JEAN BAPTISTE COPE: THE ARCHITECT OF PEACE
In 1752, Jean Baptiste Cope of Shubenacadie signed a peace treaty with the imperial powers. The treaty remains the law of the land as it has been upheld by several recent cases of the Supreme Court of Canada. A granite monument to the treaty can be viewed near the Indian Brook Community Centre.
Vote for Jean Baptiste Cope: Click Here
Want To Know More About Jean Baptiste Cope
Read Cope's Treaty: Click Here
Read the Supreme Court of Canada decision that upheld Cope's Treaty: Click Here
Buy the "Hants County Loop Booklet" by the Scott Brothers: Click Here
Read the Supreme Court of Canada decision that upheld Cope's Treaty: Click Here
Buy the "Hants County Loop Booklet" by the Scott Brothers: Click Here
To Purchase The Book: "Raid on the Kennetcook River": Click Here
The exploits of Jean Baptise Cope and the Maritime militia are powerfully retold in the novel: "Raid on the Kennetcook River" by Sir Charles Roberts--Sir Charles was a professor of English at Kings College in Windsor, Hants Co, and was one of Canada's leading literary figures at the turn of the 20th century.
The exploits of Jean Baptise Cope and the Maritime militia are powerfully retold in the novel: "Raid on the Kennetcook River" by Sir Charles Roberts--Sir Charles was a professor of English at Kings College in Windsor, Hants Co, and was one of Canada's leading literary figures at the turn of the 20th century.