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Burnsville

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North Carolina, Yancey County, Burnsville
Burnsville exemplified western North Carolinians’ divided loyalties. Yancey County was evenly split on the secession issue. In January 1861, secession advocates in the town square burned an effigy of Cong. Zebulon B. Vance, who advised caution in response to Lincoln’s election. The future governor’s defenders vowed to tar and feather those responsible. Once the state seceded, many men enlisted in local Confederate companies, such as the Black Mountain Boys, while a few others joined the Federal units. The mountains soon became a haven for deserters from both sides.

In September 1863, Gov. Vance appointed John W. McElroy commander of the western “home guard” brigade to keep the peace and enforce Confederate conscription. McElroy already had told Vance that “many will go to the mountains before they will go to war.” McElroy moved his headquarters from this house to Madison County in September 1863. On April 9, 1864, in McElroy’s absence, about 50 Yancey County women “assembled… and marched in a body to a store-house… and (carried off) about sixty bushels of Government wheat.” The next day, McElroy reported, a band of 75 local renegades under Montraville Ray “came into Burnsville… surprised the guard, broke open the magazine, and took all the arms and ammunition. …The county is gone up.” Col. John B. Palmer soon marched 250 Confederate infantrymen here and attacked Ray’s force, capturing 15 and destroying the Ray family property. McElroy soon reestablished his headquarters here. In one of the last local acts of violence of the war, in April 1865, near here, Unionists shot and killed the Rev. Sam Byrd, whose son was a captain in McElroy’s home guard.

(sidebar)
John W. McElroy constructed this house about 1845, after he bought two lots here. He lived here until late in the 1850s but used the dwelling during the war. According to local tradition, after the April 1864 engagement in Burnsville, the house served as a hospital.

(captions)
(lower left) Gen. John W. McElroy; Montraville Ray.
(upper right) The Yancey County Courthouse, photographed ca. 1890, stood in the town square. It was constructed ca. 1850 and demolished in 1909. Photos courtesy Yancey History Association

(War, US Civil) Includes location, directions, 6 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

Charles Edward Wright

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Mississippi, Leflore County, Greenwood

To Commemorate the Enterprise and Initiative
of
Charles Edward Wright

Who in May 1895, 901 feet east of this spot
sank the first overflowing well in the
Mississippi Delta and gave to its people the
blessing of artesian water, this fountain
is erected by
Chakchiuma Chapter D.A.R.
in Novermber 1915.

(Man-Made Features) Includes location, directions, 3 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

Pleasant Gardens

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North Carolina, McDowell County, Marion

Home of Joseph McDowell (1758-1795), soldier and physician. Officer at the Battle of Kings Mountain.

(War, US Revolutionary) Includes location, directions, 2 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

Cathey's Fort

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North Carolina, McDowell County, Marion

A rendezvous for the North Carolina militia led by General Griffith Rutherford against the Cherokee in 1776, was one mile east.

(Native Americans • Wars, US Indian) Includes location, directions, 2 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

St. Andrews Historic District

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New Brunswick, Charlotte County, St. Andrews
English
Founded by Loyalists in 1783, St. Andrews is a fine and rare surviving example of a Canadian town whose plan and character clearly reflect its 18th-century origins. The town retains the four key elements of a British colonial settlement of that period; a gridiron plan, provision for public spaces, well-defined sites for defensive works, and a common area surrounding the original townsite to provide a clear delineation between settled and non-settled area. St. Andrews is further distinguished by its fine collection of commercial and residential buildings spanning the town’s history, the majority of which feature design motifs inspired by British classicism. The earliest of these buildings date to the era of the founding of the town and are of wood construction with simple exterior testaments. As the local economy matured, new houses were more elaborately embellished, and the largest and most expensive were constructed of brick. The consistent use of classical architectural features, the retention of the original street layout, and the division of the town blocks into generously sized lots have resulted in a community with a distinctive appearance and a strong sense of place.

