at
least an army always ready to take the field. But cold, cramped quarters
in foggy little Louisbourg, between the estranging sea and an uncouth land
of rock, bog, sand, and scrubby vegetation, made all the world of
difference in the soldier's eyes. Add to this his want of faith in works
which he saw being scamped by rascally contractors, and we can begin to
understand why the general attitude of town and garrison alike was one of
'Here to-day and gone to-morrow.'</p>
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<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER II — THE SEA LINK LOST </h2>
<h3> 1745 </h3>
<p>Rome would not rest till she had ruined Carthage. Britain would not rest
till she had seen Dunkirk demolished. New England would not rest till she
had taken Louisbourg.</p>
<p>Louisbourg was unique in all America, and that was its undoing. It was the
one sentinel beside the gateway to New France; therefore it ought to be
taken before Quebec and Canada were attacked. It was the one corsair lying
in perpetual wait beside the British lines of seaborne trade; therefore it
must be taken before British shipping could be safe. It was the one French
sea link between the Old World and the New; therefore its breaking was of
supreme importance. It was the one real fortress ever heard of in America,
and it was in absolutely alien hands; therefore, so ran New England logic,
it was most offensive to all true Britons, New Englanders, and Puritans;
to all rivals in smuggling, trade, and privateering; and to all
right-thinking people generally.</p>
<p>The weakness of Louisbourg was very welcome news to energetic
Massachusetts. In 1744, when Frederick the Great had begun the War of the
Austrian Succession and France had taken arms against Great Britain, du
Quesnel, the governor of Louisbourg, who had received the intelligence of
these events some weeks before the alert Bostonians, at once decided to
win credit by striking the first blow. He was much disliked in Louisbourg.
He drank hard, cursed his subordinates when in his cups, and set the whole
place by the ears. Moreover, many of those under him wished to avoid
giving the British Americans any provocation, in the hope that the war
might be confined to Europe. But none dared to refuse a legal and positive
order. So in May his expedition left for Canso, where there was a little
home-made British fort on the strait between Cape Breton and the mainland
of Nova Scotia. The eighty fishermen in Canso surrendered to du Vivier,
the French commander, who sent them on to Boston, after burning their fort
to the ground. Elated by this somewhat absurd success, and strengthened by
nearly a hundred regulars and four hundred Indians, who raised his total
force to at least a thousand men, du Vivier next proceeded against
Annapolis on the west side of Nova Scotia. But Mascarene, the British
commander there, stood fast on his defence, though his men were few and
his means small. The Acadian French in the vicinity were afraid to join du
Vivier openly. The siege dragged on. The British received a slight
reinforcement. The French did not. And in September du Vivier suddenly
retired without attempting an assault.</p>
<p>The burning of Canso and the attack on Annapolis stirred up the wrath of
New England. A wild enthusiast, William Vaughan, urged Governor Shirley of
Massachusetts to make an immediate counter-attack. Shirley was an English
lawyer, good at his own work, but very anxious to become famous as a
conqueror. He lent a willing ear to Vaughan, and astounded the General
Court of Massachusetts on January 21, 1745, by first inducing the members
to swear secrecy and then asking them to consider a plan for a colonial
expedition against Louisbourg. He and they were on very good terms. But
they were provincial, cautious, and naturally slow when it came to
planning campaigns and pledging their credit for what was then an enormous
sum of money. Nor could they be blamed. None of them knew much about
armies and navies; most thought Louisbourg was a real transatlantic
Dunkirk; and all knew that they were quite insolvent already. Their joint
committee of the two Houses reported against the scheme; whereupon each
House carried a secret adverse vote by a large majority.</p>
<p>But, just before these votes were taken, a Puritan member from a country
district wrestled in what he thought confidential prayer with such loud
ejaculations that an eavesdropper overheard him and passed the secret on.
Of course the momentous news at once began to run like wildfire through
the province. Still, the 'Noes had it,' both in the country and the House.
Shirley was dejected and in doubt what to do next. But James Gibson, the
merchant militiaman, suddenly hit on the idea of getting up a petition
among the business community. The result surpassed every expectation. All
the merchants were eager for attack. Louisbourg embodied everything they
feared and hated: interference with seaborne commerce, rank popery, French
domination, trouble with Acadia, and the chance of being themselves
attacked. When the petition was presented to both Houses, the whole
subject was again debated. Provincial insolvency and the absence of either
a fleet or an army were urged by the Opposition. But the fighting party
put forth all their strength and pleaded that delay meant reinforcements
for Louisbourg and a good chance lost for ever. The vote would have been a
tie if a member of the Opposition had not slipped and broken his leg as he
was hurrying down to the House. Once the decision had been reached,
however, all did their best to ensure success.</p>
<p>Shirley wrote to his brother governors. Vaughan galloped off post-haste to
New Hampshire with the first official letter. Gibson led the merchants in
local military zeal. The result was that Massachusetts, which then
included Maine, raised over 3,000 men, while New Hampshire and Connecticut
raised about 500 each. Rhode Island concurred, but ungraciously and
ineffectually late. She nursed two grudges against Massachusetts, one
about the undeniably harsh treatment meted out to her great founder, Roger
Williams, the other about that most fruitful source of inter-provincial
mischief-making, a disputed boundary. New York lent some guns, which
proved very useful. The remaining colonies did nothing.</p>
<p>Shirley's choice of a commander-in-chief wisely fell on William
Pepperrell. There was no military leader in the whole of New England. So
the next most suitable man was the civilian who best combined the
necessary qualities of good sense, sound knowledge of men and affairs,
firmness, diplomacy, and popularity. Popularity was essential, because all
the men were volunteers. Pepperrell, who answered every reasonable test,
went through the campaign with flying colours and came out of it as the
first and only baronet of Massachusetts. He was commissioned as
major-general by all three contributing provinces, since none of them
recognized any common authority except that of the crown. He was ably
seconded by many leading men who, if not trained soldiers, were at least
accustomed to the organization of public life; for in those days the word
politician had not become a term of reproach in America, and the people
were often represented by men of the highest character.</p>
<p>The financial difficulty was overcome by issuing letters of credit, which
were afterwards redeemed by the Imperial government, at a total cost of
nearly a quarter of a million sterling. There was no time and there were
no means to change the militia into an army. But many compensating
advantages helped to make up for its deficiencies. The men volunteered
eagerly. They were all very keen to fight the French. Most of them
understood the individual use of firearms. Many of them had been to sea
and had learned to work together as a crew. Nearly all of them had the
handiness then required for life in a new country. And, what with
conviction and what with prejudice, they were also quite disposed to look
upon the expedition as a sort of Crusade against idolatrous papists, and
therefore as a very proper climax to the Great Awakening which had
recently roused New England to the heights of religious zealotry under the
leadership of the famous George Whitefield himself.</p>
<p>Strangely enough, neither Whitefield nor his friend Pepperrell was at all
sure that the expedition was a wise or even a godly venture. Whitefield
warned Pepperrell that he would be envied if he succeeded and abused if he
failed. The Reverend Thomas Prince openly regretted the change of enemy.
'The Heavenly shower is over. From fighting the Devil they needs must turn
to fighting the French.' But Parson Moody, most truculent of Puritans, had
no doubts whatever. The French, the pope, and the Devil were all one to
him; and when he embarked as senior chaplain he took a hatchet with which
to break down the graven images of Louisbourg. In the end Whitefield
warmed up enough to give the expedition its official motto: 'Nil
desperandum Christo Duce.' The 'Never Despair' heartened the worldlings.
The 'Christ our Commander' appealed to the 'Great Awakened.' And the whole
saying committed him to nothing particular concerning the issue at stake.</p>
<p>The three militia contingents numbered 4,270 men. The three naval
contingents had 13 vessels mounting 216 guns. In addition to both these
forces there were the transports, which had considerable crews. But all
these together, if caught on the open sea, would be no match for a few
regular men-of-war. New England had no navy, though the New Englanders had
enjoyed a good deal of experience in minor privateering against the
Spaniards during the last few years, as well as a certain amount of
downright piracy in time of peace, whenever a Frenchman or a Spaniard
could be safely taken at a disadvantage. So Shirley asked Commodore
Warren, commanding the North American station, to lend his aid. Warren had
married an American and was very well disposed towards the colonists. But,
having no orders from England, he at first felt obliged to refuse. Within
a short time, however, he was given a free hand by the Imperial
government, which authorized him to concert measures with Shirley 'for the
annoyance of the enemy, and for his Majesty's Service in North America.'</p>
<p>Warren immediately sailed for Canso with three men-of-war and sent for
another to join him. His wait for orders made him nearly three weeks later
than the New Englanders in arriving at the rendezvous. But this delay, due
to no fault of his own, was really an advantage to the New England
militia, who thus had a chance of learning a little more drill and
discipline. His four vessels carried 180 guns and 1,150 men at full
strength. The thirteen Provincial armed vessels carried more than 1,000
men. No exact returns were ever made out for the transports. But as '68
lay at anchor' in Canso harbour, while others 'came dropping in from day
to day,' as there were 4,270 militiamen on board, in addition to all the
stores, and as the French counted '96 transports' making for Gabarus Bay,
there could not have been less than 100, while the crews could hardly have
mustered less than an average of 20 men each. The grand total, at the
beginning of the expedition, could not, therefore, have been less than
8,000 men, of all sorts put together—over 4,000 American Provincial
militia, over 1,000 men of the Royal Navy, quite 1,000 men aboard the
Provincial fighting vessels, and at least 2,000 more as crews to work the
transports.</p>
<p>May 1, the first Sunday the Provincials spent at Canso, was a day of great
and multifarious activity, both sacred and profane. Parson Moody, the same
who had taken the war-path with his iconoclastic hatchet, delivered a
tremendous philippic from the text, 'Thy people shall be willing in the
day of Thy power.' Luckily for his congregation he had the voice of a
Stentor, as there were several mundane competitors in an adjoining field,
each bawling the word of command at the full pitch of his lungs. A
conscientious diarist, though full of sabbatarian zeal, was fain to admit
that 'Severall sorts of Busnesses was a-Going on: Sum a-Exercising, Sum
a-Hearing o' the Preaching.'</p>
<p>On May 5 Warren sailed into Canso. The Provincials thought the date of his
arrival a very happy omen, as it fell on what was then, according to the
Old Style calendar, St George's Day, April 23. After a conference with
Pepperrell he hurried off to begin the blockade of Louisbourg. A week
later, May 21, the transports joined him there, and landed their
militiamen for one of the most eccentric sieges ever known.</p>
<p>While the British had been spending the first four months of 1745 in
preparing 8,000 men, the French authorities in Louisbourg, whose force was
less than 2,000, had been wasting the same precious time in ridiculous
councils of war. It is a well-known saying that councils of war never
fight. But these Louisbourg councils did not even prepare to fight. The
news from Boston was not heeded. Worse yet, no attention was paid to the
American scouting vessels, which had been hovering off the coast for more
than a month. The bibulous du Quesnel had died in October. But his
successor, du Chambon, was no better as a commandant. Perhaps the kindest
thing to say of du Chambon is that he was the foolish father of a knavish
son—of that du Chambon de Vergor who, in the next war, surrendered
Fort Beausejour without a siege and left one sleepy sentry to watch
Wolfe's Cove the night before the Battle of the Plains.</p>
<p>It is true that du Chambon had succeeded to a thoroughly bad command. He
had no naval force whatever; and the military force had become worse
instead of better. The mutiny in December had left the 560 regulars in a
very sullen frame of mind. They knew that acquisitive government officials
were cheating them out of their proper rations of bacon and beans. The
officials knew that the soldiers knew. And so suspicion and resentment
grew strong between them. The only other force was the militia, which,
with certain exceptions, comprised every male inhabitant of Cape Breton
who could stand on two legs and hold a musket with both hands. There were
boys in their early teens and old men in their sixties. Nearly 1,800 ought
to have been available. But four or five hundred that might have been
brought in never received their marching orders. So the total combatants
only amounted to some 1,900, of whom 1,350 were militia. The
non-combatants numbered nearly as many. The cramped hundred acres of
imprisoned Louisbourg thus contained almost 4,000 people—mutineers
and militia, women and children, drones and other officials, all huddled
up together.</p>
<p>No reinforcements arrived after the first appearance of the British fleet.
Marin, a well-known guerilla leader, had been sent down from Quebec,
through the bush, with six or seven hundred whites and Indians, to join
the two thousand men whom the French government had promised du Vivier for
a second, and this time a general, attack on Acadia. But these other two
thousand were never sent; and Marin, having failed to take Annapolis by
the first week in June, was too late and too weak to help Louisbourg
afterwards. The same ill luck pursued the French by sea. On April 30 the
Renommee, a very smart frigate bringing out dispatches, was chased off by
the Provincial cruisers; while all subsequent arrivals from the outside
world were intercepted by Warren.</p>
<p>The landing effected on May 12 was not managed according to Shirley's
written instructions; nor was the siege. Shirley had been playing a little
war game in his study, with all the inconvenient obstacles left out—the
wind, the weather, the crashing surf in Gabarus Bay, the rocks and bogs of
the surrounding country, the difficulties of entering a narrow-necked
harbour under a combination of end-on and broadside fire, the terrible lee
shore off the islands, reefs, and Lighthouse Point, the commonest
vigilance of the most slovenly garrison, and even the offensive power of
the guns on the walls of Louisbourg itself. Shirley's plan was that
Pepperrell should arrive in the offing too late to be seen, land
unobserved, and march on Louisbourg in four detachments while the garrison
was wrapped in slumber. Two of these detachments were to march within
striking distance and then 'halt and keep a profound silence.' The third
was to march 'under cover of said hills' until it came opposite the Royal
Battery, which it was to assault on a given signal; while the 'profound
silence' men rushed the western gate. The fourth detachment was to race
along the shore, scale a certain spot in the wall, 'and secure the windows
of the Governor's Apartments.' All this was to be done by raw militia, on
ground they had never reconnoitred, and in the dead of night.</p>
<p>Needless to say, Pepperrell tried something quite different. At daybreak
of the 12th the whole fleet stood into Gabarus Bay, a large open roadstead
running west from the little Louisbourg peninsula. The Provincials eyed
the fortress eagerly. It looked mean, squat, and shrunken in the dim grey
light of early dawn. But it looked hard enough, for all that. Its alarm
bells began to ring. Its signal cannon fired. And all the people who had
been living outside hurried in behind the walls.</p>
<p>The New Englanders were so keen to land that they ran some danger of
falling into complete disorder. But Pepperrell managed very cleverly.
