155:
wherein Steele alleged that Cooke had called him names and threatened him with a stick. Cooke did not show up to the first court date, claiming he was sick; the physician, however, personally notified the court that Cooke was okay to attend the second date. There, he claimed Steele owed him money, then resorted to name-calling when Steele produced a receipt. Unimpressed with his conduct, the court sent Cooke to jail. He spent his one night there writing an apology letter; when released the next morning, he promised to apologize to Steele the following Monday.
134:, which he duly did. Cooke then commanded him onto another ship and he refused; he left shortly after, as "he could serve Cook no longer." The nascent government ordered Cooke to return Hendly's belongings from the ship, pay his wages "from the day of shipping to the day of his dismissal", and cover the fixed court costs.
164:
damages by Grace and prosecuted by the court for impersonating a justice. During his hearing, he verbally abused the officials and was thrown in jail. After deliberation about how to punish Cooke for being in contempt of court, they decided on a more lenient sentence and charged him a Β£20 fee with a Β£500
163:
class and had friends in the upper echelons of society. Eventually, though, his desire to do as he pleased and his disrespect for the court caught up with him when he issued a warrant for fisherman John Grace, who had not yet gone to trial and thus was not required to be in prison. Cooke was sued for
145:
from Cooke, who agreed to court proceedings until it was clear that things were not going to settle in his favor. When one of Davis' men brought Cooke the court order outlining the cost, he made it clear he had no intention of paying. When confronted by
Cornwallis, he claimed that the unnamed owner
154:
Despite this, Cornwallis appointed him to the
Commission of the Common Pleas and Inferior Courts, where he served as a Justice of Peace. There, he had a history of verbally abusing, threatening, and disrespecting other justices, culminating in a disagreement with Justice William Steele in 1752,
150:
would only pay if he or the ship were seized. Infuriated by Cooke's insubordination and disrespect, Cornwallis issued a warrant preventing him from leaving the harbor until he paid the damages and wrote a note of apology. Cooke scrambled to obey so his warrant would not impact his crew from
158:
Cooke was left off the commission list following the conflict with Steele, but he maintained that his first appointment was still valid, effectively dismissing the legality of the court's authority. Though he was not himself particularly wealthy, he was still part of the
180:
from London arrived the following year and, along with local creditors, "sued Cook into oblivion." It is unclear whether he returned to
England for a short period or whether he went straight to form a settlement at the mouth of the Mushamush River in what is now
228:. Cooke brought in Swiss, French, and English settlers to occupy the land and started a ship building company. This trade fully occupied the town, so much so that by the 1900s, Mahone Bay residents were supported almost entirely by the industry.
151:
conducting his business as a merchant. A nearly identical situation happened in
February 1750, again with Cooke on the losing end. Halifax's justice system was in part shaped out of necessity for handling Cooke's behavior.
192:
In
Halifax, Cooke had poured thousands of pounds into developing his lot and his life in Mushamush was no different. After the block house, he built a saw mill and two vessels, which he used to bring in cattle from
141:, entangling the two vessels. When neither crew could get the ships unstuck, a more senior officer on Cooke's ship separated them with an ax. The owner of the other ship, Mr. Davis, approached the court to request
118:. Cooke decided to settle in town the same year and was immediately implicated in Halifax's first-ever civil case, just four months after the town itself was established. Michael Hendly, a former
137:
Like other early settlers, Cooke was critical of the men tasked with heading the justice system. Not long after the case with
Hendley, another ship in the harbor drifted and hit the
225:
224:, who were already living on the land. Further, Cooke was able to choose the commander of the troop and requested his old shipmate and acquaintance Captain
752:
83:, Nova Scotia. Originally from England, Cooke's life in Nova Scotia was marked with charges of fraud, embezzlement, abusive language, impersonating a
176:
In 1753, Cooke reportedly sold off a large swath of his waterfront property and left whatever remained to his clerk, Stephen Janson. A
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17:
774:
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716:
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639:(Report). Canadian Historic Sites: Occasional Papers on Archaeology and History No. 9. Parks Canada
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248:
182:
80:
76:
733:
651:
213:
115:
102:
87:, and insubordination, which had a major impact in shaping Halifax's early justice system.
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106:, under Cooke's command, was one of the first ships carrying European settlers to land in
8:
636:
798:
765:
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205:
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was given orders to provide Cooke with whatever he needed; as such, he was given a
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English mariner, merchant, and shipbuilder who was in early settler in Nova Scotia
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107:
724:
71:
was a mariner, merchant, and shipbuilder who was instrumental in establishing
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31:
247:, he built another block house, this time in the present-day community of
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186:
165:
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221:
131:
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51:
753:"The Fight for Bourgeois Law in Halifax, Nova Scotia, 1749-1753"
637:
Halifax
Waterfront Buildings: An [sic] Historical Report
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628:"Yarmouth, Nova Scotia: A Sequel to Campbell's History"
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674:. Vol. 4. University of Toronto/UniversitΓ© Laval
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307:
732:
McInnis, Peter S.; Macdonald, Heather (2012-09-24).
