Source: Annapolis River Valley
Mouth: Bay of Fundy
General direction of flow: west
Main Characteristics: Acadian heritage, tourism and agriculture
The pink and white blossoms of the apple orchards in
the Annapolis Valley are renowned throughout North America.
The Annapolis Valley is also remembered as the site of
the first European colony in Canada. But it is famous
most of all as the original homeland of Canada's French-speaking
Acadians.
It is symbolized by the image of Evangeline, the fictional
young Acadienne woman who lost her lover in a mass deportation
by British military governors that broke the homes and
hearts of thousands of Acadian families.
The Annapolis valley was not carved by water as are
most river valleys. Instead, the river flows through
a wide trough that parallels Nova Scotia's northern shoreline
on the Bay of Fundy. 'The Valley,' as Nova Scotians call
it, is really home to two rivers flowing in opposite
directions. The Annapolis River flows westward through
the valley while the Cornwallis flows eastward.
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The earliest inhabitants of the valley were the Mi'kmaq
who lived throughout the present-day Maritimes, particularly
in what became Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island.
They are members of the Algonquian family of languages.
The entire Annapolis River basin was claimed for France
by Samuel de Champlain in 1605. Champlain was determined
to establish a farming colony. His French colonists expected
the climate to be similar to that of the south of France,
with its Mediterranean climate of hot, dry summers, and
warm, wet winters, since both were at roughly the same
latitude.
Champlain did not understand that any warming effects
of a low latitude would be overcome by the chilling effect
of the Labrador current and the frigid winds blowing
across the Bay of Fundy from the continent of North America.
None of the early European colonizers really understood
North America at first, and all relied on the aboriginals
for survival. Yet, Champlain's French settlers persisted
in the colder climate and established at Port-Royal,
the first agricultural settlement established by Europeans
in present-day Canada. The settlers at Port Royal built
the first water-powered gristmill in North America. They
imported the European technique of making dikes to create
farmland from the marshy mudflats along the river. Their
system of dikes has been maintained and expanded ever
since.
Three times in the 17th century, the French settlement
of Port-Royal was captured by the English. Each time,
however, a peace treaty returned it to French control.
Champlain's settlers and those who followed were the
ancestors of today's Acadian people.
The fourth and last capture of Port-Royal saw the settlement
pass permanently to British hands. It was renamed 'Annapolis
Royal' in 1710 for Britain's Queen Anne.
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The deportation of the Acadians in 1775 is still regarded
by many people as a great wrong. The Acadians did refuse
to swear allegiance to the British Crown, but they promised
to stay neutral in any future war with France. This was
not enough assurance for the British military governors
who dispersed the Acadians to their colonies in the present-day
United States.
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's epic poem, Evangeline, transformed
the story of the Acadian deportation into a legend. It
has helped to make tourism in the Annapolis Valley and
in the valley of the adjacent Cornwallis River a key
segment of the economy in northwestern Nova Scotia.
The arrival of New England settlers after 1755, followed
by British Loyalists after the American War of Independence
in 1783, again changed the cultural character of the
valley. The Napoleonic War brought a boom in shipbuilding,
prosperity and more immigration.
Champlain's original vision has been fulfilled. The
Annapolis Valley is a serene region of prosperous farms,
towns and villages. The only invaders today are tourists
who come to photograph apple blossoms, watch whales in
the Bay of Fundy, and drive the length of the Evangeline
Trail.
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