Upload
ann-dickerson
View
218
Download
1
Tags:
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
Chapter 6
The Duel for North America, 1608–1763
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
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)
p99
Map 6-2 p100
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
Map 6-3 p101
Table 6-1 p101
p102
Map 6-4 p102
Area under control after Queen Anne’s War
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
Table 6-2 p103
p103
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
Map 6-5 p104
Map 6-6 p105
p106
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.
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
p107
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
Map 6-7a p108
Map 6-7b p108
p109
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
Map 6-8 p110
p112