Seeing that some Frenchmen were ready to resist a landing on Flat Point,
two miles south-west of Louisbourg, he made a feint against it, drew their
fire, and then raced his boats for Freshwater Cove, another two miles
beyond. Having completely outdistanced the handful of panting Frenchmen,
he landed in perfect safety and presently scattered them with a wild
charge which cost them about twenty in killed, wounded, and prisoners.
Before dark two thousand Provincials were ashore. The other two thousand
landed at their leisure the following day.</p>
<p>The next event in this extraordinary siege is one of the curiosities of
war. On May 14 the enthusiastic Vaughan took several hundreds of these
newly landed men to the top of the nearest hillock and saluted the walls
with three cheers. He then circled the whole harbour, keeping well inland,
till he reached the undefended storehouses on the inner side of the
North-East Harbour, a little beyond the Royal Battery. These he at once
set on fire. The pitch, tar, wood, and other combustibles made a blinding
smoke, which drifted over the Royal Battery and spread a stampeding panic
among its garrison of four hundred men. Vaughan then retired for the
night. On his return to the Royal Battery in the morning, with only
thirteen men, he was astounded to see no sign of life there. Suspecting a
ruse, he bribed an Indian with a flask of brandy to feign being drunk and
reel up to the walls. The Indian reached the fort unchallenged, climbed
into an embrasure, and found the whole place deserted. Vaughan followed at
once; and a young volunteer, shinning up the flag-pole, made his own red
coat fast to the top. This defiance was immediately answered by a random
salvo from Louisbourg, less than a mile across the harbour.</p>
<p>Vaughan's next move was to write a dispatch to Pepperrell: 'May it please
your Honour to be informed that by the Grace of God and the courage of 13
Men I entered the Royal Battery about 9 o' the clock and am waiting for a
reinforcement and a flag.' He had hardly sent this off before he was
attacked by four boats from Louisbourg. Quite undaunted, however, he stood
out on the open beach with his thirteen men and kept them all at bay till
the reinforcement and the flag arrived with Bradstreet, who was afterwards
to win distinction as the captor of Fort Frontenac during the great
campaign of 1759.</p>
<p>This disgraceful abandonment and this dramatic capture of the Royal
Battery marked the first and most decisive turning-point in the fortunes
of the siege. The French were dismayed, the British were elated; and both
the dismay and the elation grew as time wore on, because everything seemed
to conspire against the French and in favour of the British. Even the
elements, as the anonymous Habitant de Louisbourg complains in his
wonderfully candid diary, seemed to have taken sides. There had never been
so fine a spring for naval operations. But this was the one thing which
was entirely independent of French fault or British merit. All the other
strokes of luck owed something to human causes. Wise-acres had shaken
their heads over the crazy idea of taking British cannon balls solely to
fit French cannon that were to be taken at the beginning of the siege: it
was too much like selling the pelt before the trap was sprung. Yet these
balls actually were used to load the forty-two pounders taken with the
Royal Battery! Moreover, as if to cap the climax, ten other cannon were
found buried in the North-East Harbour; and again spare British balls were
found to fit exactly! The fact is that what we should now call the
Intelligence Department had been doing good work the year before by spying
out the land at Louisbourg and reporting to the proper men in Boston.</p>
<p>The Bostonians had always intended to take the Royal Battery at the
earliest possible moment. But nobody had thought that the French would
abandon it without a blow and leave it intact for their enemy, with all
its armament complete. The French council of war apparently shrank from
hurting the feelings of the engineer in charge, who had pleaded for its
preservation! They then ran away without spiking the guns properly, and
without making the slightest attempt either to burn the carriages or knock
the trunnions off. The invaluable stores were left in their places. The
only real destruction was caused by a barrel of powder, which some
bunglers blew up by mistake. The inevitable consequence of all this French
ineptitude was that the Royal Battery roared against Louisbourg the very
next morning with tremendous effect, smashing the works most exposed to
its fire, bringing down houses about the inhabitants' ears, and sending
the terrified non-combatants scurrying off to underground cover.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the bulk of the New Englanders were establishing their camp
along the brook which fell into Gabarus Bay beside Flat Point and within
two miles of Louisbourg. Equipment of all kinds was very scarce. Tents
were so few and bad that old sails stretched over ridge-poles had to be
used instead. When sails ran short, brushwood shelters roofed in with
overlapping spruce boughs were used as substitutes.</p>
<p>Landing the four thousand men had been comparatively easy work. But
landing the stores was very hard indeed; while landing the guns was not
only much harder still, but full of danger as well. Many a flat-boat was
pounded into pulpwood while unloading the stores, though the men waded in
waist-deep and carried all the heavy bundles on their heads and shoulders.
When it came to the artillery, it meant a boat lost for every single piece
of ordnance landed. Nor was even this the worst; for, strange as it may
seem, there was, at first, more risk of foundering ashore than afloat.
There were neither roads nor yet the means to make them. There were no
horses, oxen, mules, or any other means of transport, except the brawny
men themselves, who literally buckled to with anchor-cable drag-ropes—a
hundred pair of straining men for each great, lumbering gun. Over the sand
they went at a romp. Over the rocks they had to take care; and in the
dense, obstructing scrub they had to haul through by main force. But this
was child's play to what awaited them in the slimy, shifting, and
boulder-strewn bog they had to pass before reaching the hillocks which
commanded Louisbourg.</p>
<p>The first attempts here were disastrous. The guns sank out of sight in the
engulfing bog; while the toiling men became regular human targets for shot
and shell from Louisbourg. It was quite plain that the British batteries
could never be built on the hillocks if the guns had nothing to keep them
from a boggy grave, and if the men had no protection from the French
artillery. But a ship-builder colonel, Meserve of New Hampshire, came to
the rescue by designing a gun-sleigh, sixteen feet in length and five in
the beam. Then the crews were told off again, two hundred men for each
sleigh, and orders were given that the work should not be done except at
night or under cover of the frequent fogs. After this, things went much
better than before. But the labour was tremendous still; while the danger
from random shells bursting among the boulders was not to be despised.
Four hundred struggling feet, four hundred straining arms—each team
hove on its long, taut cable through fog, rain, and the blackness of the
night, till every gun had been towed into one of the batteries before the
walls. The triumph was all the greater because the work grew, not easier,
but harder as it progressed. The same route used twice became an
impassable quagmire. So, when the last two hundred men had wallowed
through, the whole ensnaring bog was seamed with a perfect maze of
decoying death-trails snaking in and out of the forbidding scrub and
boulders.</p>
<p>Pepperrell's dispatches could not exaggerate these 'almost incredible
hardships.' Afloat and ashore, awake and asleep, the men were soaking wet
for days together. At the end of the longest haul they had nothing but a
choice of evils. They could either lie down where they were, on hard rock
or oozing bog, exposed to the enemy's fire the moment it was light enough
to see the British batteries, or they could plough their way back to camp.
Here they were safe enough from shot and shell; but, in other respects, no
better off than in the batteries. Most men's kits were of the very
scantiest. Very few had even a single change of clothing. A good many went
bare-foot. Nearly all were in rags before the siege was over.</p>
<p>When twenty-five pieces had been dragged up to Green Hill and its
adjoining hillocks, the bombardment at last began. The opening salvo
seemed to give the besiegers new life. No sooner was their first rough
line of investment formed than they commenced gaining ground, with a
disregard for cover which would have cost them dear if the French practice
had not been quite as bad as their own. A really wonderful amount of
ammunition was fired off on both sides without hitting anything in
particular. Louisbourg itself was, of course, too big a target to be
missed, as a rule; and the besiegers soon got so close that they simply
had to be hit themselves now and then. But, generally speaking, it may be
truthfully said that while, in an ordinary battle, it takes a man's own
weight in cartridges to kill him, in this most extraordinary siege it took
at least a horse's weight as well.</p>
<p>The approach to the walls defied all the usual precautions of regular war.
But the circumstances justified its boldness. With only four thousand men
at the start, with nearly half of this total on the sick list at one
rather critical juncture, with very few trained gunners, and without any
corps of engineers at all, the Provincials adapted themselves to the
situation so defiantly that they puzzled, shook, and overawed the French,
who thought them two or three times stronger than they really were.
Recklessly defiant though they were, however, they did provide the
breaching batteries with enough cover for the purpose in hand. This is
amply proved both by the fewness of their casualties and by the evidence
of Bastide, the British engineer at Annapolis, who inspected the lines of
investment on his arrival, twelve days before the surrender, and reported
them sufficiently protected.</p>
<p>Where the Provincials showed their 'prentice hands to genuine disadvantage
was in their absurdly solemn and utterly futile councils of war. No
schoolboys' debating club could well have done worse than the council held
to consider du Chambon's stereotyped answer to the usual summons sent in
at the beginning of a siege. The formula that 'his cannon would answer for
him' provoked a tremendous storm in the council's teacup and immediately
resulted in the following resolution: 'Advised, Unanimously, that the
Towne of Louisbourg be Attacked this Night.' But, confronted with 'a great
Dissatysfaction in many of the officers and Souldiers at the designed
attack of the towne this Night,' it was 'Advised, Unanimously,' by a
second council, called in great haste, 'that the Said Attack be deferred
for the Present.' This 'Present' lasted during the rest of the siege.</p>
<p>Once the New Englanders had settled down, however, they wisely began to
increase their weight of metal, as well as to decrease the range at which
they used it. They set to work with a will to make a breach at the
North-West Gate of Louisbourg, near where the inner angle of the walls
abutted on the harbour; and they certainly needed all their indomitable
perseverance when it came to arming their new 'North-Western' or
'Titcomb's Battery.' The twenty-two pounders had required two hundred men
apiece. The forty-two pounders took three hundred. Two of these unwieldy
guns were hauled a couple of miles round the harbour, in the dark, from
that 'Royal Battery' which Vaughan had taken 'by the Grace of God and the
courage of 13 Men,' and then successfully mounted at 'Titcomb's,' just
where they could do the greatest damage to their former owners, the
French.</p>
<p>Well-trained gunners were exceedingly scarce. Pepperrell could find only
six among his four thousand men. But Warren lent him three more, whom he
could ill spare, as no one knew when a fleet might come out from France.
With these nine instructors to direct them Pepperrell's men closed in
their line of fire till besieged and besiegers came within such easy
musket-shot of one another that taunting challenges and invitations could
be flung across the intervening space.</p>
<p>Each side claimed advantages and explained shortcomings to its own
satisfaction. A New England diarist says: 'We began our fire with as much
fury as possible, and the French returned it as warmly with Cannon,
Mortars, and continual showers of musket balls; but by 11 o'clock we had
beat them all from their guns.' A French diarist of the same day says that
the fire from the walls was stopped on purpose, chiefly to save powder;
while the same reason is assigned for the British order to cease fire
exactly one hour later.</p>
<p>The practice continued to be exceedingly bad on both sides; so bad,
indeed, that the New Englanders suffered more from the bursting of their
own guns than from the enemy's fire. The nine instructors could not be
everywhere; and all their good advice could not prevent the eager amateurs
from grossly overloading the double-shotted pieces. 'Another 42-pound gun
burst at the Grand Battery.' 'Captain Hale is dangerously hurt by the
bursting of another gun. He was the mainstay of our gunnery since Captain
Rhodes's misfortune'—a misfortune due to the same cause. But, in
spite of all such drawbacks on the British side, Louisbourg got much the
worst of it. The French had to fire from the centre outwards, at a
semicircle of batteries that fired back convergingly at them. Besides, it
was almost as hard to hit the thin, irregular line of British batteries as
it was to miss the deep, wide target of overcrowded Louisbourg. The walls
were continually being smashed from without and patched up from within.
