Gamaliel Smethurst
Gamaliel Smethurst (April 9, 1738 – July 20, 1826)[1] was a New England Planters who wrote one of the rare captivity narratives from Nova Scotia and eventually became a politician in Nova Scotia. He represented Cumberland County in the Legislative Assembly of Nova Scotia from 1765 to 1770.
He was born in Marblehead, Massachusetts, the son of Captain Joseph Smethurst[1] and Tabitha Skinner.[2] In 1761, Smethurst travelled to Chaleur Bay to trade with the French and natives under a license from the military governor of Quebec, James Murray. Smethurst was abandoned by the captain Roderic Mackenzie, who was apparently afraid of the natives of the region, and so was forced to make his way to Fort Cumberland. Smethurst returned to Marblehead by way of Halifax but, in 1763, received a land grant in Cumberland County. He served as customs comptroller and deputy surveyor of woods. Not long after his term in the Nova Scotia assembly, he moved to London, England.<ref name="narrative"/[3]>
In 1774, he published A narrative of an extraordinary escape: out of the hands of the Indians, in the Gulph of St. Lawrence describing his earlier voyage to Chaleur Bay.[4]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Chapman, Joseph Warren (1903). Vital records of Marblehead, Massachusetts, to the end of the year 1849. Volume I - Births. Salem: Essex Institute. p. 471.
- ↑ Chapman, Joseph Warren (1904). Vital records of Marblehead, Massachusetts, to the end of the year 1849. Volume II - Marriages and Deaths. Salem: Essex Institute. p. 392.
- ↑ w.—
- ↑ Smethurst, Gamaliel (1774). Ganong, William Francis, ed. 'A narrative of an extraordinary escape: out of the hands of the Indians, in the Gulph of St. Lawrence. New Brunswick Historical Society.