Fort Gaspareaux National Historic Site of Canada
Port Elgin, New Brunswick
General view
(© Parks Canada Agency / Agence Parcs Canada)
Address :
Fort Moncton Road, Port Elgin, New Brunswick
Recognition Statute:
Historic Sites and Monuments Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. H-4)
Designation Date:
1920-01-30
Dates:
-
1751 to 1751
(Significant)
-
1755 to 1755
(Significant)
-
1751 to 1756
(Significant)
Event, Person, Organization:
-
Marquis de Jonquière, Governor-General of New France
(Person)
-
M. De Villeray
(Person)
-
Colonel John Winslow
(Person)
Other Name(s):
-
Fort Gaspareaux
(Designation Name)
DFRP Number:
04283 00
Plaque(s)
Original Plaque: New Brunswick
Built by French troops in 1751 by order of the Marquis de la Jonquière, Governor of Canada.
Evacuated by the French and occupied by British troops, commanded by Lieut. Colonel John Winslow, 19th June 1755, when it was renamed Fort Monckton.
Demolished in 1756.
Existing plaque: Stone cairn Fort Moncton Road, Port Elgin, New Brunswick
Built by French troops in 1751 to prevent the English from penetrating the Chignecto Isthmus, Fort Gaspareaux served particularly as a provisioning base for the forts of Acadia. When, on the 17th of June, 1755, Fort Beauséjour capitulated to General Monckton's army, M. de Villeray, having only 19 soldiers at Gaspareaux was also forced to surrender. Colonel John Winslow took possession of the Fort in Monckton's name. Its poor condition, together with its general strategic unimportance, led the English to burn it in September, 1756.
Description of Historic Place
Fort Gaspareaux National Historic Site of Canada is an archaeological site located just outside Port Elgin, New Brunswick, 4.8 km from the village of Baie Verte. It is on a small point of land jutting into Baie Verte on the Northumberland Strait separating the mainland from Prince Edward Island. The site consists of 1.23 hectares of flat coastal land on the south side of the estuary of the Gaspareaux River and is protected by a substantial sea wall. Its landscape contains archaeological traces of the French Fort Gaspareaux together with 9 graves of Provincial soldiers killed in 1756 while garrisoning the fort. The designation refers to the landscape and the remains of the French-English struggle it contains.
Heritage Value
Fort Gaspareaux was designated a national historic site 1920 because of its role in the struggle between France and Britain for North America in the 1750s.
The heritage value of Fort Gaspareaux National Historic Site of Canada resides in its associated history as illustrated by the site, setting and associated remains. The strategic location and footprint of the fort, its materials, construction technology and disposition all embody value.
Fort Gaspareaux was a border outpost built by French troops in 1751 by order of the Marquis de Jonquière, Governor-General of New France to prevent the British from penetrating the Chignecto Isthmus. It also served as a provisioning base for the forts of Acadia during the French règime. The fort was manned by a skeleton staff of 19 soldiers led by M. De Villeray when, on 17 June 1755, it was attacked by British soldiers under Colonel John Winslow and forced to surrender. The British burned the fortress in September 1756. Its location has been known since that time even though the site of the fortress served as farmland for a long period. This was one of the first sites to be commemorated by the Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada and became the locus of archaeological investigation in 1996.
Sources: Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada, Minutes, May 1920, 1923 and 1975; Commemorative Integrity Statement, 2006.
Character-Defining Elements
Key elements of this site contributing to its heritage value include: its strategic location on the Isthmus of Chignecto on a defensible point of land extending into Baie Verte; its setting on a flat coastal plain beside a natural harbour off the Strait of Northumberland at the east end of the portage route through the Chignecto corridor, with a natural bog landward and indigenous forest as a border on one edge of the site; the integrity of the natural landscape; the trace of the fort itself as described by forms and remnants of its footprint embedded in the cultural landscape (ditch, remnants of the curtain wall); the integrity of above and below ground remnants of the fort; the found form, materials, and location of archaeological remnants; the integrity of the gravestones of soldiers killed in 1756 and buried on the site; retention of the knowledge associated with historic objects removed from the site during archaeological excavation (including 18th century ceramic shards; fragments of glassware; clay pipes; pre-European Aboriginal artifacts); viewplanes seaward from the site of the fort, toward the mouth of the Gaspareaux River, overland to the village of Baie Verte and to the portage route to Beausejour.