The streets were ploughed from end to end. Many houses were laid in ruins:
only one remained intact when the siege was over. The non-combatants, who
now exceeded the garrison effectives, were half buried in the smothering
casemates underground; and though the fighting men had light, air, and
food enough, and though they were losing very few in killed and wounded,
they too began to feel that Louisbourg must fall if it was not soon
relieved from outside.</p>
<p>The British, on the contrary, grew more and more confident, both afloat
and ashore, though they had one quite alarming scare ashore. They knew
their navy outmatched the French; and they saw that, while Warren was
being strengthened, du Chambon was being left as devoid of naval force as
ever. But their still greater confidence ashore was, for the time being,
very rudely shaken when they heard that Marin, the same French guerilla
leader who had been sent down from Quebec against Annapolis with six or
seven hundred whites and Indians, had been joined by the promised
reinforcements from France and was coming to take the camp in rear. The
truth was that the reinforcements never arrived, that Marin had failed to
take Annapolis, and that there was no real danger from his own dwindling
force, even if it had tried to relieve Louisbourg in June. But the rumour
ran quickly through the whole camp, probably not without Pepperrell's own
encouragement, and at once produced, not a panic, but the most excellent
effect. Discipline, never good, had been growing worse. Punishments were
unknown. Officers and men were petitioning for leave to go home, quite
regardless of the need for their services at the front. Demands for
promotion, for extra allowances, and for increased pay were becoming a
standing nuisance. Then, just as the leaders were at their wits' ends what
to do, Marin's threatened attack came to their aid; and their brave armed
mob once more began to wear the semblance of an army. Sentries, piquets,
and outposts appeared as if by magic. Officers went their rounds with
zeal. The camp suddenly ceased to be a disorderly playground for every one
off duty. The breaching batteries redoubled their efforts against the
walls.</p>
<p>The threat of danger once past, however, the men soon slipped back into
their careless ways. A New England chronicler records that 'those who were
on the spot have frequently, in my hearing, laughed at the recital of
their own irregularities and expressed their admiration when they
reflected on the almost miraculous preservation of the army from
destruction.' Men off duty amused themselves with free-and-easy musketry,
which would have been all very well if there had not been such a dearth of
powder for the real thing. Races, wrestling, and quoits were better; while
fishing was highly commendable, both in the way of diet as well as in the
way of sport. Such entries as 'Thritty Lobbsters' and '6 Troutts' appear
in several diaries.</p>
<p>Nor were other forms of gaiety forgotten. Even a Massachusetts Puritan
could recommend a sermon for general distribution in the camp because 'It
will please your whole army, as it shows them the way to gain by their
gallantry the hearts and affections of the Ladys.' And even a city of the
'Great Awakening,' like Boston, could produce a letter like the following:</p>
<p>I hope this will find you at Louisbourg with a bowl<br/>
of Punch, a Pipe, and a Pack of Cards, and whatever<br/>
else you desire. (I had forgot to mention a Pretty<br/>
French Madammoselle.) Your Friend Luke has lost several<br/>
Beaver Hatts already concerning the Expedition. He is<br/>
so very zealous about it that he has turned poor<br/>
Boutier out of his house for saying he believed you<br/>
wouldn't take the Place. Damn his Blood, says Luke,<br/>
let him be an Englishman or a Frenchman and not pretend<br/>
to be an Englishman when he is a Frenchman in his<br/>
Heart. If Drinking to your Success would take Cape<br/>
Britton you must be in possession of it now, for it's<br/>
a Standing Toast.<br/></p>
<p>The day this letter was written in Boston, May 6, Warren had already begun
the regular blockade. Only a single ship eluded him, an ably handled
Basque, which stood in and rounded to, under the walls of Louisbourg,
after running the gauntlet of the Royal Battery, on which the French fired
with all their might to keep its own fire down. A second vessel was forced
aground. Her captain fought her to the last; but Warren's boat crews took
her. Some men who escaped from her brought du Chambon the news that a
third French ship, the Vigilant, was coming to the relief of Louisbourg
with ammunition and other stores. This ship had five hundred and sixty men
aboard, that is, as many as all the regulars in Louisbourg. On May 31 the
garrison heard a tremendous cannonading out at sea. It grew in volume as
Warren's squadron was seen to surround the stranger, who was evidently
making a gallant fight against long odds. Presently it ceased; the
clustered vessels parted; spread out; and took up their stations exactly
as before, except that a new vessel was now flying the British flag. This
was the Vigilant, which had been put in charge of a prize crew, while her
much-needed stores had been sent in to the Provincial army.</p>
<p>The French in Louisbourg were naturally much discouraged to see one of
their best frigates flying the Union Jack. But they still hoped she might
not really be the anxiously expected Vigilant. Warren, knowing their
anxiety, determined to take advantage of it at the first opportunity. He
had not long to wait. A party of New Englanders, wandering too far inland,
were ambushed by the French Indians, who promptly scalped all the
prisoners. Warren immediately sent in a formal protest to du Chambon, with
a covering letter from the captain of the Vigilant, who willingly
testified to the good treatment he and his crew were receiving on board
the British men-of-war. Warren's messenger spoke French perfectly, but he
concealed his knowledge by communicating with du Chambon through an
interpreter. This put the French off their guard and induced them to
express their dismay without reserve when they read the news about the
Vigilant. Everything they said was of course reported back to Warren, who
immediately passed it on to Pepperrell.</p>
<p>Warren now thought the time had come to make a bold, decisive stroke. He
had just been reinforced by two more frigates out from England. Titcomb's
famous brace of forty-two's had just begun to hammer in the North-West
Gate of Louisbourg. Pepperrell's lines of investment were quite complete.
The chance was too tempting to let slip, especially as it was safe
strategy to get into Louisbourg before the French could be relieved either
by land or sea. Still, there was the Island Battery to reckon with. It was
full of fight, and it flanked the narrow entrance in the most threatening
way. Warren paused to consider the strength of this last outpost of the
French defences and called a council of war to help him. For once a
council favoured extreme measures; whereupon Warren sent in word to
Pepperrell, asking for 1,500 Provincials, and proposing a combined assault
immediately. The plan was that Warren should sail in, past the Island
Battery, and attack the harbour face of Louisbourg with every soldier,
sailor, and ship's gun at his disposal; while Pepperrell carried the
landward face by assault. This plan might have succeeded, though at
considerable loss, if Pepperrell's whole 4,000 had been effective. But as
he then had 1,900 sick and wounded, and 600 guarding his rear against the
rumoured advance of Marin from Annapolis, it was quite evident that if he
gave Warren another 1,500 he would have to assault the landward face
alone. Under these circumstances he very sensibly declined to co-operate
in the way Warren had suggested. But he offered 600 men, both from his
army and the transports, for the Vigilant, whose prize crew would thus be
released for duty aboard their own vessels. Warren, who was just over
forty, replied with some heat. But Pepperrell, who was just under fifty,
kept his temper admirably and carried the day.</p>
<p>Warren, however, still urged Pepperrell to take some decisive step. Both
fleet and army agreed that a night attack on the Island Battery was the
best alternative to Warren's impracticable plan. Vaughan jumped at the
idea, hoping to repeat in another way his success against the Royal
Battery. He promised that, if he was given a free hand, he would send
Pepperrell the French flag within forty-eight hours. But Vaughan was not
to lead. The whole attack was entrusted to men who specially volunteered
for it, and who were allowed to choose their own officers. A man called
Brooks happened to be on the crest of the wave of camp popularity at the
moment; so he was elected colonel for this great occasion. The volunteers
soon began to assemble at the Royal Battery. But they came in by driblets,
and most of them were drunk. The commandant of the battery felt far from
easy. 'I doubt whether straggling fellows, three, four, or seven out of a
company, ought to go on such service. They seem to be impatient for
action. If there were a more regular appearance, it would give me greater
sattysfaction.' His misgivings were amply justified; for the men whom
Pepperrell was just beginning to form into bodies with some kind of
cohesion were once more being allowed to dissolve into the original armed
mob.</p>
<p>The night of June 7 was dark and calm. A little before twelve three
hundred men, wisely discarding oars, paddled out from the Royal Battery
and met another hundred who came from Lighthouse Point. The paddles took
them along in silence while they circled the island, looking for the
narrow landing-place, where only three boats could go abreast between the
destroying rocks on which the surf was breaking. Presently they found the
tiny cove, and a hundred and fifty men landed without being discovered.
But then, with incredible folly, they suddenly announced their presence by
giving three cheers. The French commandant had cautioned his garrison to
be alert, on account of the unusual darkness; and, at this very moment, he
happened himself to be pacing up and down the rampart overlooking the spot
where the volunteers were expressing their satisfaction at having
surprised him so well.</p>
<p>His answer was instantaneous and effective. The battery 'blazed with
cannon, swivels, and small-arms,' which fired point-blank at the men
ashore and with true aim at the boats crowded together round the narrow
landing-place. Undaunted though undisciplined, the men ashore rushed at
the walls with their scaling-ladders and began the assault. The attempt
was vain. The first men up the rungs were shot, stabbed, or cut down. The
ladders were smashed or thrown aside. Not one attacker really got home.
Meanwhile the leading boats in the little cove were being knocked into
splinters by the storm of shot. The rest sheered off. None but the hundred
and fifty men ashore were left to keep up the fight with the garrison. For
once the odds were entirely with the French, who fired from under perfect
cover, while the unfortunate Provincials fired back from the open rocks.
This exchange of shots went on till daylight, when one hundred and
nineteen Provincials surrendered at discretion. Their total loss was one
hundred and eighty-nine, nearly half the force employed.</p>
<p>Despairing Louisbourg naturally made the most of this complete success.
The bells were rung and the cannon were fired to show the public joy and
to put the best face on the general situation. Du Chambon surpassed
himself in gross exaggerations. He magnified the hundred and fifty men
ashore into a thousand, and the two hundred and fifty afloat into eight
hundred; while he bettered both these statements by reporting that the
whole eighteen hundred had been destroyed except the hundred and nineteen
who had been taken prisoners.</p>
<p>Du Chambon's triumph was short-lived. The indefatigable Provincials began
a battery at Lighthouse Point, which commanded the island at less than
half a mile. They had seized this position some time before and called it
Gorham's Post, after the colonel whose regiment held it. Fourteen years
later there was another and more famous Gorham's Post, on the south shore
of the St Lawrence near Quebec, opposite Wolfe's Cove. The arming of this
battery was a stupendous piece of work. The guns had to be taken round by
sea, out of range of the Island Battery, hauled up low but very dangerous
cliffs, and then dragged back overland another mile and a quarter. The
directing officer was Colonel Gridley, who drew the official British maps
and plans of Louisbourg in 1745, and who, thirty years later, traced the
American defences on the slopes of Bunker's Hill. Du Chambon had attempted
to make an attack on Gorham's Post as soon as it was established. His idea
was that his men should follow the same route as the British guns had
followed—that is, that they should run the gauntlet between the
British fleet and army, land well north of Gorham's Post, and take it by
surprise from the rear. But his detachment, which was wholly inadequate,
failed to strike its blow, and was itself very nearly cut off by Warren's
guard-boats on its crest-fallen return to Louisbourg.</p>
<p>Gridley's Lighthouse Battery soon over-matched the Island Battery, where
powder was getting dangerously scarce. Many of the French guns were
knocked off their mountings, while the walls were breached. Finally, the
British bombardment became so effective that Frenchmen were seen running
into the water to escape the bursting shells. It was now past the middle
of June, and the siege had lasted more than a month. The circle of fire
was closing in on the beleaguered garrison. Their total effectives had
sunk to only a thousand men. This thousand laboured harder in its losing
cause than might have been expected. Perhaps the mutineers hoped to be
pardoned if they made a firm defence. Perhaps the militia thought they
ought not to be outdone by mutineers and hireling foreigners. But,
whatever the reason, great efforts were certainly made to build up by
night what the British knocked down by day. Two could play at that game,
however, and the British had the men and means to win. Their western
batteries from the land were smashing the walls into ruins. Their Royal
Battery wrecked the whole inner water-front of Louisbourg. Breaches were
yawning elsewhere. British fascines were visible in large quantities,
ready to fill up the ditch, which was already half full of debris. The
French scouts reported hundreds of scaling-ladders on the reverse slopes
of the nearest hillocks. Warren's squadron had just been again reinforced,
and now numbered eleven sail, carrying 554 guns and 3,000 men. There was
no sign of help, by land or sea, for shrunken, battered, and despairing
Louisbourg. Food, ammunition, stores were all running out. Moreover, the
British were evidently preparing a joint attack, which would result in
putting the whole garrison to the sword if a formal surrender should not
be made in time.</p>
<p>Now that the Island Battery had been silenced there was no reason why
Warren's plan should not be crowned with complete success. Accordingly he
arranged with Pepperrell to run in with the first fair wind, at the head
of the whole fleet, which, with the Provincial armed vessels, now numbered
twenty-four sail, carried 770 guns, and was manned by 4,000 sailors. Half
these men could be landed to attack the inner water-front, while
Pepperrell could send another 2,000 against the walls. The total odds
against Louisbourg would thus be about four to one in men and over eight
to one in guns actually engaged.</p>
<p>But this threatened assault was never made. In the early morning of June
27 the non-combatants in Louisbourg unanimously petitioned du Chambon to
surrender forthwith. They crept out of their underground dungeons and
gazed with mortal apprehension at the overwhelming forces that stood
arrayed against their crumbling walls and dwindling garrison. Noon came,
and their worst fears seemed about to be realized. But when the drums
began beating, it was to a parley, not to arms. A sigh of ineffable relief
went up from the whole of Louisbourg, and every eye followed the little
white flutter of the flag of truce as it neared that terrible breaching
battery opposite the West Gate. A Provincial officer came out to meet it.
The French officer and he saluted. Then both moved into the British lines
and beyond, to where Warren and Pepperrell were making their last
arrangements on Green Hill.</p>
<p>After a short consultation the British leaders sent in a joint reply to
say that du Chambon could have till eight the next morning to make his
proposals. These proved to be so unacceptable that Pepperrell refused to
consider them, and at once sent counter-proposals of his own. Du Chambon
had now no choice between annihilation and acceptance, so he agreed to
surrender Louisbourg the following day. He was obliged to guarantee that
none of the garrison should bear arms against the British, in any part of
the world, for a whole year. Every one in Louisbourg was of course
promised full protection for both property and person. Du Chambon's one
successful stipulation was that his troops should march out with the
honours of war, drums beating, bayonets fixed, and colours flying. Warren
and Pepperrell willingly accorded this on the 28th; and the formal
transfer took place next day, exactly seven weeks since the first eager
New Englanders had waded ashore through the thundering surf of Gabarus
Bay.</p>
<p>The total losses in killed and wounded were never precisely determined.
Each side minimized its own and maximized the enemy's. But as du Chambon
admitted a loss of one hundred and forty-five, and as the Provincials
claimed to have put three hundred out of action, the true number is
probably about two hundred, or just over ten per cent of the whole
garrison. The Provincials reported their own killed, quite correctly, at a
hundred. The remaining deaths, on both sides, were due to disease. The
Provincial wounded were never grouped together in any official returns.