French
Fondée par les Loyaliste en 1783, St. Andrews constitue, par son plan et son caractère, l’une des rares villes du XVIIIᵉ siècle qui sont aussi bien conservée au Canada. Elle possède toujours les quatre éléments-clés des établissements des colonies britanniques de l’époque : un plan en échiquier, des espaces publics, des ouvrages défensifs bien définis et des aires communes en périphérie séparant les zones habitées de celles no habitées. St. Andrews possède aussi de beaux édifices commerciaux et résidentiels, pour la plupart d’inspiration classique britannique. Les plus anciens, en bois et d’une grande simplicité extérieure, datent de la fondation de la ville. Au fur et à mesure que l’économie locale a prospéré, des maisons plus ornementées ont été construites, dont les plus grandes et les plus cossues étaient en brique. L’omnipresence du vocabulaire architectural classique, la préservation du tracé d’origine des rues et la division des îlots en terrains aux dimensions généreuses ont produit une communauté d’allure distinctive dégageant une atmosphère particulièrement remarquable.

(Settlements & Settlers) Includes location, directions, 9 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

A Window To Our Past

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Indiana, St. Joseph County, South Bend
The St. Joseph River of today looks much different than it did during the last glacial age, some 16,000 years ago. At that time, a mountain of snow and ice, perhaps a half a mile thick, covered much of St. Joseph county. Tremendous quantities of meltwater from this glacier, as well as from glaciers to the north, formed a gigantic river, known as the Glacial Kankakee. The river coursed through what today is downtown South Bend. Where you are no standing, a river one mile wide and at least 100 feet deep, ice-cold and rapidly flowing, would have journeyed to the southwest, eventually following the modern Kankakee channel.

As thousands of years passed, the river narrowed to its present boundaries. The high bank you see before you would serve as the southern boundary for the river. The northern compliment of this bank can be found at the intersection of La Salle and Eddy streets in South Bend. How did the bank get to be so high? Actually, it’s not that the south bank is so high, but rather the north bank is so low. The glacial material that was formerly present here gradually washed away until all that remained was a level plain. The power of the river’s current caused it to cut further into its own bed, year after year. Even today, the river continues to cut deeper into its own channel.

South Bend was a much different place 16,000 years ago. Northern Indiana was covered with tundra, similar to what is found in the arctic regions today. Animals associated with a northern climate, like moose, caribou, and loons, were found here. Extinct glacial animals, such as ground sloths, giant beavers, cave bears, and mastadons were present as well. We know this by the discovery of remains in our area.

Many animals, no longer seen in the city, called the river their home. About 150 years ago, beaver, muskrat, mink, otter and bald eagles all made their home along the St. Joseph River. The St. Joe, with its sandy and gravelly bottom, was an ideal breeding location for walleye, northern pike and small-mouth bass. Giant Lake Sturgeon, six feet in length, were seen by the original settlers of the city passing through the shallow water near Leeper Park en route to their breeding grounds. How could the fish be seen so easily? At the time of the city’s founding in the 1820's, the river was described as “cool, clear, and swift,” with its bottom visible from any vantage point overlooking the water.

(Environment) Includes location, directions, 3 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

Howard Park

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Indiana, St. Joseph County, South Bend


South Bend’s Oldest Park

Howard is South Bend’s first and oldest park. The ground was named in honor of Judge Timothy Howard (1837-1916), who had a long and varied career in state and local politics. He served as a city council member, a state senator, and as chief justice of the Indiana Supreme Court. Howard went on to become president of the Northern Indiana Historical Society, and wrote a comprehensive history of St. Joseph County.

The land being considered for the park was an unlikely location. It was then a flood plain that paralleled the St. Joseph River, acting as a kind of sponge which absorbed excess water during periods of flooding. It was thought of as nothing more than “an overflowed swamp waste,” (*From Howard’s History of St. Joseph County) and extended from Jefferson Street to the foot bridge at the southern end of the park. Because it was regarded as a breeding place for malarial insects, people mistakenly viewed it as a health hazard, and the city decided to eliminate it. From 1878 to 1895, this land was slowly filled in with refuse from the city. In some places, this fill is from ten to fifteen feet deep. In the summer of 1895, the seawall and sidewalk were completed. The park was officially dedicated on Friday evening, August 18, 1899.

