The Great Fortress A Chronicle of Louisbourg 1720-1760
They repaired the breaches, in a temporary way, and ran up shelters for the winter. Interest revived wi
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
et 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
poses 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
little Louisbourg, except the wearisome routine of a disgustingly safe base. Rocks, bogs, fogs, sand, and scrubby
s 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, l
little forts and trading-posts, the fishing-villages and hamlets; even the farms a
ransplanted plum and apple trees, with, here and there, a straggling little patch of pale, forlorn narcissus,
GRAPHI
histories of Canada, New England, and the United States, though it is not much noticed in works written in the mother country. The secon
ench 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 h
s well as in Justin Winsor's 'Narrative and Critical History of America'. But none of these includes some important items to be fou