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Cape Negro, Nova Scotia
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Cape Negro, Nova Scotia : ウィキペディア英語版
Cape Negro, Nova Scotia


Cape Negro is a community in the Canadian province of Nova Scotia, located in the Barrington Municipal District of Shelburne County.〔(Government of Nova Scotia website: Community Counts )〕 Cape Sable, Nova Scotia By one account, Cape Negro were first settled by the French who migrated from Port Royal, Nova Scotia in 1720.〔M. A. MacDonald. Fortune and La Tour. Methuen Press. 1983.p.14〕 However other records indicate the habitation and garden of a French Priest at the Hawl Over (or Haulover) in Cape Negro as early as 1635, and the 1671 French census records the family of Amand and Elizabeth Lalloue living in Cape Negro 〔Joseph R. Ross. History of Cape Negro and Blanche. Passage Print and Litho Ltd, Barrington Passage, NS. 1987. p. 7-8〕
== History ==
Origin of the place name. In the records of Samuel de Champlain during 1604, the following was written (translated from the original French):
"There is a harbour very good for vessels, and the head of it has a little river, which runs from a distance inland, which I named the port Cape Negro, on account of a rock which at a distance resembles one, four leagues from it and four from Port Mouton. The cape is very dangerous on account of the rocks."〔Joseph R. Ross. History of Cape Negro and Blanche. Passage Print and Litho Ltd, Barrington Passage, NS. 1987. p. 4〕
The first mention of permanent European habitation was that of a French Priest in 1635. What remain of the 1671 French census indicates a family of seven (Amand Lalloue) living in Cape Negro, with a farm which included grain, peas and other vegetables as well as sizeable herds of goats and pigs. Several Mi'kmaq families with children lived in Cape Negro, at least during the summer.〔Joseph R. Ross. History of Cape Negro and Blanche. Passage Print and Litho Ltd, Barrington Passage, NS. 1987. p.6-8〕
Practically all of the Acadians were expelled by the English / New England military forces by 1758, and the New England Planters began to settle the formerly Acadian farmland by 1760-1761. The earliest New England Planters in Cape Negro were: Peleg Coffin, Sacco Barnes, Timothy Bryant, Samuel Knowles.〔Joseph R. Ross. History of Cape Negro and Blanche. Passage Print and Litho Ltd, Barrington Passage, NS. 1987. p. 9-11〕
Although there was at one time a Cape Negro school and community hall, all that remains today are the Cape Negro Church (current building built 1853) and adjacent cemeteries (Seaview Cemetery, 1770. Hillside Cemetery, 1958). The remnants of the canal built at the Hawl Over also remain.〔Joseph R. Ross. History of Cape Negro and Blanche. Passage Print and Litho Ltd, Barrington Passage, NS. 1987.〕 The Cape Negro Church has the distinction of having Freeborn Garrettson as one of its first ministers.

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