The Electric Fountain

July 21, 1906, was a special day for Howard Park and the city of South Bend. A new and elaborate fountain was donated to the city by John M. Studebaker, president of the Studebaker Manufacturing Corporation. It was made of bronze and stood about twenty feet tall. The top of the fountain was encircled with colored electric lights, a novelty in 1906. Water cascaded down from the upper and middle basins, and sprayed out in streams from the mouths of turtles positioned in the large, bottom basin. But time took its toll on the fountain. After thirty-five years, it became dilapidated and had to be dismantled. It was moved to a golf driving range, formerly found on the southeast corner of Jefferson and Eddy Streets in South Bend. Some time after 1941, as part of the national drive to build up the federal arsenal for WWII, the fountain was donated for the manufacture of armaments.

Ice Cutting and Skating

Prior to 1878, much of the area now comprising Howard Park was a flood plain, absorbing excess flowage during times of high water. It was also used by area residents for winter activities. When frozen, this area near the river was used for ice skating. And Howard points out that “part of the ground was scooped out deeper to make an ice pond for the cutting and storing of ice in the cold season.” (*From Howard’s History of St. Joseph County) Winter activities continue in the park today. In 1958, the ice-skating rink was built, along with the warming house, concessions and toilet facilities, and the Senior Center. The opening of the rink drew a crown of 4,000 skaters and spectators, and several hundred had to be turned away.

Protecting the “Fair St. Joseph”

This postcard from 1918 shows one of three cannons that were formerly in Howard Park along the St. Joseph River. The cannons, placed along the bank in the summer of 1895, were used in the Civil War and donated by the Grand Army of the Republic to honor South Bend veterans. Judge Howard states, in the flowerly language of the time, that the cannons were poised on the riverbank “as if on guard against any possible enemy that might appear upon the placid bosom of the fair St. Joseph.” (*From Howard’s History of St. Joseph County) After a couple of decades, the cannon’s supporting platforms decayed, and the guns were taken to the city’s storage yard. In 1928, a new armory was built in South Bend (now the Newman Center), where the cannons were sent for use as lawn decorations. Because of the outbreak of WWII, the cannons became part of a nation-wide collection and sent by rail to the Gary, Indiana steel mils, where they were melted down to aid the war effort.

Bridge Remains, Standpipe Gone

The first structure to span the river at Jefferson Street was a frail, wooden bridge. It was erected some time after 1875. In 1883, it was destroyed by an ice flow and carried down stream. Later that year, an iron truss bridge was constructed as a replacement. The iron bridge was moved to Ironwood Drive, and a Melan bridge took its place. The Melan bridge uses arches made of steel ribbing buried in concrete. It was opened for public use in 1906 and continues to be used today.

The tower-like structure you see in the background of this photo is the city standpipe. It was erected on November 17, 1873, northwest of the Jefferson Street bridge. It stood 200 feet tall and contained an iron pipe that was five fee tin diameter. The standpipe was a type of water tower that was constructed after the infamous Chicago and Boston fires of 1871 and 1872. Its purpose was to provide pressurized water for the task of extinguishing fires. It was dismantled in 1930.

