Wallace and Area Museum
Wallace, Nova Scotia

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

 
Monument of Thomas Huestis. Born in New York State, 1759, died Wallace, 1853, at 93 years of age
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Monument for Andrew Forshner, Loyalist hero, settled in Wallace Bay on lot 97 of the Remsheg Grant
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Abigail Akerly, wife of Benjamin Betts monument found in farmer's field, Wallace River
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United Empire Loyalist refugee landing site at Fort Cumberland, on the Bay of Fundy, June 1783
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Members of a re-inactment group celebrating the arrival of the United Empire Loyalists
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Remsheg was originally populated by native Mi'kmaq and then French settlers came after 1689
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Costumed reenactors crossing a bridge at the Wallace and Area Museum 2007
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Loyalist claim submitted to government for loss during the American Revolution.
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Hand drawn map of Fanningboro, created by surveyor Charles Baker 1783
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Property in Blue shows the extent of the 20,000 acre property in the Remsheg Grant
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Part of Trail between Fort Cumberland and Remsheg photograph 2012
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Loyalist costumes were a big hit during plans for celebrating the Bicentennial in 1984
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Chart of Bay Of Fundy near Fort Cumberland
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Aerial photo of  former townsite called Fanningboro, now called North  Wallace
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Survey of Chignecto Basin at the northern end of the Bay of Fundy. Showing site Fort Cumband in 1755
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1766 document, part of a map of the Passaic River near Horseneck, New Jersey, several Loyalist names
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Loyalist soldier
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Part of the map of Fanningboro, surveyed by Charles Baker in 1784. Document shows statistics.
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