They amounted to about three hundred. This brings the total casualties in
Pepperrell's army up to four hundred and gives the same percentage as the
French. The highest proportion of casualties among all the different
forces was the fifteen per cent lost by the French on board the Vigilant
in less than five hours' fighting. The lowest was in Warren's squadron and
the Provincial Marine—about five in each. The loss of material
suffered by the French was, of course, on quite a different scale. Every
fortification and other building in Louisbourg, with the remarkable
exception of a single house, was at least partly demolished by the nine
thousand cannon balls and six hundred shells that hit the target of a
hundred acres peopled by four thousand souls.</p>
<p>On the 29th the French marched out with the honours of war, laid down
their arms, and were put under guard as prisoners, pending their transport
to France. Du Chambon handed the keys to Pepperrell at the South Gate. The
victorious but disgusted Provincials marched in by the West Gate, and
found themselves set to protect the very houses that they had hoped to
plunder. Was it not high time to recoup themselves for serving as soldiers
at sixpence a day? Great Babylon had fallen, and ought to be destroyed—of
course, with due profit to the destroyers. There was a regular Louisbourg
legend, current in New England, that stores of goods and money were to be
found in the strong rooms of every house. So we can understand the
indignation of men whose ideas were coloured by personal contact with
smuggling and privateering, and sometimes with downright piracy, when they
were actually told off as sentries over these mythical hoards of wealth.
One diarist made the following entry immediately after he had heard the
news: 'Sabbath Day, ye 16th June [Old Style] they came to Termes for us to
enter ye Sitty to morrow, and Poore Termes they Bee too.' Another added
that there was 'a great Noys and hubbub a mongst ye Solders a bout ye
Plunder: Som a Cursing, Som a Swarein.' Five days later a third indignant
Provincial wrote: 'Ye French keep possession yet, and we are forsed to
stand at their Dores to gard them.' Another sympathetic chronicler, after
pouring out the vials of his wrath on the clause which guaranteed the
protection of French private property, lamented that 'by these means the
poor souldiers lost all their hopes and just demerit [sic] of plunder
promised them.'</p>
<p>While Parson Moody was preaching a great thanksgiving sermon, and all the
senior officers were among his congregation, there was what responsible
officials called 'excessive stealing in every part of the Towne.' Had this
stealing really been very 'excessive' no doubt it would have allayed the
grumbling in the camp. But, as a matter of fact, there was so little to
steal that the looters began to suspect collusion between their leaders
and the French. Another fancied wrong exasperated the Provincials at this
critical time. A rumour ran through the camp that Warren had forestalled
Pepperrell by receiving the keys himself. Warren was cursed, Pepperrell
blamed; and a mutinous spirit arose. Then it was suddenly discovered that
Pepperrell had put the keys in his pocket.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the fleet was making haul after haul. When Pepperrell marched
through the battered West Gate, at the head of his motley army, Warren had
led his squadron into the harbour; and both commanders had saluted the
raising of the Union Jack which marked the change of ownership. But no
sooner had the sound of guns and cheering died away than the Union Jack
was lowered and the French flag was raised again, both over the citadel of
Louisbourg and over the Island Battery. This stratagem succeeded beyond
Warren's utmost expectations. Several French vessels were lured into
Louisbourg and captured with stores and men enough to have kept the
British out for some weeks longer. Their cargoes were worth about a
million dollars. Then, just as the naval men were wondering whether their
harvest was over or not, a fine French frigate made for the harbour quite
unsuspectingly, and only discovered her fatal mistake too late to turn
back. By the irony of circumstances she happened to be called Notre-Dame
de la Delivrance. Among her passengers was the distinguished man of
science, Don Antonio de Ulloa, on his way to Paris, with all the results
of those explorations in South America which he afterwards embodied in a
famous book of travel. Warren treated him with the greatest courtesy and
promised that all his collections should be duly forwarded to the Royal
Academy of Sciences. Once this exchange of international amenities had
been ended, however, the usual systematic search began. The visible cargo
was all cocoa. But hidden underneath were layers and layers of shining
silver dollars from Peru; and, underneath this double million, another two
million dollars' worth of ingots of silver and ingots of gold.</p>
<p>The contrast between the poverty of Louisbourg, where so much had been
expected, and the rich hauls of prize-money made by the fleet, was gall
and wormwood to the Provincials. But their resentment was somewhat
tempered by Warren's genial manner towards them. Warren was at home with
all sorts and conditions of men. His own brother-officers, statesmen and
courtiers, distinguished strangers like Ulloa, and colonial merchants like
Pepperrell, were equally loud in his praise. With the lesser and much more
easily offended class of New Englanders found in the ranks he was no less
popular. A rousing speech, in which he praised the magnificently stubborn
work accomplished by 'my wife's fellow-countrymen,' a hearty generosity
all round, and a special hogshead of the best Jamaica rum for the garrison
of the Royal Battery, won him a great deal of goodwill, in spite of the
fact that his 'Admiral's eighth' of the naval prize-money amounted to some
sixty thousand pounds, while Pepperrell found himself ten thousand pounds
out of pocket at the end of the siege.</p>
<p>Pepperrell, however, was a very rich man, for those colonial days; and he
could well afford to celebrate the fall of Louisbourg by giving the chief
naval and military officers a dinner, the fame of which will never fade
away from some New England memories. Everything went off without a hitch.
But, as the hour approached, there was a growing anxiety, on the part of
both host and guests, as to whether or not the redoubtable Parson Moody
would keep them listening to his grace till all the meats got cold. He was
well known for the length, as well as for the strength, of his discourses.
He had once denounced the Devil in a grace of forty minutes. So what was
the surprised delight of his fellow-revellers when he hardly kept them
standing longer than as many seconds. 'Good Lord!' he said, 'we have so
much to thank Thee for, that Time will be too short. Therefore we must
leave it for Eternity. Bless our food and fellowship on this joyful
occasion, for the sake of Christ our Lord. Amen!'</p>
<p>News of the victory was sent at once to Boston. The vessel bearing it
arrived in the middle of the night. But long before the summer sun was up
the streets were filled with shouts of triumph, while the church bells
rang in peals of exultation, and all the guns and muskets in the place
were fired as fast as men could load them.</p>
<p>The mother country's joy was less exuberant. There were so many other
things to think of nearer home; among them the British defeat at Fontenoy
and the landing of the Young Pretender. Nor was the actual victory without
alloy; for prescient people feared that a practically independent colonial
army had been encouraged to become more independent still. And who can say
the fear was groundless? Louisbourg really did serve to blood New
Englanders for Bunker's Hill. But, in spite of this one drawback, the news
was welcomed, partly because any victory was welcome at such a time, and
partly because the fall of Louisbourg was a signal assertion of British
sea-power on both sides of the Atlantic.</p>
<p>London naturally made overmuch of Warren's share, just as Boston made
overmuch of Pepperrell's. But the Imperial government itself perfectly
understood that the fleet and the army were each an indispensable half of
one co-operating whole. Warren was promoted rear-admiral of the blue, the
least that could be given him. Pepperrell received much higher honours. He
was made a baronet and, like Shirley, was given the colonelcy of a
regiment which was to bear his name. Such 'colonelcies' do not imply the
actual command of men, but are honorary distinctions of which even kings
and conquerors are proud. Nor was the Provincial Marine forgotten. Rous,
of the Shirley, was sent to England with dispatches, and was there made a
post-captain in the Royal Navy for his gallantry in action against the
Vigilant. He afterwards enjoyed a distinguished career and died an
admiral. It was in his ship, the Sutherland, that Wolfe wrote the final
orders for the Battle of the Plains fourteen years after this first siege
of Louisbourg.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER III — THE LINK RECOVERED </h2>
<h3> 1748 </h3>
<p>Louisbourg was the most thoroughly hated place in all America. The French
government hated it as Napoleon hated the Peninsula, because it was a
drain on their resources. The British government hated it because it cut
into their oversea communications. The American colonists hated it because
it was a standing menace to their ambitious future. And every one who had
to live in it—no matter whether he was French or British, European
or American, naval or military, private or official—hated it as only
exiles can.</p>
<p>But perhaps even exiled Frenchmen detested it less heartily than the
disgusted Provincials who formed its garrison from the summer of 1745 to
the spring of the following year. Warren and Pepperrell were obliged to
spend half their time in seeing court-martial justice done. The
bluejackets fretted for some home port in which to enjoy their plentiful
prize-money. The Provincials fretted for home at any cost. They were angry
at being kept on duty at sixpence a day after the siege was over. They
chafed against the rules about looting, as well as against what they
thought the unjust difference between the million sterling that had been
captured at sea, under full official sanction, and the ridiculous
collection of odds and ends that could be stolen on land, at the risk of
pains and penalties. Imagine the rage of the sullen Puritan, even if he
had a sense of humour, when, after hearing a bluejacket discussing plans
for spending a hundred golden guineas, he had to make such entries in his
diary as these of Private Benjamin Crafts: 'Saturday. Recd a half-pint of
Rum to Drinke ye King's Health. The Lord look upon Us and prepare us for
His Holy Day. Sunday. Blessed be the Lord that has given us to enjoy
another Sabath. Monday. Last Night I was taken verry Bad. The Lord be
pleased to strengthen my Inner Man. May we all be Prepared for his Holy
Will. Recd part of Plunder—9 Small tooth combs.'</p>
<p>No wonder there was trouble in plenty. The routine of a small and
uncongenial station is part of a regular's second nature, though a very
disagreeable part. But it maddens militiamen when the stir of active
service is past and they think they are being kept on such duty overtime.
The Massachusetts men had the worst pay and the best ringleaders, so they
were the first to break out openly. One morning they fell in without their
officers, marched on to the general parade, and threw their muskets down.
This was a dramatic but ineffectual form of protest, because nearly all
the muskets were the private property of the men themselves, who soon came
back to take their favourite weapons up again. One of their most zealous
chaplains, however, was able to enter in his diary, perhaps not without a
qualm, but certainly not without a proper pride in New England spirit, the
remark of a naval officer 'that he had thought the New England men were
cowards—But that Now he thought that if they had a Pick ax and Spade
they would digg ye way to Hell and storm it.'</p>
<p>The only relief from the deadly monotony and loneliness of Louisbourg was
to be found in the bad bargains and worse entertainment offered by the
camp-followers, who quickly gathered, like a flock of vultures, to pick
the carcass to the bone. There were few pickings to be had, but these
human parasites held on until the bones were bare. Of course, they gave an
inordinate amount of trouble. They always do. But well-organized armies
keep them in their place; while militiamen can not.</p>
<p>Between the camp-followers and the men Pepperrell was almost driven mad.
He implored Shirley to come and see things for himself. Shirley came. He
arrived at the end of August accompanied both by his own wife and by
Warren's. He delivered a patriotic speech, in which he did not stint his
praise of what had really been a great and notable achievement. His
peroration called forth some genuine enthusiasm. It began with a promise
to raise the pay of the Massachusetts contingent by fifteen shillings a
month, and ended with free rum all round and three cheers for the king.
The prospect thereupon brightened a little. The mutineers kept quiet for
several days, and a few men even agreed to re-enlist until the following
June. Shirley was very much pleased with the immediate result, and still
more pleased with himself. His next dispatch assured the Duke of Newcastle
that nobody else could have quelled the incipient mutiny so well. Nor was
the boast, in one sense, vain, since nobody else had the authority to
raise the men's pay.</p>
<p>But discontent again became rife when it began to dawn on the Provincials
that they would have to garrison Louisbourg till the next open season. The
unwelcome truth was that, except for a few raw recruits, no reliefs were
forthcoming from any quarter. The promised regulars had left Gibraltar so
late that they had to be sent to Virginia for the winter, lest the sudden
change to cold and clammy Louisbourg should put them on the sick list. The
two new regiments, Shirley's and Pepperrell's, which were to be recruited
in the American colonies and form part of the Imperial Army, could not be
raised in time. There even seemed to be some doubt as to whether they
could be raised at all. The absence of Pepperrell from New England, the
hatred of garrison duty in Louisbourg, and resentment at seeing some
Englishmen commissioned to command Americans, were three great obstacles
in the way. The only other resource was the colonial militia, whose waifs
and strays alone could be induced to enlist.</p>
<p>Thus, once the ice began to form, the despairing Provincial garrison saw
there could be no escape. The only discharge was death. What were then
known as camp fevers had already broken out in August. As many as
twenty-seven funerals in a single day passed by the old lime-kiln on the
desolate point beyond the seaward walls of Louisbourg. 'After we got into
the Towne, a sordid indolence or Sloth, for want of Discipline, induced
putrid fevers and dyssentrys, which at length became contagious, and the
people died like rotten sheep.' Medical men were ignorant and few. Proper
attendance was wholly lacking. But the devotion of the Puritan chaplains,
rivalling that of the early Jesuits, ran through those awful horrors like
a thread of gold. Here is a typical entry of one day's pastoral care:
'Prayed at Hospital. Prayed at Citadel. Preached at Grand Batery. Visited
[a long list of names] all verry Sick. [More names] Dy'd. Am but poorly
myself, but able to keep about.'</p>
<p>No survivor ever forgot the miseries of that dire winter in cold and
clammy Louisbourg. When April brought the Gibraltar regiments from
Virginia, Pepperrell sent in to Shirley his general report on the three
thousand men with whom he had begun the autumn. Barely one thousand were
fit for duty. Eleven hundred lay sick and suffering in the ghastly
hospital. Eight hundred and ninety lay buried out on the dreary tongue of
land between the lime-pit and the fog-bound, ice-encumbered sea.</p>
<p>Warren took over the command of all the forces, as he had been appointed
governor of Louisbourg by the king's commission. Shirley had meanwhile
been revolving new plans, this time for the complete extirpation of the
French in Canada during the present summer of 1746. He suggested that
Warren should be the naval joint commander, and Warren, of course, was
nothing loth.</p>
<p>Massachusetts again rose grandly to the situation. She voted 3,500 men,
with a four pound sterling bounty to each one of them. New Hampshire,
Connecticut, and Rhode Island followed well. New York and New Jersey did
less in proportion. Maryland did less still. Virginia would only pass a
lukewarm vote for a single hundred men. Pennsylvania, as usual, refused to
do anything at all. The legislature was under the control of the Quakers,
who, when it came to war, were no better than parasites. upon the body
politic. They never objected to enjoying the commercial benefits of
conquest; any more than they objected to living on land which could never
have been either won or held without the arms they reprobated. But their
principles forbade them to face either the danger or expense of war. The
honour of the other Pennsylvanians was, however, nobly saved by a
contingent of four hundred, raised as a purely private venture.