(Bridges & Viaducts • Settlements & Settlers • Waterways & Vessels) Includes location, directions, 6 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

Willi Münzenberg

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Germany, Thuringia, Erfurt

Hier stand das Geburtshaus
von
Willi Münzenberg
1889 - 1940
Publizist im Widerstand
gegen Hitler und Stalin
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Here stood the birthplace
of
Willi Münzenberg
1889 - 1940
Publicist in resistance
against Hitler and Stalin

(Notable Persons) Includes location, directions, 2 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

American Legion Park

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Wisconsin, Kewaunee County, Algoma
Dedicated to the
Memory of All
American Veterans

In Remembrance of
Clarence and Eunice Bathke


(Military) Includes location, directions, 6 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

Franz Marc

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Germany, Bavaria, Munich

Der grösste Bayerische maler
des 20. jahrhunderts.
Der begründer des "Blauen reiters"
hat in diesem hause von
1892-1895
gelebt
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The greatest Bavarian painter
of the 20th century.
The founder of the "Blue Rider"
lived in this house from
1892-1985

(Arts, Letters, Music • Man-Made Features) Includes location, directions, 2 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

First Rural Power Line

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Wisconsin, Washington County, West Bend
The first strictly rural electric power line in the United States was built in 1919 by West Bend Heating and Lighting Company, which was founded in 1907 by Adam Kuehlthau. It was 24 miles long and served 57 farmers in the townships of West Bend, Barton, Addison and Wayne. Monthly charges were determined by the number of lights in the home.

(Agriculture • Industry & Commerce) Includes location, directions, 4 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

A Grist Mill

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New York, Warren County, Brant Lake
Built in 1865 on this Site
by Jud Barton. Operated
by Jud and his Sons Until
1937. Powered by Water from Outlet of Mill Pond.


(Industry & Commerce) Includes location, directions, 2 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

Bruemmerville

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Wisconsin, Kewaunee County, near Algoma

     Henry Bruemmer, a native of Mecklenburg, Germany, learned the milling trade in his native land before emigrating. After spending a few years on the East Coast, he invested in a flourmill in Mishicot before operating a mill at Tisch Mills. In the mid-1860s, he and his family moved to what is now known as Bruemmerville where he purchased an interest in the Ahnapee Mill, eventually becoming the sole proprietor.

     In addition to a flour and feed mill, the Bruemmer family enterprise also included a saw and planning mill. The mills were powered by water supplied by a dam on Silver Creek (the South Branch of the Ahnapee River) as well as steampower when necessary. The present dam was constructed in the early 1920s.

     In addition to the mills, Bruemmerville eventually included an ice house, brickyard, cheese factory, two livery stables, and a tavern (part of which was built in 1875 by Randolph Bruemmer and is still in the community) as well as several homes including those owned by members of the Bruemmer family.

     At one time, the mills made this one of the busiest areas of the county. The two stables were said to be able to hold up to 300 horses. However competition from other mills eventually led to the closing of the operation in the mid-1940s.

     While the mill that was once located here is gone, the dam remains as a reminder of the days long past when this area was a bustling community providing services necessary to residents of our county from miles around.

(Industry & Commerce • Man-Made Features • Settlements & Settlers • Waterways & Vessels) Includes location, directions, 4 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

Klostermühle / Monastery Mill

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Germany, Baden-Württemberg, Tübingen District, Bebenhausen


Untere mühle · erbaut 1447
aufgestockt 1780 · umbau zu
e-werk 1900 unter König
Wilhelm II · renoviert 1977
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1978 Tübingen
Stadtbild wettbewerb
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Lower mill · built in 1447
increased in 1780 · converted to
e-factory in 1900 under King
Wilhelm II · renovated in 1977
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1978 Tübingen
Cityscape competition

(Notable Buildings) Includes location, directions, 2 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

Abtshaus / Abbot's House

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Germany, Baden-Württemberg, Tübingen District, Bebenhausen

1339 unter Abt Konrad von Lustnau als Wohnung des Abtes errichtet, um 1510 erweitert und mit Fachwerkobergeschoß versehen. Holzbrücke als Verbindungsgang zum Dormitorium (um 1860 abgerissen).

Ab 1807-11 Umbau als Jagdschloß für König Friedrich I. von Württemberg nach Plänen des Landbaumeisters Johann Adam Groß III.

