Wallace and Area Museum
Wallace, Nova Scotia

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

 
Museum workers Jim Reeves and Amos Grant searching for the corner marker of the Remsheg Grant.
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Map research program
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Careful Measurements to find the spot where the White Birch stood for the corner of lot #1in 1784
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Jim Reeves with Corner stake for Remsheg grant survey.
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Museum Worker Jim Reeves drives corner post for the lot #1 in the 1785 Remsheg Grant.
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Ken Tattrie, land owner, with museum employee AmosGrant, marking the corner lot of the Remsheg grant
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A.F. Church map of Cumberland County 1869, showing Wallace Bay and Fanningboro
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Loyalists coming to Remsheg found small areas of rich marshland once cultivated by the Acadians
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View of the head of the Bay of Fundy looking south from Fort Cumberland near Amherst
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Document of claim for losses, suffered by Loyalist Charles Vincent witnessed by Col. Delancy
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Section of 1848 Navigation Chart done by Captain James Cook and others.
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A section of an 1848 Chart showing Wallace and Fanningboro, drawn and constructed by Cook and others
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Loyalist display, summer 2008, Wallace and Area Museum.
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Town Crier from Amherst greeting those attending the Loyalist reunion June 29, 2008.
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Signature of Lt. Governor James Parr on original Remsheg Grant Document, date July 1st 1785
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Charles Baker signature from Fanningboro survey document 1784
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Amos Grant and Jim Reeves ploting the lines of the 1783  Remsheg grant
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White post shows site for Remsheg Grant corner marker of the 20 thousand three hundred acre property
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