Altogether, the new Provincial army amounted to over 8,000 men.</p>
<p>The French in Canada were thoroughly alarmed. Rumour had magnified the
invading fleet and army till, in July, the Acadians reported the combined
forces, British regulars included, at somewhere between forty and fifty
thousand. But the alarm proved groundless. The regulars were sent on an
abortive expedition against the coast of France, while the Duke of
Newcastle ordered Shirley to discharge the 'very expensive' Provincials,
who were now in Imperial pay, 'as cheap as possible.' This was then done,
to the intense disgust of the colonies concerned. New York and
Massachusetts, however, were so loth to give up without striking a single
blow that they raised a small force, on their own account, to take Crown
Point and gain control of Lake Champlain. [Footnote: An account of this
expedition will be found in Chapter ii of 'The War Chief of the Six
Nations' in this Series.]</p>
<p>Before October came the whole of the colonies were preparing for a quiet
winter, except that it was to be preceded by the little raid on Crown
Point, when, quite suddenly, astounding news arrived from sea. This was
that the French had sent out a regular armada to retake Louisbourg and
harry the coast to the south. Every ship brought in further and still more
alarming particulars. The usual exaggerations gained the usual credence.
But the real force, if properly handled and combined, was dangerous
enough. It consisted of fourteen sail of the line and twenty-one frigates,
with transports carrying over three thousand veteran troops; altogether,
about 17,000 men, or more than twice as many as those in the contingents
lately raised for taking Canada.</p>
<p>New York and Massachusetts at once recalled their Crown Point expeditions.
Boston was garrisoned by 8,000 men. All the provinces did their
well-scared best. There was no danger except along the coast; for there
were enough armed men to have simply mobbed to death any three thousand
Frenchmen who marched into the hostile continent, which would engulf them
if they lost touch with the fleet, and wear them out if they kept
communications open. Those who knew anything of war knew this perfectly
well; and they more than half suspected that the French force had been
doubled or trebled by the panic-mongers. But the panic spread, and spread
inland, for all that. No British country had ever been so thoroughly
alarmed since England had watched the Great Armada sailing up the Channel.</p>
<p>The poets and preachers quickly changed their tune. Ames's Almanac for
1746 had recently edified Bostonians with a song of triumph over fallen
Louisbourg:</p>
<p>Bright Hesperus, the Harbinger of Day,<br/>
Smiled gently down on Shirley's prosperous sway,<br/>
The Prince of Light rode in his burning car,<br/>
To see the overtures of Peace and War<br/>
Around the world, and bade his charioteer,<br/>
Who marks the periods of each month and year,<br/>
Rein in his steeds, and rest upon High Noon<br/>
To view our Victory over Cape Brittoon.<br/></p>
<p>But now the Reverend Thomas Prince's litany, rhymed by a later bard,
summed up the gist of all the supplications that ascended from the
Puritans:</p>
<p>O Lord! We would not advise;<br/>
But if, in Thy Providence,<br/>
A Tempest should arise,<br/>
To drive the French fleet hence,<br/>
And scatter it far and wide,<br/>
Or sink it in the sea,<br/>
We should be satisfied,<br/>
And Thine the Glory be.<br/></p>
<p>Strange to say, this pious suggestion had been mostly answered before it
had been made. Disaster after disaster fell upon the doomed French fleet
from the very day it sailed. The admiral was the Duc d'Anville, one of the
illustrious La Rochefoucaulds, whose family name is known wherever French
is read. He was not wanting either in courage or good sense; but, like his
fleet, he had little experience at sea. The French ships, as usual, were
better than the British. But the French themselves were a nation of
landsmen. They had no great class of seamen to draw upon at will, a fact
which made an average French crew inferior to an average British one. This
was bad enough. But the most important point of all was that their fleets
were still worse than their single ships. The British always had fleets at
sea, constantly engaged in combined manoeuvres. The French had not; and,
in face of the British command of the sea, they could not have them. The
French harbours were watched so closely that the French fleets were often
attacked and defeated before they had begun to learn how to work together.
Consequently, they found it still harder to unite two different fleets
against their almost ubiquitous enemy.</p>
<p>D'Anville's problem was insoluble from the start, Four large men-of-war
from the West Indies were to join him at Chibucto Bay, now the harbour of
Halifax, under Admiral Conflans, the same who was defeated by Hawke in
Quiberon Bay thirteen years later, on the very day that Wolfe was buried.
Each contributory part of the great French naval plan failed in the
working out. D'Anville's command was a collection of ships, not a
co-ordinated fleet. The French dockyards had been neglected; so some of
the ships were late, which made it impossible to practise manoeuvres
before sailing for the front. Then, in the bungling hurry of fitting out,
the hulls of several vessels were left foul, which made them dull sailers;
while nearly all the holds were left unscoured, which, of course, helped
to propagate the fevers, scurvy, plague, and pestilence brought on by bad
food badly stowed. Nor was this all. Officers who had put in so little sea
time with working fleets were naturally slack and inclined to be
discontented. The fact that they were under sealed orders, which had been
communicated only to d'Anville, roused their suspicions while his weakness
in telling them they were bound for Louisbourg almost produced a mutiny.</p>
<p>The fleet left France at midsummer, had a very rough passage through the
Bay of Biscay, and ran into a long, dead calm off the Azores. This ended
in a storm, during which several vessels were struck by lightning, which,
in one case, caused a magazine explosion that killed and wounded over
thirty men. It was not till the last week of September that d'Anville made
the excellently safe harbour of Halifax. The four ships under Conflans
were nowhere to be seen. They had reached the rendezvous at the beginning
of the month, had cruised about for a couple of weeks, and had then gone
home. D'Anville was now in no position to attack Louisbourg, much less New
England. Some of his vessels were quite unserviceable. There was no
friendly port nearer than Quebec. All his crews were sickly; and the five
months' incessant and ever-increasing strain had changed him into a
broken-hearted man. He died very suddenly, in the middle of the night;
some said from a stroke of apoplexy, while others whispered suicide.</p>
<p>His successor, d'Estournel, summoned a council of war, which overruled the
plan for an immediate return to France. Presently a thud, followed by
groans of mortal agony, was heard in the new commander's cabin. The door
was burst open, and he was found dying from the thrust of his own sword.
La Jonquiere, afterwards governor-general of Canada, thereupon succeeded
d'Estournel. This commander, the third within three days, was an excellent
naval officer and a man of strong character. He at once set to work to
reorganize the fleet. But reorganization was now impossible. Storms
wrecked the vessels. The plague killed off the men: nearly three thousand
had died already. Only a single thousand, one-tenth of the survivors, were
really fit for duty. Yet La Jonquiere still persisted in sailing for
Annapolis. One vessel was burned, while four others were turned into
hospital ships, which trailed astern, dropping their dead overside, hour
after hour, as they went.</p>
<p>But Annapolis was never attacked. The dying fleet turned back and at last
reached Port Louis, on the coast of Brittany. There it found La Palme, a
frigate long since given up for lost, lying at anchor, after a series of
adventures that seem wellnigh impossible. First her crew's rations had
been cut down to three ounces a day. Then the starving men had eaten all
the rats in her filthy hold; and when rats failed they had proposed to eat
their five British prisoners. The captain did his best to prevent this
crowning horror. But the men, who were now ungovernable, had already gone
below to cut up one prisoner into three-ounce rations, when they were
brought on deck again, just in time, by the welcome cry of sail-ho! The
Portuguese stranger fortunately proved to have some sheep, which were
instantly killed and eaten raw.</p>
<p>News of these disasters to the French arms at length reached the anxious
British colonies. The militia were soon discharged. The danger seemed
past. And the whole population spent a merrier Christmas than any one of
them had dared to hope for.</p>
<p>In May of the next year, 1747, La Jonquiere again sailed for Louisbourg.
But when he was only four days out he was overtaken off Cape Finisterre by
a superior British fleet, under Anson and Warren, and was totally
defeated, after a brave resistance.</p>
<p>In 1748 the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle gave Louisbourg back to the French.
The British colonies were furious, New England particularly so. But the
war at large had not gone severely enough against the French to force them
to abandon a stronghold on which they had set their hearts, and for which
they were ready to give up any fair equivalent. The contemporary colonial
sneer, often repeated since, and quite commonly believed, was that 'the
important island of Cape Breton was exchanged for a petty factory in
India.' This was not the case. Every power was weary of the war. But
France was ready to go on with it rather than give up her last sea link
with Canada. Unless this one point was conceded the whole British Empire
would have been involved in another vast, and perhaps quite barren,
campaign. The only choice the British negotiators could apparently make
was a choice between two evils. And of the two they chose the less.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER IV — LOST FOR EVER </h2>
<h3> 1758 </h3>
<p>The ten years of the second French regime in Louisbourg were divided into
very different halves. During the first five years, from 1749 to 1753, the
mighty rivals were as much at peace, all over their conflicting frontiers,
as they ever had been in the past. But from 1754 to 1758 a great and, this
time, a decisive war kept drawing continually nearer, until its strangling
coils at last crushed Louisbourg to death.</p>
<p>Three significant events marked 1749, the first of the five peaceful
years. Louisbourg was handed over to its new French garrison; the British
founded Halifax; and the Imperial government indemnified New England in
full for the siege of 1745. Halifax was intended partly as a counterpoise
to Louisbourg, and partly as a place-d'armes for one of the two local
footholds of British sea-power, Nova Scotia and Newfoundland, which,
between them, narrowed the French line of communication with Canada into a
single precarious strait. The New England indemnity was meant, in the
first instance, to be a payment for service done. But it was also intended
to soften colonial resentment at the giving up of Louisbourg. A specially
gracious royal message was sent to 'The Council and Assembly' of
Massachusetts, assuring them, 'in His Majesty's name, that their conduct
will always entitle them, in a particular manner, to his Royal favour and
protection.' This message, however, did not reconcile the Provincial army
to the disappointment of their own expectations. Nor did it dispose the
colonies in general to be any the more amenable to government from London.
They simply regarded the indemnity as the skinflint payment of an overdue
debt, and the message as no more than the thanks they had well deserved.
But the money was extremely welcome to people who would have been bankrupt
without it. Nearly a quarter of a million sterling was sent out in 217
cases of Spanish dollars and 100 barrels of coppers, which were driven
through the streets of Boston in 27 trucks.</p>
<p>The next three years in Louisbourg were completely uneventful. The town
resumed its former life, but in a still more makeshift fashion. Nobody
knew how long the truce would last; and nobody wanted to take root
commercially in a place that might experience another violent change at
any time. Nevertheless, smuggling flourished as vigorously as before.
British shipping did most of it. Many vessels came from England, many from
Boston, some, and very active ones, from Halifax. Joshua Mauger smuggled
from France to Louisbourg, from Louisbourg to 'Mauger's Beach' near
Halifax, and from Halifax all over Acadia and the adjacent colonies. He
also supplied the Micmacs with scalping-knives and tomahawks for use
against his own countrymen. He died, a very rich man, in England, leaving
his fortune to his daughter, who, with her spendthrift husband, the Duc de
Bouillon, was guillotined during the French Revolution.</p>
<p>The officials were naturally affected by the same uncertainty, which made
them more than ever determined to get rich and go home. The intendant
Bigot was promoted to Quebec, there to assist his country's enemies by the
worst corruption ever known in Canada. But the new intendant, Prevost,
though a man of very inferior talent, did his best to follow Bigot's lead.</p>
<p>French regulars still regarded the Louisbourg routine as their most
disgusting duty. But it became more tolerable with the increase of the
garrison. The fortifications were examined, reported on, repaired, and
extended. The engineers, like all the other Frenchmen connected with
unhappy Louisbourg, Bigot alone excepted, were second- and third-rate men;
and the actual work was done as badly as before. But, on the whole, the
place was strengthened, especially by a battery near the lighthouse. With
this and the Island Battery, one on either side of the narrow entrance,
which the Royal Battery faced directly, almost a hundred guns could be
brought to bear on any vessels trying to force their way in.</p>
<p>The end of the five years' truce was marked by voluminous reports and
elaborate arguments to prove how well Louisbourg was being governed, how
admirably the fortifications had been attended to (with the inadequate
means at the intendant's disposal), and how desirable it was, from every
point of view, for the king to spend a great deal more money all round in
the immediate future. Fisheries, shipbuilding, fortification, Indians,
trade, religion, the naval and military situation, were all represented as
only needing more money to become quite perfect. Louisbourg was correctly
enough described as an indispensable link between France and the long
chain of French posts in the valleys of the Mississippi and the St
Lawrence. But less well explained in America and less well understood in
Europe was the fact that the separate military chains in Old France and
New could never hold an oversea dominion unless a naval chain united them.
Some few Frenchmen understood this thoroughly. But most did not. And
France, as a whole, hoped that a vigorous offensive on land would more
than counterbalance whatever she might lose by an enforced defensive on
the sea.</p>
<p>In 1754 Washington's first shot beyond the Alleghanies broke the hollow
truce between the French and British colonies, whose lines of expansion
had once more inevitably crossed each other's path. This proved to be the
beginning of the last 'French and Indian War' in American history, of that
'British Conquest of Canada' which formed part of what contemporary
Englishmen called the 'Maritime War,' and of that great military struggle
which continental Europe called the 'Seven Years' War.'</p>
<p>The year 1755 saw Braddock's Defeat in the west, the battle of Lake George
in the centre, and two pregnant events in the east, one on either side of
Louisbourg—the expulsion of the Acadians, and the capture by
Boscawen of two French men-of-war with several hundred soldiers who were
to reinforce the army that was soon to be commanded by Montcalm.</p>
<p>The next year, 1756, saw the formal declaration of war in Europe, its
continued prosecution in America, and the taking of Oswego, which was the
first of Montcalm's four victories against the overwhelming British. But
Louisbourg still remained untouched.</p>
<p>Not till 1757 was the first attempt made to break this last sea link with
France. There was a very natural anxiety, among the British on both sides
of the Atlantic, to do conspicuously well against Louisbourg. Fort
Necessity, Braddock's Defeat, and Montcalm's daring capture of Oswego,
coming with cumulative effect, in three successive campaigns, had created
a feeling of bitter disappointment in America; while the Black Hole of
Calcutta; the loss of Minorca, and, worse still, Byng's failure to bring a
British fleet into decisive action, had wounded the national pride in
England.</p>
<p>But 1757 turned out to be no better than its disconcerting predecessors.