715:
586:
482:
400:
343:
126:. He claimed that, after working on the voyage from
415:
376:
333:
331:
717:"Heritage Boat Yard Co-op, Mahone Bay Nova Scotia"
539:
527:
130:, Cooke required him to serve on a ship bound for
799:"History of the Court of Chancery in Nova Scotia"
515:
439:
295:
807:
731:
598:
328:
260:
220:and soldiers to protect him from the Indigenous
650:
610:
122:crew member, was successful in suing Cooke for
630:. Rand Avery Company – via Google Books.
797:Townshend, Charles James (January 28, 1900).
775:"The Admiralty Court in Colonial Nova Scotia"
695:Hamilton, William Baillie (January 1, 1996).
686:DesBrisay, Mather Byles (January 28, 1895).
185:, but he had settled and started building a
626:Brown, George Stayley (January 28, 1888).
796:
768:. J. Barnes – via Internet Archive.
685:
509:
433:
394:
370:
349:
801:. Carswell – via Internet Archive.
694:
289:
763:
574:
562:
476:
322:
251:, to protect the Mushamush population.
14:
808:
634:
533:
114:' expedition to establish the town of
772:
766:"A History of Nova Scotia, Or Acadie"
764:Murdoch, Beamish (January 28, 1866).
690:. W. Briggs – via Google Books.
665:
625:
497:
409:
382:
266:
750:
688:"History of the County of Lunenburg"
545:
521:
464:
445:
421:
337:
301:
24:
239:out of Nova Scotia as part of the
25:
847:
826:People from Halifax, Nova Scotia
672:Dictionary of Canadian Biography
773:Stone, Arthur J. (1994-10-01).
701:. University of Toronto Press.
698:Place Names of Atlantic Canada
79:(present-day Mahone Bay), and
13:
1:
619:
168:for a year of good behavior.
635:Buggey, Susan (2006-10-24).
599:McInnis & Macdonald 2012
171:
90:
7:
10:
852:
95:
29:
738:The Canadian Encyclopedia
711:– via Google Books.
666:Chard, Donald F. (1979).
197:. The first ship was the
58:
46:
39:
587:Heritage Boat Yard Co-op
254:
652:"Stars Over Mahone Bay"
577:, pp. 14, 230β231.
30:For the physician, see
816:History of Nova Scotia
235:was chartered to move
231:In 1755, Cooke's ship
18:Ephraim Cook (mariner)
836:Canadian shipbuilders
779:Dalhousie Law Journal
654:. Cape Breton Gallery
831:English shipbuilders
62:Mariner, shipbuilder
611:Cape Breton Gallery
565:, pp. 230β231.
206:Patrick Sutherland
751:Muir, J. (2016).
467:, pp. 12β13.
245:Raid on Lunenburg
241:Great Deportation
112:Edward Cornwallis
66:
65:
16:(Redirected from
843:
802:
793:
791:
790:
769:
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755:. Archived from
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745:
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723:. Archived from
721:heritageco-op.ca
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668:"MAUGER, JOSHUA"
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243:. Following the
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821:Acadian history
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759:on 2018-10-04.
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727:on 2018-05-21.
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510:Townshend 1900
502:
500:, p. 227.
481:
479:, p. 209.
469:
450:
438:
434:Townshend 1900
426:
414:
412:, p. 374.
399:
395:Townshend 1900
387:
385:, p. 226.
375:
373:, p. 144.
371:DesBrisay 1895
354:
350:Townshend 1900
342:
327:
325:, p. 218.
306:
294:
292:, p. 296.
271:
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256:
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173:
170:
108:Halifax Harbor
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100:In 1749, the
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69:Ephraim Cooke
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59:Occupation(s)
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53:
49:
45:
41:Ephraim Cooke
38:
33:
19:
787:. Retrieved
782:
778:
757:the original
741:. Retrieved
737:
734:"Mahone Bay"
725:the original
720:
697:
676:. Retrieved
671:
656:. Retrieved
641:. Retrieved
606:
594:
582:
575:Murdoch 1866
570:
563:Murdoch 1866
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529:
524:, p. 6.
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505:
477:Murdoch 1866
472:
448:, p. 7.
441:
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345:
340:, p. 3.
323:Murdoch 1866
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226:Thomas Lewis
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68:
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32:Ephraim Cook
534:Buggey 2006
210:Fort Edward
187:block house
166:surety bond
161:bourgeoisie
110:as part of
810:Categories
789:2023-11-29
743:2023-11-29
678:2023-11-29
658:2023-11-29
643:2023-11-29
620:References
498:Brown 1888
410:Stone 1994
383:Brown 1888
267:Chard 1979
249:Blockhouse
212:in nearby
183:Mahone Bay
132:Louisbourg
81:Blockhouse
546:Muir 2016
522:Muir 2016
465:Muir 2016
446:Muir 2016
422:Muir 2016
338:Muir 2016
302:Muir 2016
214:Lunenburg
189:in 1754.
172:Mushamush
148:Baltimore
139:Baltimore
120:Baltimore
103:Baltimore
91:Biography
77:Mushamush
785:(2): 374
237:Acadians
178:creditor
222:Mi'kmaq
146:of the
143:damages
116:Halifax
96:Halifax
85:justice
73:Halifax
52:England
705:
233:Edward
202:Edward
128:London
255:Notes
218:sloop
124:libel
703:ISBN
199:snow
47:Born
208:at
812::
783:17
781:.
777:.
736:.
719:.
670:.
553:^
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204:.
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20:)
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