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Guysborough Township, Queens County, Nova Scotia
Guysborough Township
Port Mouton, Queens County, Nova Scotia
See what we discovered during our 2001 to 2003 survey: Guysborough Archaeology
In 1783 and 1784, a township was laid out along the
north shore of Port Mouton Bay by British officials. It was
immediately after the end of the Revolutionary War, and
20,000 people would come from the former colonies to Nova
Scotia. Over half of those would find themselves at the new
town of Shel burne, located approximately 50 kilometers south
along the coast from Port Mouton. The new Guysborough
Township was therefore created in order to accommodate
some of the Loyalist refugees from the American Colonies.
Right: The south wall of a cellar can be seen in the woods in
the old Guysborough Town Plot.
The Guysborough Township was situated immediately west of the Liverpool Township that had been
established 14 years earlier and settled by Planters from New England. The Guysborough Township was 5.8
kilometres in width and ran seventeen kilometres back from the shore of Port Mouton Bay. A town plot was
laid out along the western shore of Jones Cove, consisting of 12 blocks separated by roadways, with common
land located uphill, behind the plot. Fish lots were laid out between the town plot and the cove, and sea lots
were laid out on adjacent shores. In addition, 100-acre wood lots were drawn in the inland areas around the
great river of Port Mouton, now called Broad River.
Thomas Raddall's 1947 paper, published by the Nova Scotia Historical Society, is the best source of archival
research on the Guysborough Township. Raddall tells us that the first of the Loyalists to arrive in Port Mouton
were 125 men of the British Legion, along with 175 women and children. Simeon Perkins, in his journal, puts
the date on which the "English Legion" landed at "Port Mutton" as October 10, 1783.

Tarleton's Legion
The British Legion, commonly known as 'Tarleton's Legion', were arguably the most
despised British troops in the Revolutionary War. Their leader, Lt. Col. Banastre
Tarleton, was dubbed "Bloody Ban" by the Americans in the southern colonies. While
the name of the Legion is still known in Queens County, the reputation and
phenomenal history of this group is largely forgotten. Ironically, it is the descendants
of the people who despised the Legion that are keeping their memory alive. The Mel
Gibson movie "The Patriot" features a British commander based on Tarleton, and a
legion of dragoons (cavalry) that are based on Tarleton's Legion. Read more about
the Legion, their exploits and their leader on our Tarleton's Legion page.
On October 17, 1783 - just a week after the Legion landed at Port Mouton - HMS Sophie came into the harbour
with 70 African American Loyalists. The crew of the Sophie told the Legion people that another 700 people
would be coming from the British Commissary-General's base in New York (where Loyalists had gathered for
evacuation). Radall believed that over 2000 additional people - the entire New York Base staff - arrived in
Port Mouton through the rest of October and November.
Through that winter, as many as 2500 people struggled to survive on the
rocky shore of Port Mouton Bay. Many ships had brought supplies and
dissembled dwellings, and other dwellings were constructed from local
sources. In Liverpool, Simeon Perkins waited until January, when he
received a written contract with the British government, to send any
lumber to Port Mouton as he had been requested to do. Many people died
of exposure and disease that winter, and are presumably buried in the
small cemetery that can be seen there today.
Left: Remains of a stone wall in the woods. The wall may date to 1783.
In May of the following year (only six months after their arrival) many
people left Port Mouton in search of greener pastures (Port Mouton, like
most of the Atlantic coast of Nova Scotia, is very rocky). Apparently, most
of these people were the New York base personnel, who went on to found
the towns of St. Stephen, New Brunswick and Guysborough, Nova Scotia.
At this point, the history is a little hazy. Around the same time as these people were laving in the spring of
1784, a fire apparently swept through the Guysborough Township, destroying almost all of the dwellings and
contents. Local tradition has it that two dwellings survived the fire, although these are likely houses that
were constructed soon after the fire. In any case, the sight of the rocky sub-soil and barren landscape likely
convinced many to leave the area entirely, while others relocated to nearby shores.
We know that a significant number of the Tarleton's
Legion people stayed, because the names and
stories live on today. Oral tradition tells us that the
town plot may have consisted of up to 300
buildings prior to the fire, and that 800 people
wintered in the settlement.
Right: The 'Haystack Road' may have been built by
Loyalists in 1783.
The Mersey Heritage Society threw some light on
this interesting history in the survey of the visible
archaeological remains that it carried out between
2001 and 2003. See "Guysborough Archaeology" for
more information. The final installment of this
work will be carried out in 2004: the creation of a digital map of the features using GPS technology. This map
will help to make sense of the configuration and layout of the features, and provide information about the
general layout of the town plot.
Contact us at merseyhersoc@netscape.net if you would like more information.
Back to Archaeology
© 2004 Mersey Heritage Society
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