True, England's ally, Frederick the Great, won consummate victories at
Rossbach and at Leuthen. But that was at the end of a very desperate
campaign. True, also, that Clive won Plassey and took Chandernagore. But
those were far away from English-speaking homes; while heavy reverses
close at hand brought down the adverse balance. Pitt, the greatest of all
civilian ministers of War, was dismissed from office and not reinstated
till the British Empire had been without a cabinet for eleven weeks. The
French overran the whole of Hanover and rounded up the Duke of Cumberland
at Kloster-Seven. Mordaunt and his pettifogging councils of war turned the
joint expedition against Rochefort into a complete fiasco; while Montcalm
again defeated the British in America by taking Fort William Henry.</p>
<p>The taking of Louisbourg would have been a very welcome victory in the
midst of so much gloom. But the British were engaged in party strife at
home. They were disunited in America. And neither the naval nor the
military leader of the joint expedition against Louisbourg was the proper
man to act either alone or with his colleague. Speed was of prime
importance. Yet Admiral Holbourne did not sail from England for Halifax
till May. General the Earl of Loudoun was slower yet. He drew in the
troops from the northern frontier, concentrated them in New York, and laid
an embargo on shipping to keep a secret which was already out. Finally, he
and Sir Charles Hardy sailed for Halifax to keep their rendezvous with
Holbourne, from whom no news had come. They arrived there before him; but
his fleet came limping in during the next ten days, after a bad buffeting
on its transatlantic voyage.</p>
<p>Loudoun now had nearly 12,000 men, whom he landed and drilled' throughout
July. His preparations were so meticulously careful that they even
included a vegetable garden, which, though an excellent precaution in its
own way, ought to have been left to the commandant of the base. So thought
Sir Charles Hay, who was put under arrest for saying that all the money
was being spent in fighting sham battles and planting out cabbages.
However, a reconnaissance of Louisbourg had been made by Gorham of the
Rangers, whose very imperfect report induced Holbourne and Loudoun to get
ready to sail. But, just as they were preparing to begin, too late, a
Newfoundland vessel came in with captured French dispatches which showed
that Admiral La Motte had united his three squadrons in Louisbourg
harbour, where he was at anchor with twenty-two ships of the line and
several frigates, the whole carrying 1,360 guns. This was correct. But the
garrison was exaggerated by at least a third in the same dispatch, which
estimated it as numbering over 7000 men.</p>
<p>The lateness of the season, the strength of the French, and the practical
certainty of failing to take Louisbourg by forcing the attack home at any
cost, were very sensibly held, under existing circumstances, to be
sufficient cause for withdrawing the army. The fleet, however, sailed
north, in the hope of inducing La Motte to come out for a battle in the
open. But, at that particular juncture, La Motte was right not to risk
decisive action. A week later he was equally wrong to refuse it.
Holbourne's fleet had been dispersed by a September hurricane of
extraordinary violence. One ship became a total wreck. Nine were
dismasted. Several had to throw their guns overboard. None was fit for
immediate service. But La Motte did not even reconnoitre, much less
annihilate, his helpless enemy.</p>
<p>Pitt returned to power at the end of June 1757, in time to plan a
world-wide campaign for 1758, though not in time to choose the best
commanders and to change the whole course of the war. This became possible
only in the Empire Year of 1759. The English-speaking peoples have nearly
always begun their great wars badly, and have gradually worked up to a
climax of victory after being stung into proper leadership and
organization by several exasperating failures; and though now in the third
year of their most momentous struggle for oversea dominion, they were not
even yet altogether prepared.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, Pitt wielded the amphibious might of Britain with a master
hand. Sea-power, mercantile and naval, enabled him to 'command the riches
of the world' and become the paymaster of many thousand Prussians under
Frederick the Great and Ferdinand of Brunswick. He also sent a small
British army to the Continent. But he devoted his chief attention to
working out a phase of the 'Maritime War' which included India on one
flank and the Canadian frontiers on the other. Sometimes with, and
sometimes without, a contingent from the Army, the British Navy
checkmated, isolated, or defeated the French in Europe, Asia, Africa, and
America.</p>
<p>The preliminary isolation of Louisbourg was a particularly effective
stroke of naval strategy. Even before 1758 began the first French fleet
that left for Louisbourg had been shadowed from Toulon and had been shut
up in Cartagena. A second French fleet was then sent to help the first one
out. But it was attacked on the way and totally defeated. In April the
first fleet made another attempt to sail; but it was chased into Rochefort
by Hawke and put out of action for the rest of the campaign. The third
French fleet did manage to reach Louisbourg. But its admiral, du
Chaffault, rightly fearing annihilation in the harbour there, and wishing
to keep some touch between Old France and New, sailed for Quebec with most
of his best ships.</p>
<p>Quebec and the rest of Canada were themselves on the defensive; for
Abercromby was leading 15,000 men—the largest single army America
had ever seen—straight up the line of Lake Champlain. Montcalm
defeated him at Ticonderoga in July. But that gave no relief to
Louisbourg; because the total British forces threatening the Canadian
inland frontier were still quite strong enough to keep the French on the
strict defensive.</p>
<p>Thus Louisbourg was completely isolated, both by land and sea. It was
stronger and more extensive than during the first siege. It had a better
governor, Drucour, a better and a larger garrison, more food and
ammunition, and, what it formerly lacked altogether, the support of a
considerable fleet. Drucour was a gallant soldier. His garrison numbered
nearly 3,000 effective regulars, with about 1,000 militiamen and some 500
Indians. Seventeen mortars and over two hundred cannon were mounted on the
walls, as well as on the outworks at the Royal, Island, and Lighthouse
Batteries. There were thirteen vessels in the fleet, mounting 590 guns,
and carrying over 3,500 men. This made the French grand total about 800
guns and 8,000 men. But not all these were really effective. Ships at
anchor lose a good deal of their fighting value. Crews are less efficient
when ashore than when they are afloat; and the French ships were mostly
fought at anchor, while the crews were gradually landed for the defence of
the crowded little town. Then, the Indians were comparatively useless in a
fort. The militia were not good soldiers anywhere. Moreover, the three
kinds of regulars—French, Canadian, and foreign—did not get on
very well together; while the fleet, as a whole, got on no better with the
army as a whole.</p>
<p>The British amphibious force presented a striking contrast to this. Its
naval and military parts worked together like the two branches of one
United Service. The Army and Navy naturally understood each other better
than the two services of less amphibious countries; and when a statesman
like Pitt and a first lord of the Admiralty like Anson were together at
headquarters there was no excuse for misunderstandings at the front.
Boscawen and Amherst, both distinguished members of distinguished Service
families, were the best of colleagues. Boscawen had somewhat over, Amherst
a little under, 12,000 men. Boscawen's fleet comprised 39 sail, from a
90-gun ship of the line down to a 12-gun sloop. The British grand total
therefore exceeded Drucour's by over three to one, counting mere numbers
alone. If expert efficiency be taken, for the sake of a more exact
comparison, it is not too much to say that the odds in favour of the
British personnel and armament were really four to one.</p>
<p>On the other hand, the French had the walls of Louisbourg to redress the
balance in their favour. These walls were the crucial factor in the
problem. Both sides knew they were far from being impregnable. But how
long could they withstand a regular siege? If for only one month, then
they were useless as a protection to Quebec. If for two months, then
Quebec and New France were safe until the following year.</p>
<p>Boscawen left England in February. Amherst followed separately. One of the
three brigadier-generals in Amherst's army was Wolfe, of whom we shall
hear more presently. The rendezvous was Halifax, where boat work and
landing exercises were sedulously carried out by the troops. Towards the
end of May Boscawen sailed out of Halifax, though Amherst had not yet
arrived. They met at sea. The Dublin, which had brought Amherst across so
slowly, then 'went very sickly into Halifax,' while Amherst joined
Boscawen, and the whole fleet and convoy bore away for Louisbourg. The
French had been expecting them for at least a month; as scouts kept
appearing almost every day, while Hardy's squadron of nine sail had been
maintaining a sort of open blockade.</p>
<p>On the night of June 1 the French look-outs in Gabarus Bay saw more lights
than usual to the southward. Next morning Louisbourg was early astir,
anxiously eager to catch the first glimpse of this great destroying
armada, which for several expectant hours lay invisible and dread behind a
curtain of dense fog. Then a light sea breeze came in from the Atlantic.
The curtain drew back at its touch. And there, in one white, enormous
crescent, all round the deep-blue offing, stood the mighty fleet, closing
in for the final death-grip on its prey.</p>
<p>Nearly a whole week went by before the British landed. Each day the
scouting boats and vessels stood in as close as possible along the shore.
But they always found the smashing surf too high. At last, on the 8th, the
whole army put off in three brigades of boats, supported by the frigates,
which fired at the French defences. All three landing-places were
threatened simultaneously, White Point, Flat Point, and Kennington Cove.
These landing-places were, respectively, one, two, and four miles west of
Louisbourg. The intervening ground mostly hid them from the ramparts, and
they had to depend upon their own defences. Drucour had sent out
two-thirds of his garrison to oppose the landing. Each point was protected
by artillery and entrenchments. Eight guns were mounted and a thousand men
stood guard over the quarter-mile of beach which lay between the two
little surf-lashed promontories of Kennington Cove. But Wolfe's brigade
made straight for shore. The French held their fire until the leading
boats were well within short musket-shot. Then they began so furiously
that Wolfe, whose tall, lank figure was most conspicuous as he stood up in
the stern-sheets, waved his cane to make the boats sheer off.</p>
<p>It looked as if the first successful landing would have to be made
elsewhere, a bitter disappointment to this young and ardent brigadier,
whose command included the pick of the grenadiers, light infantry, and
Highlanders. But three boatloads of light infantry pushed on against the
inner point of the cove. Perhaps their officers turned their blind eye on
Wolfe's signal, as Nelson did on Parker's recall at Copenhagen. But,
whatever the reason, these three boats went in smash against the rocks and
put their men ashore, drenched to the skin. Major Scott, commanding the
light infantry and rangers, followed them at once. Then Wolfe, seeing they
had gained a foothold where the point afforded them a little cover,
signalled the whole brigade to land there in succession. He pushed his own
boat through, jumped in waist-deep, and waded ashore.</p>
<p>This sudden change, quite unexpected by either friend or foe, greatly
disconcerted the French. They attacked Major Scott, who withstood them
with a handful of men till reinforcements came clambering up the rocks
behind him. With these reinforcements came Wolfe, who formed the men into
line and carried the nearest battery with the bayonet. The remaining
French, seeing that Wolfe had effected a lodgment on their inner flank,
were so afraid of being cut off from Louisbourg that they ran back and
round towards the next position at Flat Point. But before they reached it
they saw its own defenders running back, because the British were also
landing at White Point. Here too the defences were abandoned as soon as
the little garrison found itself faced by greatly superior numbers afloat
and deserted by its fellow-garrisons ashore. The retreating French kept up
a sort of running fight till they got under the covering fire of
Louisbourg, when the pursuing British immediately drew off.</p>
<p>Considering the number of boats that were stove and the intensity of the
first French fire, the British loss was remarkably small, only one hundred
and nine killed, wounded, and drowned. The French loss was still less;
but, in view of the difference between the respective grand totals, it was
a good deal heavier in proportion.</p>
<p>That night the glare of a big fire inside the harbour showed that Drucour
felt too weak to hold the Royal Battery. Unlike his incompetent
predecessor, however, he took away everything movable that could be turned
to good account in Louisbourg; and he left the works a useless ruin. The
following day he destroyed and abandoned the battery at Lighthouse Point.
