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Acadian Expulsion


Beginning in 1755, one of the most devastating forced migrations in North American history unfolded along the shores and farmlands of what is now Atlantic Canada. Known to the Acadians as Le Grand Dérangement, the Acadian Expulsion saw more than 6,000 Acadians violently removed from their homes by British authorities, not because of rebellion, but because of fear, suspicion, and imperial ambition.

For generations, the Acadians had lived in Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, and Cape Breton, cultivating fertile marshlands, building tight-knit communities, and maintaining a neutral stance amid the ongoing power struggle between Britain and France. They were farmers, fishermen, and families deeply connected to the land. Their refusal to swear an unconditional oath of allegiance to the British Crown, especially one that might force them to fight against France or their Indigenous allies, made them targets.

A Campaign of Removal and Destruction


In 1755, British military authorities ordered the mass deportation of the Acadian population. Soldiers arrived in villages with little warning. Homes and barns were burned to prevent return, churches were destroyed, and entire communities were erased from the landscape in a matter of weeks. Families were rounded up, often separated without explanation, and forced onto overcrowded ships bound for destinations they did not choose.

The deportations were chaotic and brutal. Husbands were separated from wives. Children were taken from parents. Many Acadians were given little time to gather belongings, losing land, livestock, tools, and family heirlooms accumulated over generations.

Scattered Across a Continent and Beyond


The British intended to disperse the Acadians so thoroughly that they could never reunite as a people. Thousands were scattered among the Thirteen American Colonies, though many colonies refused to accept them or treated them harshly upon arrival.

Of the more than 6,000 deported from mainland Nova Scotia in 1755:


Approximately 2,000 were sent to Massachusetts

1,500 to Virginia

1,027 to South Carolina (some never left Boston)

900 to Connecticut

450 to Pennsylvania

450 to Georgia

250 to Maryland

Conditions were often grim. Many Acadians were imprisoned or placed under forced labor. Disease spread rapidly aboard ships and in overcrowded camps. Hundreds died at sea. Others escaped, fleeing north to Quebec, hiding with the Mi’kmaq in Nova Scotia, or making their way to present-day New Brunswick or Prince Edward Island.

The suffering continued even after the initial expulsion. Following the fall of Louisbourg in 1758, several hundred more Acadians were deported, extending the tragedy across years and regions.

A Landscape Stripped of Memory


The destruction of Acadian communities left behind more than abandoned fields. Churches and chapels were either burned or slowly disappeared as buildings collapsed and materials were reused. Cemeteries, once sacred gathering places, faded into the land.

There is no evidence that Acadians commonly used stone grave markers before the Deportation. Like many rural European communities of the time, they marked graves with wooden crosses, which naturally decayed over time. As a result, few physical traces of Acadian burial grounds remain today.

Occasionally, history resurfaces by accident. At Grand-Pré National Historic Site, the Saint-Charles-des-Mines cemetery is known to exist, though its full dimensions remain uncertain. In 2000, excavation work for a housing development in Falmouth, formerly Pisiquid, unexpectedly uncovered graves from the old Sainte-Famille parish cemetery, a quiet reminder of lives once lived there.

A 1686 map of Port-Royal provides the only known visual depiction of a 17th-century Acadian church and cemetery. It shows a fenced burial ground, designed to keep animals out and define sacred space. Inside stand several small wooden crosses and one larger central cross set on a stone base. Sparse written records from the 18th century confirm this simple but meaningful tradition.

Survival, Dispersal, and Legacy


Despite the British attempt to erase them as a people, the Acadians endured. Their forced dispersal reshaped the demographic map of North America. Some eventually returned to the Maritimes. Others resettled permanently in places like Louisiana, where their descendants became known as Cajuns, preserving Acadian culture through language, music, food, and tradition.

The Acadian Expulsion was not merely a military maneuver. It was a human catastrophe that fractured families, erased communities, and left scars still visible in genealogical records today. Yet it also stands as a testament to resilience. Against overwhelming odds, Acadians survived displacement, loss, and exile, carrying their identity across borders and generations.

Their story is not just one of removal, but of persistence. The land remembers them, even when the stones do not.

