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Chapter 6 The Duel for North America, 1608–1763

Chapter 6 The Duel for North America, 1608–1763

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Page 1: Chapter 6 The Duel for North America, 1608–1763

Chapter 6

The Duel for North America, 1608–1763

Page 2: Chapter 6 The Duel for North America, 1608–1763
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I. France Finds a Foothold in Canada • France was late to claim New World real estate• The government of New France (Canada) – Eventually controlled by king (Louis XIV)• Autocratic, few personal freedoms

– Landowning peasants had little motive to move– French Huguenots were denied a refuge– French government favored the Caribbean Islands

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II. New France Fans Out• New France most valuable resource, the beaver– French recruited Indians into the fur business– French Catholic missionaries (Jesuits) involved

• French explorers focused on rivers– St. Lawrence, Ohio, Mississippi– Established fortified posts • New Orleans (1718)

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III. The Clash of Empires• French – British conflicts in North America– Britain wins SE Canada• King William’s War (1697), Queen Anne’s War (1713)

Britain was awarded French-populated Acadia, which the British renamed Nova Scotia also Newfoundland and Hudson Bay

– France still clung to its holdings- Ohio, Miss, Canada

• Spanish – British conflicts in North America– War of Jenkins’s Ear (1739), King George’s War (1748)– Spain controlled Florida, Mexico, American SW

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Area under control after Queen Anne’s War

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IV. George Washington Inaugurates War with France

• Ohio Valley combination of French & British– France erected a chain of forts on the Ohio River

• Washington was sent to the Ohio Country– George Washington defeated (1754)

• British brutally uprooted the French Acadians– Most moved to Louisiana

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V. Global War and Colonial Disunity

• Washington's skirmish led to Seven Years’ War– Between Great Britain & France

• The crisis caused Albany colonial meeting– United colonial military response • Benjamin Franklin’s Join or Die Flag

– But colonies didn’t unite

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VI. Braddock’s Blundering and Its Aftermath

• The opening clashes went badly for the British– Gen. Edward Braddock commanded British regulars– The British had defeat after defeat.

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VII. Pitt’s Palms of Victory• William Pitt, British superlative leader– Focused military on Canada– Captured Louisbourg– The Battle of Quebec (1759) • Plains of Abraham

– Conquest of Montreal (1760)– The Peace of Paris (1763)• The French lost Canada

• Great Britain dominant power in North America

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VIII. Restless Colonists• Britain’s colonists gained confidence – Won The French and Indiana War– Found other colonists with common ideals– The start of a coherent nation

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IX. War’s Fateful Aftermath

• Biggest threats – Indians & Spanish– Pontiac’s uprising / Rebellion / War– Defeated British at Detroit, Niagara, Pitts (1763) – Eventual British Victory• “smallpox blankets” (~400,000 died)

• Proclamation of 1763– Prohibited settlement beyond the Appalachian

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