Thus two fortifications were given up, one of them for the second time,
before a single shot had been fired either from or against them. Time,
labour, and expense had all gone for worse than nothing, as the positions
were at once used by the enemy on each occasion. The wasted expense was of
the usual kind-one half spent on inferior construction, the other pocketed
by the Louisbourg officials. Drucour himself was not at all to blame,
either for the way the works were built or the way in which they had to be
abandoned. With odds of more than three to one against him, he had no men
to spare for trying to keep the British at arm's length.</p>
<p>Amherst pitched his camp in a crescent two miles long, facing Louisbourg
two miles off. His left overlooked the French squadron in the south-west
harbour next to Louisbourg at the distance of a mile. His right rested on
Flat Point. Thus Louisbourg itself was entirely surrounded both by land
and sea; for the gaps left at the Royal Battery and Lighthouse Point were
immediately seized by the British. Wolfe marched round the harbour on the
12th with 1,300 infantry and a strong detachment of artillery. The guns
for the Royal Battery and other points inside the harbour were hauled into
place by teams of about a hundred men each. Those for Lighthouse Point
were sent round by sea, landed, with immense difficulty, more than a mile
distant on the rock-bound shore, hauled up the cliff, and then dragged
back over the roughest of ground to the battery. It was, in fact, a
repetition of what the American militiamen had done in 1745. Wolfe worked
incessantly, directing and encouraging his toiling men. The bluejackets
seconded his efforts by doing even harder work. Their boats were often
stove, and a catamaran was wrecked with a brass twenty-four pounder on
board. But nothing could stop the perfect co-operation between the two
halves of the single United Service. 'The Admiral and General,' wrote
Wolfe, 'have carried on the public service with great harmony, industry,
and union. Mr Boscawen has given all, and even more than we could ask of
him. He has furnished arms and ammunition, pioneers, sappers, miners,
gunners, carpenters, and boats.'</p>
<p>While Wolfe was doing his eight days' work of preparation at the
Lighthouse Battery, between the 12th and the 20th, Amherst, whose
favourite precept was 'slow and sure,' was performing an even more arduous
task by building a road from Flat Point to where he intended to make his
trenches. This road meandered over the least bad line that could be found
in that country of alternate rock, bog, sand, scrub, bush, and marshy
ponds. The working party was always a thousand strong, and shifts, of
course, were constant. Boscawen landed marines to man the works along the
shore, and bluejackets for any handy-man's job required. This proved of
great advantage to the army, which had so many more men set free for other
duties. The landing of stores went on from sunrise to sunset, whenever the
pounding surf calmed down enough. Landing the guns was, of course, much
harder still. It accounted for most of the hundred boats that were dashed
to pieces against that devouring shore.</p>
<p>Thorough and persistent as this work was, however, it gave the garrison of
Louisbourg little outward sign of what was happening just beyond the
knolls and hillocks. Besides, just at this time, when there was a lull
before the storm that was soon to burst from Wolfe and Amherst, both sides
had more dramatic things to catch the general eye. First, there was the
worthy namesake of 'the saucy Arethusa' in the rival British Navy, the
Arethuse, whose daring and skilful captain, Vauquelin, had moored her
beside the Barachois, or sea-pond, so that he could outflank Amherst's
approach against the right land face of Louisbourg. Then, of still more
immediate interest was the nimble little Echo, which tried to run the
gauntlet of the British fleet on June 18, a day long afterwards made
famous on the field of Waterloo. Drucour had entrusted his wife and
several other ladies to the captain of the Echo, who was to make a dash
for Quebec with dispatches for the governor of Canada. A muffling fog shut
down and seemed to promise her safety from the British, though it brought
added danger from that wrecking coast. With infinite precautions she
slipped out on the ebb, between the French at the Island Battery and
Wolfe's strenuous workers at the Lighthouse Point. But the breeze that
bore her north also raised the fog enough to let the Juno and Sutherland
sight her and give chase. She crowded on a press of sail till she was
overhauled, when she fought her captors till her case was hopeless.</p>
<p>Madame Drucour and the other ladies were then sent back to Louisbourg with
every possible consideration for their feelings. This act of kindness was
remembered later on, when a regular interlude of courtesies followed
Drucour's offer to send his own particularly skilful surgeon to any
wounded British officer who might need his services. Amherst sent in
several letters and messages from wounded Frenchmen, and a special message
from himself to Madame Drucour, complimenting her upon her bravery, and
begging her acceptance of some West Indian pineapples. Once more the flag
of truce came out, this time to return the compliment with a basket of
wine. As the gate swung to, the cannon roared again on either side.
Amherst's was no unmerited compliment; for Madame Drucour used to mount
the ramparts every day, no matter what the danger was, and fire three
cannon for the honour of her king. But the French had no monopoly in
woman's work. True, there were no officers' wives to play the heroine on
the British side. But there were others to play a humbler part, and play
it well. In those days each ship or regiment bore a certain proportion of
women on their books for laundering and other work which is still done, at
their own option, by women 'married on the strength' of the Army. Most of
the several hundred women in the besieging fleet and army became so keen
to see the batteries armed that they volunteered to team the guns, which,
in some cases, they actually did, with excellent effect.</p>
<p>By June 26 Louisbourg had no defences left beyond its own walls, except
the reduced French squadron huddled together in the south-west harbour.
The more exposed ships had come down on the 21st, after a day's
bombardment from Wolfe's terrific battery at Lighthouse Point: 'they in
return making an Infernall Fire from all their Broadsides; but, wonderfull
to think of, no harm done us.' Five days later every single gun in the
Island Battery was dumb. At the same time Amherst occupied Green Hill,
directly opposite the citadel and only half a mile away. Yet Drucour, with
dauntless resolution, resisted for another month. His object was not to
save his own doomed fortress but Quebec.</p>
<p>He needed all his resolution. The British were pressing him on every side,
determined to end the siege in time to transfer their force elsewhere.
Louisbourg itself was visibly weakening. The walls were already crumbling
under Amherst's converging fire, though the British attack had not yet
begun in earnest. Surely, thoroughly, and with an irresistible zeal, the
besiegers had built their road, dragged up their guns, and begun to worm
their way forward, under skilfully constructed cover, towards the right
land face of Louisbourg, next to the south-west harbour, where the ground
was less boggy than on the left. The French ships fired on the British
approaches; but, with one notable exception, not effectively, because some
of them masked others, while they were all under British fire themselves,
both from the Lighthouse and the Royal Batteries, as well as from smaller
batteries along the harbour. Vauquelin, who shares with Iberville the
honour of being the naval hero of New France, was the one exception. He
fought the Arethuse so splendidly that he hampered the British left attack
long enough to give Louisbourg a comparative respite for a few hasty
repairs.</p>
<p>But nothing could now resist Boscawen if the British should choose to run
in past the demolished Island Battery and attack the French fleet, first
from a distance, with the help of the Lighthouse and Royal Batteries, and
then hand-to-hand. So the French admiral, des Gouttes, agreed to sink four
of his largest vessels in the fairway. This, however, still left a gap; so
two more were sunk. The passage was then mistakenly reported to be safely
closed. The crews, two thousand strong, were landed and camped along the
streets. This caused outspoken annoyance to the army and to the
inhabitants, who thought the crews had not shown fight enough afloat, who
consequently thought them of little use ashore, who found them in the way,
and who feared they had come in without bringing a proper contribution of
provisions to the common stock.</p>
<p>The Arethuse was presently withdrawn from her perilous berth next to the
British left approach, as she was the only frigate left which seemed to
have a chance of running the gauntlet of Boscawen's fleet. Her shot-holes
were carefully stopped; and on the night of July 14, she was silently
towed to the harbour mouth, whence she sailed for France with dispatches
from Drucour and des Gouttes. The fog held dense, but the wind was light,
and she could hardly forge ahead under every stitch of canvas. All round
her the lights of the British fleet and convoy rose and fell with the
heaving rollers, like little embers blurring through the mist. Yet
Vauquelin took his dark and silent way quite safely, in and out between
them, and reached France just after Louisbourg had fallen.</p>
<p>Meanwhile Drucour had made several sorties against the British front,
while Boishebert had attacked their rear with a few hundred Indians,
Acadians, and Canadians. Boishebert's attack was simply brushed aside by
the rearguard of Amherst's overwhelming force. The American Rangers ought
to have defeated it themselves, without the aid of regulars. But they were
not the same sort of men as those who had besieged Louisbourg thirteen
years before. The best had volunteered then. The worst had been enlisted
now. Of course, there were a few good men with some turn for soldiering.
But most were of the wastrel and wharf-rat kind. Wolfe expressed his
opinion of them in very vigorous terms: 'About 500 Rangers are come,
which, to appearance, are little better than la canaille. These Americans
are in general the dirtiest, most contemptible, cowardly dogs that you can
conceive. There is no depending upon 'em in action. They fall down dead in
their own dirt, and desert by battalions, officers and all.'</p>
<p>Drucour's sorties, made by good French regulars, were much more serious
than Boishebert's feeble, irregular attack. On the night of July 8, while
Montcalm's Ticonderogan heroes were resting on their hard-won field a
thousand miles inland, Drucour's best troops crept out unseen and charged
the British right. Lord Dundonald and several of his men were killed,
while the rest were driven back to the second approach, where desperate
work was done with the bayonet in the dark. But Wolfe commanded that part
of the line, and his supports were under arms in a moment. The French
attack had broken up into a score of little rough-and-tumble fights—bayonets,
butts, and swords all at it; friend and foe mixed up in wild confusion. So
the first properly formed troops carried all before them. The knots of
struggling combatants separated into French and British. The French fell
back on their defences. Their friends inside fired on the British; and
Wolfe, having regained his ground, retired in the same good order on his
lines.</p>
<p>A week later Wolfe suddenly dashed forward on the British left and seized
Gallows Hill, within a musket-shot of the French right bastion. Here his
men dug hard all night long, in spite of the fierce fire kept up on them
at point-blank range. In the morning reliefs marched in, and the digging
still continued. Sappers, miners, and infantry reliefs, they never stopped
till they had burrowed forward another hundred yards, and the last great
breaching battery had opened its annihilating fire. By the 21st both sides
saw that the end was near, so far as the walls were concerned.</p>
<p>But it was not only the walls that were failing. For, that very afternoon
of the 21st, a British seaman gunner's cleverly planted bomb found out a
French ship's magazine, exploded it with shattering force, and set fire to
the ships on either side. All three blazed furiously. The crews ran to
quarters and did their best. But all to no purpose. Meanwhile the British
batteries had turned every available gun on the conflagration, so as to
prevent the French from saving anything. Between the roaring flames, the
bursting shells, and the whizzing cannon balls, the three doomed vessels
soon became an inferno too hot for men to stay in. The crews swarmed over
the side and escaped; not, however, without losing a good many of their
number. Then the British concentrated on the only two remaining vessels,
the Prudent and the Bienfaisant. But the French sailors, with admirable
pluck and judgment, managed to haul them round to a safer berth.</p>
<p>Next day a similar disaster befell the Louisbourg headquarters. A shell
went through the roof of the barracks at the King's Bastion, burst among
the men there, and set the whole place on fire. As the first tongues of
flame shot up the British concentrated on them. The French ran to the
threatened spot and worked hard, in spite of the storm of British shot and
shell. But nothing was saved, except Drucour's own quarters. During the
confusion the wind blew some burning debris against the timbers which
protected the nearest casemates from exploding shells. An alarm was raised
among the women and children inside. A panic followed; and the civilians
of both sexes had their nerves so shaken that they thought of nothing but
surrender on the spot.</p>
<p>Hardly had this excitement been allayed when the main barracks themselves
caught fire. Fortunately they had been cleared when the other fire had
shown how imminent the danger was to every structure along the walls. The
barracks were in special danger of fire, for they had been left with the
same wooden roof which the New Englanders had put on thirteen years
before. Again the British guns converged their devastating fire on the
point of danger, and the whole place was burned to the ground.</p>
<p>Most of the troops were now deprived of all shelter. They had no choice
but to share the streets with a still larger number of sailors than those
to whom they had formerly objected. Yet they had scarcely tried to settle
down and make the best of it before another batch of sailors came crowding
in from the last of the whole French fleet. At one o'clock in the morning
of July 25 a rousing British cheer from the harbour had announced an
attack on the Prudent and the Bienfaisant by six hundred bluejackets, who
had stolen in, with muffled oars, just on the stroke of midnight.
Presently the sound of fighting died away, and all was still. At first the
nearest gunners on the walls had lost their heads and begun blazing away
at random. But they were soon stopped; and neither side dared fire, not
knowing whom the shots might kill. Then, as the escaping French came in to
the walls, a bright glare told that the Prudent was on fire. She had cut
her cable during the fight and was lying, hopelessly stranded, right under
the inner walls of Louisbourg. The Bienfaisant, however, though now
assailed by every gun the French could bring to bear, was towed off to a
snug berth beside the Lighthouse Battery, the British bluejackets showing
the same disregard of danger as their gallant enemies had shown on the
21st, when towing her to safety in the opposite direction.</p>
<p>At daylight Drucour made a thorough inspection of the walls, while the
only four serviceable cannon left fired slowly on, as if for the funeral
of Louisbourg. The British looked stronger than ever, and so close in that
their sharpshooters could pick off the French gunners from the foot of the
glacis. The best of the French diarists made this despairing entry: 'Not a
house in the whole place but has felt the force of their cannonade.
Between yesterday morning and seven o'clock to-night from a thousand to
twelve hundred shells have fallen inside the town, while at least forty
cannon have been firing incessantly as well. The surgeons have to run at
many a cry of 'Ware Shell! for fear lest they should share the patients'
fate.' Amherst had offered to spare the island or any one of the French
ships if Drucour would put his hospital in either place. But, for some
unexplained reason, Drucour declined the offer; though Amherst pointed out
that no spot within so small a target as Louisbourg itself could possibly
be made immune by any gunners in the world.</p>
<p>Reduced to the last extremity, the French council of war decided to ask
for terms. Boscawen and Amherst replied that the whole garrison must
surrender in an hour. Drucour sent back to beg for better terms. But the
second British answer was even sterner—complete surrender, yes or
no, in half an hour. Resentment still ran high against the French for the
massacre at Fort William Henry the year before. The actual massacre had
been the work of drunken Indians. The Canadians present had looked on. The
French, headed by Montcalm, had risked their lives to save the prisoners.
But such distinctions had been blotted out in the general rage among the
British on both sides of the Atlantic; and so Louisbourg was now made the
scapegoat.</p>
<p>Drucour at once wrote back to say that he stood by his first proposal,
which meant, of course, that he was ready to face the storming of his
works and no quarter for his garrison. His flag of truce started off with
this defiance. But Prevost the intendant, with other civilians, now came
forward, on behalf of the inhabitants, to beg for immediate surrender on
any terms, rather than that they should all be exposed to the perils of
assault. Drucour then gave way, and sent an officer running after the
defiant flag of truce. As soon as this second messenger got outside the
walls he called out, at the top of his voice, 'We accept! We accept!' He
then caught up to the bearer of the flag of truce, when both went straight
on to British headquarters.</p>
<p>Boscawen and Amherst were quite prepared for either surrender or assault.