Die vorgelagerte Grünfläche als „Blumen-Gärtlein” mit geschlängelten Wegen und kleinen Rasenflächen mit Beeten, Sträuchern und Bäumen als bescheidener Landschaftsgarten im englischen Stil gestaltet.
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Established in 1339 under Abbot Conrad of Lustnau as the abbot's home, expanded in 1510 and provided with half-timbered upper floor. Wooden bridge (demolished around 1860) as a connecting corridor to the dormitory.

From 1807-11 remodeled as a hunting lodge for King Frederick I of Württemberg with plans by the architect Johann Adam Groß III.

The upstream green space designed as "Flower Garden" with meandering paths and small lawns with flower beds, shrubs and trees as a humble landscape garden in the English style.

(Churches, Etc. • Man-Made Features) Includes location, directions, 2 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

The 1858 Rosiere Kermiss

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Wisconsin, Kewaunee County, Rosiere

     The fall harvest was in and excitement reigned in the community! Cleaning, cooking, baking, sewing — it was time to celebrate and thank the Lord for the good crops and other blessings. Hardships, homesickness, and loneliness were forgotten, at least for a while.

     By the fall of 1858, the Belgian settlers in this area, the first of whom arrived in 1853, were ready to celebrate. Days were spent preparing for the kermiss, a centuries old Belgian custom that is a combination of religious and secular celebration, which usually lasted for three days.

     Their kermiss, reportedly the first in America, was held in Rosiere, Wisconsin, on the same Sunday in September 1858 that the kermiss was held in Rosiere in their native Belgium.

     Father Daems from Bay Settlement said mass. When mass ended, a band was ready to lead the people to an improvised hall. Along the way, the procession paused and people danced on the unpaved road.

     Dancing, eating (freshly baked bread, kaset, chicken booyah, trippe, jut, and those famous Belgian pies), drinking homemade beer, and playing games (catching the greased pig, climbing the greased pole, foot races, wrestling matches) went on for several days.

     As the Belgian community grew, new settlements developed, new churches were built, and more kermisses were held — eventually there was a kermiss from the last Sunday in August until November, each community taking its turn. Over the years, the celebration of kermiss changed.

(Churches, Etc. • Entertainment) Includes location, directions, 4 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

The Road to the Kanawha

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Virginia, Allegheny County, near Falling Spring
Through the gap between Peters Mountain on the left and Lick Mountain lies the road to the Kanawha used by emigrants traveling west to the Mississippi basin. The road in the valley below follows the route Washington used when inspecting the forts along the Jackson River in 1756.

(Military • Roads & Vehicles • Settlements & Settlers • Wars, US Indian) Includes location, directions, 3 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

Falling Spring Falls

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Virginia, Bath County, near Falling Spring

Welcome to Falling Spring Falls in the Heart of the Alleghany Highlands.

According to the book, “Historical Sketches of the Alleghany Highlands” by Gay Arritt, 82 acres of land including, the Falling Spring Falls was granted by King George III of Great Britain to Gabriel Jones in August 1771. In 1780 Thomas Jefferson, as Governor of Virginia, granted the property to Major Thomas Massie.

The site was once visited by Jefferson to survey the falls and he mentions it in his manuscripts “Notes on the State of Virginia” written in 1781. “The only remarkable cascade in this country is that of the Falling Spring in Augusta,” wrote Jefferson, “...it falls over a rock 200 feet into the valley below.”

From 1914 to 1926 a producer of travertine material, Ohio C. Barber Fertilizer Company, mined fertilizer in Barber, Virginia, now called Falling Spring. In 1927 Falling Spring Lime Company assumed operations until 1941. Mining operations necessitated the relocation of the falls where it now plunges only 80 feet.

Electricity generated from the falls was used to run the lime crushing plant and to operate an electric railway hauling travertine from the mine.

On November 28, 2004, Mead Westvaco donated the Falling Spring Falls and approximately 19 surrounding acres to the Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation.

For more information contact Douthat State Park.

