A random collection of stories of people who came to Louisbourg.

personal glimpses of Triumph and Tradgedy



Wednesday, May 12, 2010

JOSIAH WILLARD.

JOSIAH WILLARD.


This was not Captain Willard's first experience of Nova Scotia, nor was it to be his last. Ten years before he enlisted in the expedition against Louisburg, being first lieutenant of Captain Joshua Pierce's company, in the Fourth Massachusetts Regiment, of which his father, Samuel Willard, was colonel. He was there promoted to a captaincy, July 31, 1745, three days after his twenty-first birthday. Little more than twenty years had passed from the time when he had assisted in forcing the broken-hearted Acadien farmers into exile, and again he sailed for Nova Scotia, himself a fugitive, proscribed as a Tory, his ample estate confiscated, and his name a reproach among his life-long neighbors. As thousands of French Neutrals from Georgia to Massachusetts Bay sighed away their lives with grieving for their lost Acadie, so we know Abijah Willard, so long as he lived, looked westward with yearning heart toward that elm-shaded home so familiar to all Lancastrians. On the coast of the Bay of Fundy, not far west of St. John, is a locality yet called _Lancaster_. Colonel Abijah Willard gave it the name. It was his retreat in exile, and there he died in 1789 ...

["Henry S. Nourse, Lancaster in Acadie and the Acadiens in Lancaster," The Bay State Monthly, a Massachusetts Magazine, Vol. 1, April, 1884, No. IV]

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