Nova Scotia Cultural Groups

Acadians
See the Wiki article Nova Scotia Acadians.

Black Canadians

 * African Nova Scotians in the Age of Slavery and Abolition Nova Scotia Archives
 * 1783 - Book of Negroes
 * 1783 - Nova Scotia, Canada, Book of Negroes, 1783, index ($).
 * 1815-1818 - "Halifax List: Return of American Refugee Negroes who have been received into the Province of Nova Scotia from the United States of America between 27 April 1815 and 24 October 1818"
 * The African in Canada ; The Maroons of Jamaica and Nova Scotia

British

 * Genealogy/biography card index to materials in the Public Archives of Nova Scotia collection, ca. 1650-1990
 * 1777-1785 - Loyalists in the Maritimes — Ward Chipman Muster Master's Office, 1777–1785
 * 1772-1784 - Carleton Papers – Loyalists and British Soldiers, 1772-1784, index.
 * 1776-1835 - UK, American Loyalist Claims, 1776-1835, index
 * 1783 - Carleton Papers – Book of Negroes, 1783, index.
 * UELAC Loyalist Directory
 * The Old United Empire Loyalists List, index
 * Biographical Sketches of Loyalists of the American Revolution Lorenzo Sabine, Kennikat Press, Port Washington, 1966. Included in PANB's Biography Database.
 * Miscellaneous histories and diaries of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick


 * Beginning with King William's War in 1688, Nova Scotia was a consistent theatre of conflict between the France and England.
 * During the French and Indian War of 1754–63, the British deported the Acadians and recruited New England Planters to resettle the colony.
 * The New England Planters were settlers from the New England colonies who responded to invitations by the lieutenant governor of Nova Scotia, Charles Lawrence, to settle lands left vacant by the Bay of Fundy Campaign (1755) of the Acadian Expulsion.
 * Eight thousand Planters (roughly 2000 families), largely farmers and fishermen, arrived from 1759 to 1768 to take up the offer. The farmers settled mainly on the rich farmland of the Annapolis Valley and in the southern counties of what is now New Brunswick but was then part of Nova Scotia. Most of the fishermen went to the South Shore of Nova Scotia, where they got the same amount of land as the farmers. Many fishermen wanted to move there, especially since they were already fishing off the Nova Scotia coast.
 * After the American Revolution (1775–1783), approximately 33,000 Loyalists settled in Nova Scotia (14,000 of them in what became New Brunswick) on lands granted by the Crown as some compensation for their losses.
 * The Loyalist exodus created new communities across Nova Scotia and infused Nova Scotia with additional capital and skills. However the migration also caused political tensions between Loyalist leaders and the leaders of the existing New England Planters settlement.

First Nations

 * Nova Scotia Mi'kmaq Census Records 1871, 1881, 1891
 * Mi'kmaq Holdings Resource Guide, Nova Scotia Archives
 * Archival Holdings
 * Library Holdings
 * Genealogical Research


 * Miꞌkmaq at Wikipedia
 * Connect with Indigenous Culture in Nova Scotia
 * Mi'Kmaq Communities of Nova Scotia
 * See Canada Native Races Wiki page for more information.


 * The province includes regions of the Mi'kmaq nation of Mi'kma'ki (mi'gama'gi). (The territory of the Nation of Mi'kma'ki also includes the Maritimes, parts of Maine, Newfoundland and the Gaspé Peninsula.) The Mi'kmaq people are among the large Algonquian-language family and inhabited Nova Scotia at the time the first European colonists arrived.
 * The French arrived in 1604, and Catholic Mi'kmaq and Acadians formed the majority of the population of the colony for the next 150 years.
 * As a result of Father Rale's War (1722–1725), the Mi'kmaq signed a series of treaties with Great Britain in 1725. The British signed a treaty (or "agreement") with the Mi'kmaq, but the authorities have often disputed its definition of the rights of the Mi'kmaq to hunt and fish on their lands. However, conflict between the Acadians, Mi'kmaq, French, and the British persisted in the following decades with King George's War (1744–1748).
 * The Loyalist influx pushed Nova Scotia's 2000 Mi'kmaq People to the margins as Loyalist land grants encroached on ill-defined native lands.