Nicolas Denys

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Nicolas Denys(1598? – 1688) was a French explorer, colonizer, soldier and leader.

Contents

[edit] Early years in France

Nicolas Denys was born in Tours, France, probably in 1598[1], the son of Jacques Denys, a captain of King Henri IV’s Royal Guard.

[edit] Early years in Acadia

When Cardinal Richelieu authorized a stronger French presence in the New World, he commissioned Isaac de Razilly to be lieutenant-general of Acadia and Nicolas Denys accompanied the expedition as one of de Razilly’s lieutenants[2]. The expedition set sail in 1632 with 300 hand-picked men, supplies, six Franciscan missionaries and Nicolas’ brother, Simon.

They founded a colony at the LaHave River where Denys worked in shore fishery, lumber and fur trading – a good foundation of experience to prepare him for life in the New World. French administrators, including nearby Port Royal’s lord, the Sieur Charles de Menou d'Aulnay, thought little of the colonists’ reclaiming tidal marshlands. Denys was very impressed with the “great extent of meadows which the sea used to cover and which the Sieur d’Aulnay has drained”[3]. It was this extensive system of dikes and drainage sluices (called aboiteaux) that set his colony apart from any others. It allowed the colonists to reclaim land that the Mi'kmaq nation had no use for. This greatly aided peaceful co-existence with their neighbors, and Mi’kmaq trade, friendship and intermarriage was and is an immensely important part of the Acadian identity and heritage[4]. When de Razilly died in December 1635 the colony broke up and Denys returned to France. In 1642 he married Marguerite de Lafitte[5] in France, but soon took his new family across to his adopted lands of Acadia.

Denys served as a witness to one of the most unfortunate chapters of early Acadia’s history: the rivalry between the Lords d’Aulnay and Charles de Saint-Étienne de la Tour, his bitter rival, and the dissipation of efforts to grow the colony. La Tour had also claimed royal permission to ply the fur trade in the American Northeast. His rival outposts were in often-open hostility with the budding d’Aulnay colony, competing for resources and markets. Decades of sparring led to bloodshed. In the Spring of 1643 La Tour led a party of English mercenaries against the Acadian colony at Port Royal. His 270 Puritan and Huguenot troops killed three Acadians, burned a mill, slaughtered cattle and seized 18,000 livres of furs. D’Aulnay was able to retaliate in 1645 by seizing all of La Tour’s possessions and outposts while La Tour was drumming up more support for his cause in the English port city of Boston. Denys’ letters and journals give vivid descriptions of the drama[6].

[edit] Governor

Once he secured rights to his own lands in Acadia through the Company of New France, Denys continued to seek his fortunes now as the Governor of Canso and Isle Royale (now called Cape Breton Island). Denys founded settlements at St. Pierre (now St. Peter's, Nova Scotia, Cape Breton, home of the Nicholas Denys Museum), Ste. Anne and Nipisiquit (the site of modern Bathurst, New Brunswick)[7].

His ‘fortunes’ had some reversals, however. Sieur Emmanuel le Borgne, a rival with holdings at Port Royal, seized his properties by armed force in 1654 while Denys was at Ste. Anne. Later in 1654, King Louis XIV officially recognized Denys’ claims to the property lost to le Borgne[8]. Le Borgne was thereby commanded by royal decree to restore them to the rightful owner[9].

The Denys Family made their home in St. Pierre, Isle Royale and dwelt there in relative calm until the Winter of 1669, when Nicolas’ home and business were consumed in a fire. Denys relocated his family to Nipisiquit (Bathurst, NB), just south of the Gaspé Peninsula. It was there that he turned his efforts to writing[10].

[edit] Legacy

Denys died in 1688 at Nipisiquit, a town of his own creation. During his tenure in the New World, he appears to have offered more stability of governance than those other royal appointees around him. Perhaps his greatest legacy is his writings about the lands and peoples of Acadia, especially Description géographique et historique des costes de l’Amérique septentrionale: avec l’histoire naturelle du païs[11].


[edit] References

  1. ^ See http://www.blupete.com/Hist/BiosNS/1600-00/Denys.htm among others, although http://www.porttoulouse.com/html/the_denys_story.html isn’t as confident of this date.
  2. ^ Faragher, John Mack. A Great and Noble Scheme (WW Norton, New York, 2005) p. 43
  3. ^ Denys, Nicolas. The Description and Natural History of the Coasts of North America, ed. and trans. William F. Ganong (Champlain Society, Toronto, 1908) pp. 123-124
  4. ^ Faragher, John Mack. A Great and Noble Scheme (WW Norton, New York, 2005) pp. 16-17 and throughout
  5. ^ http://www.blupete.com/Hist/BiosNS/1600-00/Denys.htm for the marriage and return voyage, but http://www.porttoulouse.com/html/the_denys_story.html is more authoritative about the number and names of children resultant from the marriage.
  6. ^ Denys, Nicolas. The Description and Natural History of the Coasts of North America, ed. and trans. William F. Ganong (Champlain Society, Toronto, 1908)
  7. ^ Historical Biographies, Nova Scotia: Nicholas Denys (1598-1688)
  8. ^ Denys, Nicolas. The Description and Natural History of the Coasts of North America, ed. and trans. William F. Ganong (Champlain Society, Toronto, 1908) pp. 98-99
  9. ^ See a translation of the letters patent given by King Louis IV to Sieur Denys in Denys, Nicolas. The Description and Natural History of the Coasts of North America, ed. and trans. William F. Ganong (Champlain Society, Toronto, 1908) p. 61
  10. ^ Nicholas Denys Museum
  11. ^ Certainly, historians are in incredible debt to the efforts of the 1908 translator, the Champlain Society’s Dr. William Ganong, of Denys’ compilation of 1672: The Description and Natural History of the Coasts of North America, and for the toil of the Google Books project to make this work accessible to us all through http://books.google.com/books?id=zwIOAAAAIAAJ
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