There is no proof that the Acadians who lived in Port-Royal, Grand-Pré or elsewhere, used stone monuments to mark their graves. The same is true with regard to the thousands of French men and women who inhabited the fortress town of Louisbourg on Isle Royale (known today as Cape Breton Island) in the 18th century. A 1686 map of Port-Royal provides the only known visual representation of a 17th century Acadian church and cemetery. The cemetery is surrounded by a fence which served to keep animals out and to delineate the sacred ground. Inside the fence, one can see seven small wooden crosses and a central cross mounted on a base of stones. Very few 18th century documents refer to the appearance of Acadian cemeteries, but those that do indicate that Acadians before the Deportation marked their graves with wooden crosses.

Source: http://www.ameriquefrancaise.org/en/article-333/Acadian_Cemeteries_in_Nova_Scotia.html#1

Were Your Ancestors Among the Acadians? How to Trace Family History Through the Great Expulsion

These ancestors were likely a part of the Grand Derangement which took place in 1755. NOTE: This is not a complete list. As we find more, we will continue to add them.

Acadian Surnames at the Time of Deportation, 1755:


Allain, Allard, Amirau, Arostegny, Arsenault, Aubin, Aucoin, Babin, Babineau, Baguette, Baptiste, Barrios, Barnabe, Bastarache, Beaudoin, Beaulieu, Beaumont, Beauregard, Bellefontaine, Bellineau, Belliveau, Benoit, Bergeron, Bernard, Berthelot, Bertrand, Bideau, Bisson, Blanchard, Blondin, Blou, Bodart, Boisseau, Bodin, Bonneville, Bonvillain, Bourque, Bouche, Boudrot, Bourg, Bourgeois, Boutin, Boye, Brasseaux, Breau, Broussard, Brun, Bugeau, Cadet, Cahouet, Cailler, Carre, Cathary, Celestin, Chamagne, Chauvert, Chiasson, Clmenceau, Cochu, Colars, Comeau, Cormier, Caperon, Cotard, Coussan, Crosse, Daigle, Darbone, Darois, David, De Bellisle, De Foret, De La Tou, Denis, D’Entremont, Deraye, De Saulniers, Deslauriers, Deveau, Donat, Douaron, Doucet, Druce, Dubois, Dubreuil, Dugas, Duon, Dumont, Dupont, Dupuis, Durocher, Emmanuel, Estevin, Fardel, Forest, Foret, Galant, Garreau, Garso, Gaudet, Gauthereau, Gentil, Giasson, Gicheau, Gilbert, Girouard, Godin, Goudeau, Gousille, Granger, Gravois, Gros, Guerin, Guidry, Guilbeau, Guillot, Hache, Hamon, Hebert, Henry, Heon, Herpin, Houel, Hugon, Jasmin, Jeansonne, Kuessy, Labarre, Labasque, Labauve, Lacroix. Lafont, Lagosse, Lalonde, Laliberte, Lamarquis, Lambert, Lamontagne, Landry, Langlois, Lanoue, Languepee, Laperriere, Lapierre, Lariche, Laurier, Laurent, Lavallee, Lavergne, Lavoye, LeBlanc, Lebreton, Lefranc, Leger, Lejeune, Lemaistre, Leonard, Leprince, Lesperance, Lessoile, Levron, Lort, Lounais, Maillard, Maillet, Maisonnat, Marceau, Martel, Martin, Mathieu, Maurice, Mayer, Melanson, Mercier, Michel, Mignault, Mirande, Mire, Monnier, Morvant, Morin, Mouton, Moyse, Nuirat, Ondy, Olivier, Parisien, Pellerin, Perinne, Petitpas, Pinet, Pitre, Poirier, Poitier, Pothier. Prejean, Primeau, Prince, Provencal, Raymond, Rembaud, Richard, Rivet, Robichaud, Rosette, Roy, Saint-Scene, Saint-Martin, Samson, Saulnier, Sauvage, Savary, Savoye, Sendou, Simon, Sire, Surette, Surot, Theriot, Thibeau, Thibodeau, Tournageau, Toussain, Trahan, Usez, Veco, Vigneau, Villatte, Vincent, Voyer, Yvon
Source: umaine.edu
H
Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  female ancestor  Rosalie HEBERT (1753, , Acadia, Canada (Acadie) - 7 July 1815, Saint-Luc, Québec, Canada)
(Pierre HÉBERT dit PERROCHE & Madeleine GAUDET)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  male ancestor  Simon HEBERT (1709, , Acadia, Canada (Acadie) - 22 October 1764, , Haiti)
(Étienne HÉBERT & Anne DUGAS)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  male ancestor  Simon Pierre HÉBERT (1750, Grand Pré, Nova Scotia, Canada (Saint-Charles-des-Mines, Acadia) - 23 June 1807, La Prairie, Québec, Canada (St-Philippe) (St-Jean-François-Régis) (La Nativité))
(Pierre Simon HÉBERT & Elisabeth DUPUIS)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  male ancestor  Simon Pierre HÉBERT (1753, , Acadia, Canada (Acadie) - 16 April 1821, La Prairie, Québec, Canada (St-Philippe) (St-Jean-François-Régis) (La Nativité))
(Charles HÉBERT & Ursule FOREST)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  male ancestor  Simon-Pierre HEBERT (18 May 1717, Grand Pré, Nova Scotia, Canada (Saint-Charles-des-Mines, Acadia) - 28 February 1767, St-Servan, Ille-et-Vilaine, France)
(Guillaume HÉBERT & Marie Josephe DUPUIS)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  female ancestor  Theotiste HEBERT (1734, Annapolis Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada (Port Royal, Acadia) - 4 May 1795, Trois-Rivières, Québec, Canada (Three Rivers))
(Louis HEBERT & Anne Marie LABAUVE)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  female ancestor  Ursule HEBERT (1716, Grand Pré, Nova Scotia, Canada (Saint-Charles-des-Mines, Acadia) - , )
(Jacques HÉBERT & Marguerite LANDRY)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  male ancestor  Jacques HEBERT dit BOUDICHE (1704, , Acadia, Canada (Acadie) - 28 June 1779, St-Nicolas de La Rochelle, France)
(Jacques HÉBERT & Jeanne GAUTROT (GAUTREAU))

