Chapter 6 - The Duel for North America
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Transcript Chapter 6 - The Duel for North America
The Duel for North
America
1689 - 1763
New France
Edict
of Nantes in 1598 ended religious wars in
France.
French found New France Quebec in 1608.
Jacques
Cartier
Samuel de Champlain
The
“Father of
New France”
French influence in the New
World
French traders
and explorers
made pacts
with the
Huron Indians
of the lower
Great Lakes.
French Canada
The Iroquois, enemies of
the Huron, became enemies
of the French.
French
fur
traders, the
Coureurs de Bois
and Voyageurs,
lived among and
intermarried
with the Native
Americans.
Jesuit
missionaries
sought, often
forcibly, to
convert the
Indians to
Catholicism.
French
Voyageur
Robert de la Salle
1682
- French explorer de la
Salle canoed down the
Mississippi searching for the
mouth of the river.
He failed to find the opening
through the delta and was
killed in Texas in 1687.
French Expansion
1701
- Louis XIV orders the
establishment of the colony of
Louisiana and settlements in
the interior.
Detroit founded on Lake
Huron by Antoine Cadillac
The First World Wars
1688
- 97 --- The War of the
League of Augsburg (King
William’s War)
1701 - 1713 --- The War of
the Spanish Succession (Queen
Anne’s War)
1713 - Treaty of Utrecht
ends Queen Anne's War
England
gains Acadia,
renamed Nova Scotia, New
Foundland and Hudson’s Bay
Period of “Salutary Neglect”
begins in America
1739 - War of Jenkin's Ear
war
fought between Spain and
England over trade rights.
1740 - 48 -- War of the
Austrian Succession.
(King
George’s War)
Spain and France fight
England
1740 - Oglethorpe’s raid on St.
Augustine fails.
1744 - Lancaster Treaty.
Treaty
signed with Indians in
Pennsylvania
1745 New
England
troops capture
Fort Louisbourg
on the St.
Lawrence River
1748
Ohio
Company of Virginia
founded.
Land sought in the Ohio
Valley.
1748 -- Treaty of Aix-laChapelle
ends
the War of the Austrian
Succession.
Ft. Louisbourg returned to
France - New England is
outraged.
1753
Susquehanna
Company
founded.
George Washington’s first
mission to the Ohio Valley.
Americans
continue
settling in disputed
Ohio territory.
French answer by
building a string of
forts.
1754
Virginians
sent to build fort at
site of modern Pittsburgh
(chosen by young surveyor
George Washington).
The
site is the confluence of
the Monongahela and
Allegheny that form the Ohio
River.
This
is seen as an act of war
by France, who already had
its own fort there -- Ft.
Duquesne.
Virginia militia under
Washington open fire on
French troops -- starting the
French and Indian War.
The French and Indian War
(1754 - 1763)
Washington is defeated in his
first battle - July 4, 1754 at
Fort Necessity.
Fort Necessity Today
Colonists
meet at
Albany Congress
to arrange a
common defense
-- Ben Franklin
publishes cartoon
“Join, or Die.”
Only
seven out of thirteen
colonies sent delegates to the
conference.
Join or Die
The
initial purpose was to keep
the Iroquois on the side of the
British.
Franklin’s “Albany Plan of
Union” is agreed to by the
delegates but rejected by the
colonial legislatures and the
English Parliament.
1755 -- Braddock Blunders
General
Braddock’s “redcoats”
and colonial “buckskins” are
routed again at Fort
Dusquesne.
Braddock is mortally wounded.
British force 4,000 French
Acadians to move to Louisiana.
British
Redcoats
1756
French
capture Fort
Oswego
Earl of Loudoun
assumes command of
British Colonial forces
British
forces fail in
attempts to invade
Canada.
Indian raids into
colonies and military
defeats followed until
1757.
French Regulars
1757
William
Pitt becomes British
Prime Minister - reorganizes
the army.
1757
- French take Fort
William Henry.
1758 - British capture
Forts Louisbourg,
Frontenac and
Dusquesne
1759
Iroquois
agree to
aid British
forces.
The Battle of Quebec
British
take Quebec in
1759 - General Wolfe dies
in the battle on the Plains
of Abraham.
French General Montcalm
is also killed.
The Death of General Wolfe
Montreal
falls in 1760.
Paris Peace Treaty (1763)
gives all French territory east
of the Mississippi to England - Spain takes Louisiana,
England gets Florida.
Friction between England
and the Colonies
American colonists felt they
had defeated the French and
Indians and looked down on
English regular army.
Western Expansion
Americans
wanted to settle
new lands acquired in the war.
Settlers begin pouring into
western New York and
Pennsylvania and along the
upper Ohio river.
Watersheds
and the
Importance
of the
Ohio River.
Pontiac’s War
Indians,
led by Ottawa chief
Pontiac, resisted white
settlements and attacked
British forts.
Proclamation Line of 1763
British
refused
to allow
settlement
across the
Appalachians by the
Proclamation
of 1763.
British
Parliament wanted the
settlers to help pay for the cost
of the war.
Americans meeting and
fighting together in the war
realized their similarities.