Wallace and Area Museum
Wallace, Nova Scotia

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The United Empire Loyalists of Remsheg; refugees from the American Revolution.
Images: Landscape

 
Wallace and Area Museum's Traveling Loyalist display at Cumberland County Museum, Amherst, NS
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Part of the Bicenntenial Celebrations a parade in Pugwash, July 1st, 1984
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Reinactor portraying a Delancy's Brigade medical officer traveling with the Loyalist refugees
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Soldiers and their families going through the forest from Fort Cumberland to Remsheg
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Wallace Harbour 2012 picture taken from Fanningboro.
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Unitd Empire Loyalist Memorial at the Fanningboro Townsite, in North Wallace
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The original northern roadway of Fanningboro running parallel with the Bay at Fox Harbour
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Green Street, one of the surveyed roads on the original Remsheg Grant
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East end road of Fanningboro, the townsite surveyed for the Remsheg Grant
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Heavy growth on site of John Brown,s tradigic first home. John and daughter struck by lightening.
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Herons on Oyster Island in Wallace Harbour
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Trees and forest to the shore, a valuable resource, when the first refugees arrived in 1783-1784
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Loyalist ( Dotten ) Cemetery, Fanningboro, North Wallace.
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Dotten Cemetery, from Highway and Loyalist Monument in Fanningboro.
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Searching through cemeteries for Loyalist ancestors.
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United Empire Loyalist refugee landing site at Fort Cumberland, on the Bay of Fundy, June 1783
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Remsheg was originally populated by native Mi'kmaq and then French settlers came after 1689
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Aerial photo of  former townsite called Fanningboro, now called North  Wallace
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