Wallace and Area Museum
Wallace, Nova Scotia

Gallery Thumbnail Gallery Stories Contact Us Search
 

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

 
Rich Remsheg soil with still visable remnants of a 17OOs Acadian Dyke to help improve drainage
1 of 19
Rich soil, worked by Acadians before 1755, provided great lands for farmers of the Remsheg Grant.
2 of 19
Head of the Bay of Fundy viewing South from Fort Cumberland.  Landing site of the Loyalist Refugees
3 of 19
Part of Loyalist Jacob Neal's grant property #75
4 of 19
Rich earth found in most of the Remsheg Grant. Visible due to shoreline erosion around Wallace Bay
5 of 19
There were trees growing to the shore when the United Empire Loyalists arrived in Remsheg.
6 of 19
Remsheg (Wallace Harbour) viewing west into the Bay.  Part of property granted Daniel Pugsley
7 of 19
The west end of  Wallace Bay, part of a 500 acre grant to Capt s, Moses Knapp and Samuel Kipp
8 of 19
Pathway through the forest
9 of 19
Wallace Harbour,formerly Remsheg Harbour, facing North East, entering the Northumberland Strait
10 of 19
Reinactor portraying a Delancy's Brigade medical officer traveling with the Loyalist refugees
11 of 19
Soldiers and their families going through the forest from Fort Cumberland to Remsheg
12 of 19
The original northern roadway of Fanningboro running parallel with the Bay at Fox Harbour
13 of 19
Heavy growth on site of John Brown,s tradigic first home. John and daughter struck by lightening.
14 of 19
Trees and forest to the shore, a valuable resource, when the first refugees arrived in 1783-1784
15 of 19
United Empire Loyalist refugee landing site at Fort Cumberland, on the Bay of Fundy, June 1783
16 of 19
Aerial photo of  former townsite called Fanningboro, now called North  Wallace
17 of 19
Ken Tattrie, land owner, with museum employee AmosGrant, marking the corner lot of the Remsheg grant
18 of 19

Page: 1 2

Important Notices  
© 2024 All Rights Reserved