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  male ancestor  François HEBERT dit CANADIEN (17 May 1719, Amherst, Nova Scotia, Canada (Beaubassin, Acadia) (Fort Lawrence) - 21 April 1780, Châteauguay, Québec, Canada (Saint-Joachim-de-Chateauguay) )
(Joseph HÉBERT & Marie Anne BOUDROT (BOUDREAU))

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  male ancestor  Pierre HÉBERT dit LAPRADE (1679, Annapolis Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada (Port Royal, Acadia) - 27 November 1756, Annapolis Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada (Port Royal, Acadia))
(Jean Baptiste HÉBERT & Marie Anne DOUCET)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  male ancestor  Jean-Baptiste HEBERT dit MANUEL I (4/20/1711, Annapolis Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada (Port Royal, Acadia) - 3/24/1760, St. Martinville St. Martin, Louisiana, USA)
(Jean-Emmanuel HÉBERT & Madeleine DUGAS)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  female ancestor  Cécile HENRY (1700, Truro, Nova Scotia, Canada (Cobequid, Acadia) - 30 August 1761, St Suliac, Ille-et-Vilaine, Bretagne, France)
(Martin Jean HENRY & Marie HÉBERT)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  female ancestor  Elisabeth HENRY (1707, , Acadia, Canada (Acadie) - , )
(Martin Jean HENRY & Marie HÉBERT)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  male ancestor  François HENRY (1716, , Acadia, Canada (Acadie) - 1758, At Sea*)
(Martin Jean HENRY & Marie HÉBERT)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  male ancestor  Jean Dit Le Neveu HENRY (1704, Truro, Nova Scotia, Canada (Cobequid, Acadia) - 16 March 1759, St Suliac, Ille-et-Vilaine, Bretagne, France)
(Martin Jean HENRY & Marie HÉBERT)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  male ancestor  Louis HENRY (1721, Truro, Nova Scotia, Canada (Cobequid, Acadia) - 1785, , France)
(Jean HENRY & Marie HEBERT)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  female ancestor  Marguerite HENRY (1729, , Acadia, Canada (Acadie) - , )
(Germain HENRY & Cecile DEVEAU)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  female ancestor  Marie Josephe HENRY (1711, , Acadia, Canada (Acadie) - 12 March 1759, Saint-Servan, Bretagne, France)
(Martin Jean HENRY & Marie HÉBERT)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  female ancestor  Marie Josephe HENRY (1723, , Acadia, Canada (Acadie) - 12 March 1759, , France)
(Martin Jean HENRY & Marie HÉBERT)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  male ancestor  Martin HENRY (1717, , Acadia, Canada (Acadie) - December 1758, At Sea*)
(Martin Jean HENRY & Marie HÉBERT)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  male ancestor  Martin Jean HENRY (1679, Truro, Nova Scotia, Canada (Cobequid, Acadia) - 1759, , France)
(Robert HENRY & Marie Madeleine GODIN dite CHATILLON)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  male ancestor  Paul HENRY (1724, , Acadia, Canada (Acadie) - 16 April 1759, St. Suliac, Ille-et-Vilaine, France)
(Martin Jean HENRY & Marie HÉBERT)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  male ancestor  Pierre HENRY (1700, , Acadia, Canada (Acadie) - 25 February 1770, Chambly, Québec, Canada (Saint-Joseph-de-Chambly))
(Robert HENRY & Marie Madeleine GODIN dite CHATILLON)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  male ancestor  Pierre HENRY (1707, , Acadia, Canada (Acadie) - 18 February 1759, Saint-Malo, Bretagne, France)
(Martin Jean HENRY & Marie HÉBERT)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  female ancestor  Rose HENRY (1691, , Acadia, Canada (Acadie) - 23 October 1759, Cherbourg, France)
(Robert HENRY & Marie Madeleine GODIN dite CHATILLON)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  male ancestor  Simon HENRY (1729, , Acadia, Canada (Acadie) - , )
(Martin Jean HENRY & Marie HÉBERT)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  male ancestor  Charles HEON (1727, , Acadia, Canada (Acadie) - 16 June 1807, Bécancour, Nicolet, Québec, Canada (Nativité-de-Notre-Dame-de-Becancour) (Saint-Edouard-de-Gentilly))
(Charles HEON & Anne CLEMANCEAU dite CHEFDEVERNE)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  female ancestor  Marie Anne HEON (17 April 1734, Amherst, Nova Scotia, Canada (Beaubassin, Acadia) (Fort Lawrence) - 12 April 1804, Batiscan, Québec, Canada (Sainte-Geneviève-de-Batiscan) (Saint-François-Xavier))
(Charles HEON & Anne CLEMANCEAU dite CHEFDEVERNE)

