The untold chapter of reluctant enemies caught up in a continental war
When the US declared war on Great Britain in 1812, the Canadian colonies
found themselves committed to armed conflict with their American
neighbours. While Upper and Lower Canada became the main battlegrounds,
Nova Scotia was reluctant to disrupt its lucrative trade with New
England and immediately established a truce so that commerce could
continue to flow freely.
In this book author John Boileau explores many aspects of the
involvement of Nova Scotia in the War of 1812. He recounts many of the
famous privateering and naval escapades up and down the coast, including
the most famous prize, USS Chesapeake, which was captured by the Royal
Navy and brought into Halifax Harbour. Halifax was also the site of the
military prison where, over the course of the war, 10,000 men endured
overcrowded and unhealthy living conditions. In May 2005 a ceremony will
take place in Halifax to memorialize the 200 American prisoners who died
in Melville Island prison.
During the war many escaped slaves found passage to Nova Scotia. This
book reveals that instead of peace and prosperity the refugees found
prejudice, hardship and smallpox.
This book sets out the history of a war whose spoils helped to establish
Dalhousie College (now Dalhousie University) and the Cambridge Military
Library (Halifax).