The storming parties had their scaling-ladders ready. The Forlorn Hopes
had been told off to lead the different columns. Every gun was loaded,
afloat and ashore. The fleet were waiting for the signal to file in and
turn a thousand cannon against the walls. Nothing was lacking for complete
success. On the other hand, their terms were also ready waiting. The
garrison was to be sent to England as prisoners of war. The whole of
Louisbourg, Cape Breton, and Isle St Jean (now Prince Edward Island) were
to be surrendered immediately, with all the public property they
contained. The West Gate was to be handed over to a British guard at eight
the next morning; and the French arms were to be laid down for good at
noon. With this document the British commanders sent in the following
note:</p>
<p>SIR,—We have the honour to send Your Excellency the<br/>
signed articles of Capitulation.<br/>
<br/>
Lieutenant Colonel d'Anthony has spoken on behalf of<br/>
the people in the town. We have no intention of<br/>
molesting them; but shall give them all the protection<br/>
in our power.<br/>
<br/>
Your Excellency will kindly sign the duplicate of the<br/>
terms and send it back to us.<br/>
<br/>
It only remains for us to assure Your Excellency that<br/>
we shall seize every opportunity of convincing you<br/>
that we are, with the most perfect consideration, Your<br/>
Excellency's most Obedient Servants,<br/>
<br/>
E. BOSCAWEN.<br/>
J. AMHERST.<br/></p>
<p>No terms were offered either to the Indians or to the armed Canadians, on
account of Fort William Henry; and it is certain that all these would have
been put to the sword, to the very last man, had Drucour decided to stand
an assault. To the relief of every one concerned the Indians paddled off
quietly during the night, which luckily happened to be unusually dark and
calm. The Canadians either followed them or mingled with the unarmed
inhabitants. This awkward problem therefore solved itself.</p>
<p>Few went to bed that last French night in Louisbourg. All responsible
officials were busy with duties, reports, and general superintendence. The
townsfolk and soldiery were restless and inclined to drown their
humiliation in the many little cabarets, which stood open all night. A
very different place, the parish church, was also kept open, and for a
very different purpose. Many hasty marriages were performed, partly from a
wholly groundless fear of British licence, and partly because those who
wished to remain in Cape Breton thought they would not be allowed to do so
unless they were married.</p>
<p>Precisely at eight the next morning Major Farquhar drew up his grenadiers
in front of the West Gate, which was immediately surrendered to him. No
one but the officers concerned witnessed this first ceremony. But the
whole population thronged every point of vantage round the Esplanade to
see the formal surrender at noon. All the British admirals and generals
were present on parade as Drucour stepped forward, saluted, and handed his
sword to Boscawen. His officers followed his example. Then the troops laid
down their arms, in the ranks as they stood, many dashing down their
muskets with a muttered curse.</p>
<p>The French—naval, military, and civilian—were soon embarked.
The curse of Louisbourg followed most of them, in one form or another. The
combatants were coldly received when they eventually returned to France,
in spite of their gallant defence, and in spite of their having saved
Quebec for that campaign. Several hundreds of the inhabitants were
shipwrecked and drowned. One transport was abandoned off the coast of
Prince Edward Island, with the loss of two hundred lives. Another sprang a
leak as she was nearing England; whereupon, to their eternal dishonour,
the crew of British merchant seamen took all the boats and started to pull
off alone. The three hundred French prisoners, men, women, and children,
crowded the ship's side and begged that, if they were themselves to be
abandoned, their priest should be saved. A boat reluctantly put back for
him. Then, leaving the ship to her fate, the crew pulled for Penzance,
where the people had just been celebrating the glorious victory of
Louisbourg.</p>
<p>The French loss had been enough without this. About one in five of all the
combatants had been hit. Twice as many were on the sick list. Officers and
men, officials and traders, fishermen and other inhabitants, all lost
something, in certain cases everything they had; and it was to nothing but
the sheer ruin of all French power beside the American Atlantic that
Madame Drucour waved her long white scarf in a last farewell.</p>
<p>France was stung to the quick. Her sea link gone, she feared that the
whole of Canada would soon be won by the same relentless British
sea-power, which was quite as irresistible as it was ubiquitous in the
mighty hands of Pitt. So deeply did her statesmen feel her imminent danger
on the sea, and resent this particular British triumph in the world-wide
'Maritime War,' that they took the unusual course of sending the following
circular letter to all the Powers of Europe:</p>
<p>We are advised that Louisbourg capitulated to the<br/>
English on July 26, We fully realize the consequences<br/>
of such a grave event. But we shall redouble our<br/>
efforts to repair the misfortune.<br/>
<br/>
All commercial nations ought now to open their eyes<br/>
to their own interests and join us in preventing the<br/>
absolute tyranny which England will soon exercise on<br/>
every sea if a stop be not put to her boundless avarice<br/>
and ambition.<br/>
<br/>
For a century past the Powers of Europe have been<br/>
crying out against France for disturbing the balance<br/>
of power on the Continent. But while England was<br/>
artfully fomenting this trouble she was herself engaged<br/>
in upsetting that balance of power at sea without<br/>
which these different nations' independent power on<br/>
land cannot subsist. All governments ought to give<br/>
their immediate and most serious attention to this<br/>
subject, as the English now threaten to usurp the<br/>
whole world's seaborne commerce for themselves.<br/></p>
<p>While the French were taken up with unavailing protests and regrets the
British were rejoicing with their whole heart. Their loss had been small.
Only a twentieth of their naval and military total had been killed or
wounded, or had died from sickness, during the seven weeks' siege. Their
gain had been great. The one real fortress in America, the last sea link
between Old France and New, the single sword held over their transatlantic
shipping, was now unchallengeably theirs.</p>
<p>The good news travelled fast. Within three weeks of the surrender the
dispatches had reached England. Defeats, disasters, and exasperating
fiascos had been common since the war began. But at last there was a
genuine victory, British through and through, won by the Army and Navy
together, and won over the greatest of all rivals, France. 'When we lost
Minorca,' said the London Chronicle, just a month after the surrender, 'a
general panic fell upon the nation; but now that Louisbourg is taken our
streets echo with triumph and blaze with illuminations.' Loyal addresses
poured in from every quarter. The king stood on the palace steps to
receive the eleven captured colours; and then, attended by the whole
court, went in state to the royal thanksgiving service held in St Paul's
Cathedral.</p>
<p>The thanks of parliament were voted to Amherst and Boscawen. Boscawen
received them in person, being a member of the House of Commons. The
speaker read the address, which was couched in the usual verbiage worked
up by one of the select committees employed on such occasions. But
Boscawen replied, as men of action should, with fewer words and much more
force and point: 'Mr Speaker, Sir, I am happy to have been able to do my
duty. I have no words to express my sense of the distinguished reward that
has been conferred upon me by this House; nor can I thank you, Sir, enough
for the polite and elegant manner in which you have been pleased to convey
its resolution to me.'</p>
<p>The American colonists in general rejoiced exceedingly that Louisbourg and
all it meant had been exterminated. But, especially in New England, their
joy was considerably tempered by the reflection that the final blow had
been delivered without their aid, and that the British arms had met with a
terrible reverse at Ticonderoga, where the American militia had
outnumbered the old-country regulars by half as much again. Nevertheless
Boston built a 'stately bonfire,' which made a 'lofty and prodigious
blaze'; while Philadelphia, despite its parasitic Quakers, had a most
elaborate display of fireworks representing England, Louisbourg, the
siege, the capture, the triumph, and reflected glory generally.</p>
<p>At the inland front, near Lake Champlain, where Abercromby now went by the
opprobrious nickname of 'Mrs Nabbycrumby,' 'The General put out orders
that the breastwork should be lined with troops, and to fire three rounds
for joy, and give thanks to God in a Religious Way.' But the joy was more
whole-hearted among the little, half-forgotten garrisons of Nova Scotia.
At Annapolis no news arrived till well on in September, when a Boston
sloop came sailing up the bay. Captain Knox, that most industrious of
diarists, records the incident.</p>
<p>Every soul was impatient, yet shy of asking. At length<br/>
I called out, 'What news from Louisbourg?' To which<br/>
the master simply replied, and with some gravity,<br/>
'Nothing strange.' This threw us all into great<br/>
consternation, and some of us even turned away. But<br/>
one of our soldiers called out with some warmth 'Damn<br/>
you, Pumpkin, isn't Louisbourg taken yet?' The poor<br/>
New England man then answered: 'Taken, yes, above a<br/>
month ago; and I have been there since; but if you<br/>
haven't heard of it before, I have a good parcel of<br/>
letters for you now.' Instantly all hats flew off,<br/>
and we made the neighbouring woods resound with our<br/>
cheers for almost half an hour.<br/></p>
<p>Halifax naturally heard the news sooner than other places; and being then,
as now, a naval port and a garrison town, it gave full vent to its
feelings. Bells pealed. Bonfires blazed. Salutes thundered from the fort
and harbour. But all this was a mere preliminary canter. The real race
came off when the victorious fleet and army returned in triumph. Land and
water were then indeed alive with exultant crowds. The streets were like a
fair, and a noisy one at that. Soldiers, sailors, and civilians drank
standing toasts the whole night through. The commissioner of excise
recorded, not without a touch of proper pride, that, quite apart from all
illicit wines and spirits, no less than sixty thousand gallons of good
Jamaica rum were drunk in honour of the fall of Louisbourg. In higher
circles, where wine was commoner than spirits, the toasts were honoured
just as often. Governor Lawrence, fresh from Louisbourg himself, opened
the new Government House with a grand ball; and Wolfe, whom all now
thought the coming man, drank healths, sang songs, and danced with pretty
partners to his heart's content.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER V — ANNIHILATION </h2>
<h3> 1760 </h3>
<p>The new garrison of Louisbourg hated it as thoroughly as any of their
predecessors, French or British. They repaired the breaches, in a
temporary way, and ran up shelters for the winter. Interest revived with
the spring; for Wolfe was coming back again, this time to command an army
of his own and take Quebec.</p>
<p>The great absorbing question was, Who's for the front and who for the
base? Both fleet and army made their rendezvous at Louisbourg; a larger
fleet and a smaller army than those of the year before. Two new toasts
were going the rounds of the Service: 'Here's to the eye of a Hawke and
the heart of a Wolfe!' and 'Here's to British colours on every French
fort, port, and garrison in America!' Of course they were standing toasts.
The men who drank them already felt the presage of Pitt's great Empire
Year of 1759.</p>
<p>The last two weeks in May and the first in June were full of glamour in
crowded, stirring Louisbourg. There was Wolfe's picked army of nine
thousand men, with Saunders's mighty fleet of fifty men-of-war, mounting
two thousand guns, comprising a quarter of the whole Royal Navy, and
convoying more than two hundred transports and provision ships; all coming
and going, landing, embarking, drilling, dividing, massing; every one
expectant of glorious results and eager to begin. Who wouldn't be for the
front at the climax of a war like this?</p>
<p>Then came the final orders issued in Louisbourg. '1st June, 1759. The
Troops land no more. The flat-bottomed boats to be hoisted in, that the
ships may be ready to sail at the first signal.' '2nd June, 1759. The
Admiral purposes sailing the first fair wind.' On the 4th a hundred and
forty-one sail weighed anchor together. All that day and the next they
were assembling outside and making for the island of Scatari, just beyond
the point of Cape Breton, which is only ten miles north of Louisbourg. By
noon on the 6th the last speck of white had melted away from the
Louisbourg horizon and the men for the front were definitely parted from
those left behind at the base.</p>
<p>Great things were dared and done at the front that year, in Europe, Asia,
and America. But nothing was done at dull little Louisbourg, except the
wearisome routine of a disgustingly safe base. Rocks, bogs, fogs, sand,
and scrubby bush ashore. Tantalizing news from the stirring outside world
afloat. So the long, blank, summer days wore through.</p>
<p>The second winter proved a little more comfortable than the first had
been. But there was less, far less, for the garrison to expect in the
spring. In February 1760 the death-warrant of Louisbourg was signed in
London by Pitt and King George II. In the following summer it was executed
by Captain John Byron, R. N., the poet's grandfather. Sailors, sappers,
and miners worked for months together, laying the pride of Louisbourg
level with the dust. That they carried out their orders with grim
determination any one can see to-day by visiting the grave in which they
buried so many French ambitions.</p>
<p>All the rest of Ile Royale lost its French life in the same supreme
catastrophe—the little forts and trading-posts, the fishing-villages
and hamlets; even the farms along the Mira, which once were thought so
like the promise of a second French Acadia.</p>
<p>Nothing remains of that dead past, anywhere inland, except a few gnarled,
weather-beaten stumps of carefully transplanted plum and apple trees,
with, here and there, a straggling little patch of pale, forlorn
narcissus, now soothing the alien air in vain, round shapeless ruins, as
absolute and lone as those of Louisbourg itself.</p>
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<h2> BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE </h2>
<p>There is no complete naval and military history of Louisbourg, in either
French or English. The first siege is a prominent feature in all histories
of Canada, New England, and the United States, though it is not much
noticed in works written in the mother country. The second siege is
noticed everywhere. The beginning and end of the story is generally
ignored, and the naval side is always inadequately treated.</p>
<p>Parkman gives a good account of the first siege in 'A Half-Century of
Conflict', and a less good account of the second in 'Montcalm and Wolfe'.
Kingsford's accounts are in volumes iii and iv of the 'History of Canada'.
Sir John Bourinot, a native of the island, wrote a most painstaking work
on 'Cape Breton and its Memorials of the French Regime' which was first
published in the 'Transactions of the Royal Society of Canada' for 1891.
Garneau and other French-Canadian historians naturally emphasize a
different set of facts and explanations. An astonishingly outspoken
account of the first siege is given in the anonymous 'Lettre d'un Habitant
de Louisbourg', which has been edited, with a translation, by Professor
Wrong. The gist of many accounts is to be found, unpretentiously put
together, in 'The Last Siege of Louisbourg', by C. O. Macdonald. New
England produced many contemporary and subsequent accounts of the first
siege, and all books concerned with the Conquest give accounts of the
second.</p>
<p>Those who wish to go straight to original sources will find useful
bibliographies in the notes to Parkman's and Bourinot's books, as well as
in Justin Winsor's 'Narrative and Critical History of America'. But none
of these includes some important items to be found either in or through
the Dominion Archives at Ottawa, the Public Records Office in London, and
the Archives de la Marine in Paris.</p>
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