J
Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  male ancestor  Jean Baptiste JOHNSON (11 January 1715, Annapolis Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada (Port Royal, Acadia) - 15 June 1785, Saint-Jacques, Québec, Canada (Saint-Jacques-de-Montcalm) (Saint Jacques de l’Achigan))
(William (Guillaume) JOHNSON dit JEANSON & Isabelle Élisabeth CORPORON)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  male ancestor  Guillaume JOHNSON (JANSON) (July 1722, , Acadia, Canada (Acadie) - 7 December 1806, Carleton-sur-Mer, Québec, Canada (Saint-Joseph-de-Carleton) (St-Omer))
(William (Guillaume) JOHNSON dit JEANSON & Isabelle Élisabeth CORPORON)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  male ancestor  Thomas JOHNSON (JANSON) (14 June 1719, Annapolis Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada (Port Royal, Acadia) - 20 May 1797, Saint-Jacques, Québec, Canada (Saint-Jacques-de-Montcalm) (Saint Jacques de l’Achigan))
(William (Guillaume) JOHNSON dit JEANSON & Isabelle Élisabeth CORPORON)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  male ancestor  François JOSSE dit ST-BRIEUX (1696, Bretagne, France (Brittany) - 9 September 1771, D'Escousse, Nova Scotia, Canada)
L
Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  female ancestor  Anne Marie LABAUVE (1698, , Acadia, Canada (Acadie) - 31 August 1758, Québec, Québec, Canada (Quebec City))
(Louis Noel LABAUVE & Marie RAIMBAULT)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  male ancestor  Louis LABAUVE (1715, - 13 December 1758, At Sea*)
Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  female ancestor  Madeleine LABAUVE (1727, , Acadia, Canada (Acadie) - 16 May 1825, Saint-Grégoire, Nicolet, Québec, Canada (Saint-Grégoire-le-Grand) (Bécancour)*)
(François LABAUVE & Madeleine BELOU)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  female ancestor  Marguerite LABAUVE (8 July 1730, Grand Pré, Nova Scotia, Canada (Saint-Charles-des-Mines, Acadia) - 8 February 1761, Saint-Pierre-de-la-Rivière-du-Sud, Québec, Canada)
(Louis LABAUVE & Anne LAVACHE)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  female ancestor  Jeanne LAFARGUE (1738, Petit-de-Grat, Nova Scotia, Canada - 6 August 1777, Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon, France)
(Joannis LAFARGUE & Marie Anne OISELET)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  female ancestor  Marie Philippe LAMBERT (1712, , Acadia, Canada (Acadie) - 17 August 1763, Montréal, Québec, Canada (Sault-au-Récollet) (Côte-St-Michel) (Côte-St-Paul))
(Philippe LAMBERT & Marie Madeleine BOUDROT)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  male ancestor  Abraham LANDRY (1712, , Acadia, Canada (Acadie) - 1786, , Louisiana, USA)
(Abraham LANDRY & Marie GUILBAULT (GUILBEAU))