(Environment • Industry & Commerce • Natural Resources) Includes location, directions, 4 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

Birthplace of Gottlieb Daimler

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Germany, Baden-Württemberg, Rems-Murr-Kreis, Schorndorf

Marker text in German:
Erbaut frühstens 1695
Stadtrundgang Station 3

Marker in English:
Built as early as 1695
City tour stop 3

(Industry & Commerce • Roads & Vehicles) Includes location, directions, 3 photos, GPS coordinates, map.

Wartime legacies

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New Brunswick, Charlotte County, St. Andrews
English on left

St. Andrews’ citizens step up
In 1812, St. Andrews was a young town, founded not long before by Loyalists from New England fleeing the American Revolution. A modest fortification - Fort Tipperary - had been built in 1808 above the town. Citizens were concerned that the fort did not provide enough protection for the harbour and river from privateering raids. The town quickly built three batteries, which military engineers believed ineffective - and indeed possibly a threat to the town if captured by hostile forces - so blockhouses were built to defend each battery.

Maybe the cheque is in the mail
Military infrastructure was usually financed by the British government or military. However, as war with the United States loomed, government and military officials in St. Andrews were at odds about the need for the investment, so the necessary funds were raised privately by local merchants Robert Pagan and Christopher Scott. The understanding at the time was that the cost of construction would probably be reimbursed by the British military.

What about the local Aboriginal people?
While First Nations allies fought alongside British regulars and Canadian Militia to defend Upper and Lower Canada, the Passamaquoddy, Penobscots, Mi’kmaq and Wolastoqiyik (Malecite) Nations declared that they would take no part in the War of 1812, Undoubtedly, if New Brunswick had been threatened by an enemy invasion, they would have defended their lands, but no invasion was launched during the war. St. Andrews and the blockhouse are within the traditional territory of the Passamaquoddy people who were among the first Aboriginal people to come into contact with Europeans. They know St. Andrews as Qonasqamkuk, meaning “at the sandy or gravelly point”.

French on right

Une protection accrue
En 1812, St. Andrews était une jeune collectivité, fondée peu de temps auparavant par des Loyalistes de la Nouvelle-Angleterre qui avaient fui la guerre de l’Independence. Un modeste ouvrage de fortification, le fort Tipperary, avait été construit en 1808 en amont du village. Les citoyens craignaient que le fort ne soit pas assez puissant pour protéger le port la rivière contre les raids des corsaires. Le village s’empressa donc de construire trois batteries. Les ingénieurs militaires les jugeant inefficaces - voire dangereuses pour le village en cas de capture par l’ennemi -, il les renforça par des blockhaus.

Le chèque est dan la poste?
L’infrastructure militaire était généralement financée par le gouvernement ou l’armée britannique. Cependant, face à la menace d’une guerre avec les États-Unis, le gouvernement et les dirigeants militaires de St. Andrews n’arrivaient pas à s’entendre sur la nécessite de l’investissement. Les sommes nécessaires furent donc réunies par deux commerçants locaux, Robert Page et Christopher Scott. Il était entendu que les couts des construction leur seraient probablement remboursés à une date ultérieure par l’armée britannique.

Qu’en est-il des Autochtones de la région?
Alors que des allies des Premieres Nations se battirent aux côtés des soldats britanniques de la force réguliers et dest miliciens canadiens pour défendre le Haut et le Bas-Canada. Les nations Passamquoddy, Penobscot, Mi’kmaq et Wolastqiyik (Malecite) déclarèrent qu’ils ne perdraient aucune part à la guerre de 1812. Ils auraient sans doute défendu leurs terres si le Nouveau-Brunswick avait été menace par une invasion ennemie, mais aucune invasion ne fut lancée pendant la guerre. St. Andrew et le blockhaus se trouvent dans le territoire traditionnel des Parramaquoddys, l’im des premiers peuples autochtones à entrer en contact avec les Européens. Lest Possamaquoiddys connaissent St. Andrews sous le nom de Qonasqamkuk, ce que signifie “à la pointe de sable ou le gravier”.

(Forts, Castles • Native Americans • War of 1812) Includes location, directions, 2 photos, GPS coordinates, map.
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