5850 x 3900 px | 49,5 x 33 cm | 19,5 x 13 inches | 300dpi
Ubicazione:
maine usa
Altre informazioni:
Saint Croix Island is the 1604 site of the first French attempt to colonize the territory they called l'Acadie and the location of one of the earliest European settlements in North America. Members of a French expedition led by Pierre Dugua, intending to colonize North America, settled the island in 1604. Seventy-nine members of the expedition, including Samuel Champlain, passed the severe winter of 1604-1605 on the island. Thirty-five settlers died, apparently of scurvy, and were buried in a small cemetery on Saint Croix Island. In spring 1605 the survivors left the island and founded the settlement of Port Royal, Nova Scotia. To better understand the story of those who endured that winter on Saint Croix Island and the impact of their attempt at settlement, view this short movie (requires a browser with the Macromedia Shockwave plugin) and the timeline of Saint Croix Island's past 400 years. The Beginning of a Permanent European Presence in Northern North America The winter of 1604-1605 on Saint Croix Island was a cruel one for Pierre Dugua’s French expedition. Iced in by freezing temperatures and cut off from fresh water and game, 35 of 79 men died. As spring arrived and native people traded game for bread, the health of those remaining improved. Although the expedition moved on by summer, the European presence in northern North America had begun.