In prelude to the American Revolution, a historical event shaped the foundation of Louisiana history and the formation of a new culture. With the expansion of world super powers nations which included France, Britain and Spain in the 17th century lead to the discovery of new lands along the Atlantic coast of the North America. In 1604, a particular expedition from France to New World was embarked on by a few Frenchmen wear their numbers ranked low. Justice Chisholm explains, “When the brave DeMonts with his little flotilla entered the basin in 1604 to put into effect his great scheme to colonize Acadia, by which name Nova Scotia.” Chisholm continues his vivid illustration of the territory through the testimony of Judge …show more content…
Most Acadians were poor farmers who primary lived and agrarian lifestyle. They left France to carve out a new homeland and promote their beliefs. The location of the first Acadian community began in Bay of Fundy. The Bay of Fundy was a location that allowed the Acadian to promote their agrarian lifestyle peacefully. In addition, it allowed the peaceful transaction between the Acadians and the local Mikmaq Indian tribe. N. E. S. Griffiths demonstrates the importance of the Bay of Fundy as an agriculture establishment, “The creation of a people where none had been before began very early with the intermarriage of colonial migrants and native Míkmaq. Regarding each other as kin, the two communities would continue to live in peace. That accommodation was facilitated by the Acadian practice of diking the shores of the Bay of Fundy in creating new farm land rather than encroaching on the Míkmaq estate. The cooperative effort required to build and maintain the dikes, moreover, fostered the development of a strong sense of community.” With these peaceful transactions, it gives a profound testament to the overall peaceful nature of the Acadians. Furthermore, it gives testament to the Acadians seeking solidarity life and formed a strong attachment to the …show more content…
Sigur a historian of Louisiana History, explains “They were little affected by the French religious and secular institutions available in more densely settled area near new Orleans and thereby retained their own customs and practices, as well as their language already transformed by 150 years in colonial Acadia” Sigur shows a vivid religious connection between the Louisiana settlement and the Nova Scotia homeland. Although the religious and agricultural benefits were the same, the climate was not. In comparison to the West Indies, Louisiana was a humid, subtropical environment that inflicted a different atmosphere in that of Nova Scotia. The Acadians had to adapt to new crops, farming techniques, as well as new forms of illness. Malcolm Comeaux a geographer indicates “ There are four distinct environments in South Louisiana: the levee land along the Mississippi River, the prairie of southwest Louisiana, the swamps in Lafourche and Atchafalaya Basins and the marsh along the coast” As a result the Acadians in Louisiana adapted well to their odd