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  male ancestor  Alexis LANDRY (25 August 1721, Grand Pré, Nova Scotia, Canada (Saint-Charles-des-Mines, Acadia) - 6 March 1798, Caraquet, Gloucester, New Brunswick, Canada)
(Jean LANDRY & Claire LEBLANC)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  male ancestor  Amand LANDRY (12 June 1728, Grand Pré, Nova Scotia, Canada (Saint-Charles-des-Mines, Acadia) - 11 February 1809, L'Acadie, Québec, Canada (Sainte-Marguerite-de-Blairfindie))
(Antoine LANDRY & Marie Blanche LEBLANC)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  female ancestor  Anastasie LANDRY (1743, Windsor, Nova Scotia, Canada (Pisiquit, Acadia) - 3 June 1801, La Prairie, Québec, Canada (St-Philippe) (St-Jean-François-Régis) (La Nativité))
(Germain LANDRY & Cecile FOREST)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  female ancestor  Anne LANDRY (1688, , Acadia, Canada (Acadie) - 4 September 1767, Saint-Sulpice, Québec, Canada)
(Antoine LANDRY & Marie THIBODEAU)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  female ancestor  Anne LANDRY (11 April 1718, Grand Pré, Nova Scotia, Canada (Saint-Charles-des-Mines, Acadia) - 15 July 1756, , England (United Kingdom))
(François LANDRY & Josephte DOUCET)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  female ancestor  Anne LANDRY (13 October 1739, Grand Pré, Nova Scotia, Canada (Saint-Charles-des-Mines, Acadia) - 31 March 1770, La Prairie, Québec, Canada (St-Philippe) (St-Jean-François-Régis) (La Nativité))
(Pierre LANDRY & Marie-Josephe LEBLANC)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  female ancestor  Anne Jeanne Marie LANDRY (17 April , Annapolis Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada (Port Royal, Acadia) - 14 March 1800, Maskinongé, Québec, Canada (Saint-Joseph))
(Pierre LANDRY & Cécile ROBICHAUD)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  male ancestor  Anselme LANDRY (6 December 1717, Grand Pré, Nova Scotia, Canada (Saint-Charles-des-Mines, Acadia) - 13 December 1758, At Sea*)
(Rene LANDRY & Madeleine MELANÇON (MELANSON))

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  male ancestor  Anselme LANDRY (11 March 1744, Amherst, Nova Scotia, Canada (Beaubassin, Acadia) (Fort Lawrence) - 16 December 1806, Caraquet, Gloucester, New Brunswick, Canada)
(Alexis LANDRY & Marie Anne THÉRIAULT dite BERNARD)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  male ancestor  Anselme Alexandre LANDRY (1743, , Acadia, Canada (Acadie) - 7 February 1804, Ascension Parish, Louisiana, USA)
(Alexandre Charles LANDRY & Anne FLAN)

Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement  male ancestor  Antoine LANDRY (4 December 1683 , Amherst, Nova Scotia, Canada (Beaubassin, Acadia) (Fort Lawrence) - , Boston, Massachusetts, USA (East, North, South) (Allston) (Readville) (Roslindale))
(Antoine LANDRY & Marie THIBODEAU)

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ACADIAN Ancestry Mug: Ask Me About My Deported Ancestors from 1755! - Ceramic Coffee Mug


Embrace your Acadian roots with this unique ceramic coffee mug! Featuring a bold caption, 'Ask me about my ancestors who were deported from Acadia in 1755,' this mug is perfect for sharing your rich family history. Whether you're enjoying your morning coffee or hosting a family reunion, this mug is sure to spark interesting conversations about your Acadian heritage and Acadian Deportation.