Preview

The Duel For North America, 1608-1763

Powerful Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1824 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The Duel For North America, 1608-1763
Chapter 06 - The Duel for North America, 1608-1763

I. France Finds a Foothold in Canada

Like England and Holland, France was a latecomer in the race for colonies.
It was convulsed in the 1500s by foreign wars and domestic strife.
In 1598, the Edict of Nantes was issued, allowing limited toleration to the French Huguenots.
When King Louis XIV became king, he took an interest in overseas colonies.
In 1608, France established Quebec, overlooking the St. Lawrence River.
Samuel de Champlain, an intrepid soldier and explorer, became known as the “Father of New France.”
He entered into friendly relations with the neighboring Huron Indians and helped them defeat the Iroquois.
The Iroquois, however, did hamper French efforts into the Ohio
…show more content…

New France Fans Out

New France’s (Canada) one valuable resource was the beaver.
Beaver hunters were known as the coureurs de bois (runners of the woods) and littered the land with place names, including Baton Rouge (red stick), Terre Haute (high land), Des Moines (some monks) and Grand Teton (big breasts).
The French voyageurs also recruited Indians to hunt for beaver as well, but Indians were decimated by the white man’s diseases, and the beaver population was heavily extinguished.
French Catholic missionaries zealously tried to convert Indians.
To thwart English settlers from pushing into the Ohio Valley, Antoine Cadillac founded Detroit (“city of straits”) in 1701.
Louisiana was founded, in 1682, by Robert de LaSalle, to halt Spanish expansion into the area near the Gulf of Mexico.
Three years later, he tried to fulfill his dreams by returning, but instead landed in Spanish Texas and was murdered by his mutinous men in 1687.
The fertile Illinois country, where the French established forts and trading posts at Kaskaskia, Cahokia, and Vincennes, became the garden of France’s North American empire.

III. The Clash of Empires

King William’s War and Queen Anne’s
…show more content…

VII. Pitt’s Palms of Victory

In this hour of British trouble, William Pitt, the “Great Commoner,” took the lead.
In 1757, he became a foremost leader in the London government and later earned the title of “Organizer of Victory”
Changes Pitt made…
He soft-pedaled assaults on the French West Indies, assaults which sapped British strength, and concentrated on Quebec-Montreal (since they controlled the supply routes to New France).
He replaced old, cautious officers with younger, daring officers
In 1758, Louisbourg fell. This root of a fort began to wither the New France vine since supplies dwindled.
32 year-old James Wolfe, dashing and attentive to detail, commanded an army that boldly scaled the cliff walls of a part protecting Quebec, met French troops near the Plains of Abraham, and in a battle in which he and French commander Marquis de Montcalm both died, the French were defeated and the city of Quebec surrendered.
The 1759 Battle of Quebec ranks as one of the most significant engagements in British and American history, and when Montreal fell in 1760, that was the last time French flags would fly on American soil.

In the Peace Treaty at Paris in


You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Powerful Essays

    1. Problem of debt- during this time the French monarchy was deeply in debt after the seven years war. Because France lost a majority of their colonies with the addition of a fragile economic system because of their lack of faith in banks it fell to the Royal government to tap into their own finances to solve the problem…

    • 3816 Words
    • 16 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The era of late 1700’s was a period of great change in North America. After the French and Indian war ended in 1963, Great Britain’s control of North America’s east coast caused more interaction between the American colonies and Canada, which was a French colony prior to the war. In 1774, the Continental Congress wrote to the inhabitants of Quebec in an appeal which was entitled, “Appeal to the Inhabitants of Quebec.” In this appeal, the American colonists expressed their great joy that Quebec was now a part of the English colonies, and the main thesis of this appeal was that the inhabitants of Quebec had earned the right to have the same rights as the colonies under a just form of government, and that the best way for them to achieve that was by joining the American colonies. These ideas that the colonists had were very persuasive, and they provided a…

    • 616 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Samuel de Champlain, who has died aged 61, was a French navigator and soldier. He is important to Canadian history because he helped establish the settlements. He founded New France and Quebec City as well.…

    • 483 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    New France Failure

    • 2580 Words
    • 11 Pages

    During the 1400s the continent of North America was discovered by numerous different explorers, such as Giovanni Caboto, Columbus, and Jacques Cartier. This set off a great race for the ownership of this new continent, and France and England would fight over the country known as Canada. New France was first established by Jacques Cartier in 1534. While Montcalm deserves much of the blame for the loss of Quebec in 1759, New France, in fact, was destined to fall because of the policies and approaches that had been taken since the earliest foundations of the colony. The mercantilist standpoint of Jean-Baptist Colbert was also a large benefactor to the downfall of New France. This policy crippled New France and constricted its growth economically,…

    • 2580 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Jean Talon played a big role in the establishment of New France. He came up with the idea of ‘le Filles du roi’, and populated New France. Jean Talon also strengthened and extended the seigneurial system throughout New France.…

    • 504 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    It took place on this date because the end of the year enlistment for most of the soldiers would be expiring. The trips to the city started on September. The Patriots, however, did manage to seize control of Montreal on November 13. The battle was fought near the city of Quebec.…

    • 504 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    King Philip 's War, it was one of the first and bloodiest conflicts between the colonist of New England and the Native Americans, primarily the Wampanoag Indian tribe. There were massive casualties on each side, all of which were caused by fighting and disease. King Philip 's War, had began out of almost forty years of tension between local native tribes of Massachusetts and puritan colonists of Massachusetts. Each side felt as if they had no choice but to remove the other or certain annihilation of their people would inevitably happen. Political leaders on both the Indian and Colonist side reinforce this stance of “It 's them, or us”. This massive fear, and group mentality, lead to unanimous call to action with little or no actual evidence, mainly speculation, assumptions, and…

    • 1020 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    This territory was extremely important to the United States as it held transport access via the Mississippi River and a shipping port in New Orleans. "Spain had granted United States the right to ship goods originating in American ports through the mouth of the Mississippi without paying duty and also the right of deposit, or temporary storage, of American goods at New Orleans for transshipment" (Encyclopedia Britannica, 2007).…

    • 1063 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Indians were stuck with decimation and weakening of empires before the Europeans arrived, and it only got worse once they did. The Spanish Conquistadors, English Colonists, French and Dutch traders and explorers, all greatly affected the political and economic systems of the Indians both positively and negatively. The Columbian Exchange brought tools and guns in addition to many more helpful things that greatly benefited Indian society, but also brought disease and slavery in as well which had never been seen before like this which greatly altered the political and economic systems of the…

    • 580 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Louisiana was named after Louis XIV, King of France from 1643–1715. René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle claimed the territory…

    • 1562 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Fort Duquesne

    • 382 Words
    • 2 Pages

    We Started to win more and more battles as we headed towards the city of Quebec General James Wolfe decided our next move in the war was to attack Quebec .Wolfe sent myself and 7 others on a mission to find a way into Quebec . We searched for a quite sometimes before we came along a path that lead to the cliffs Quebec was located on. We hurried back to the general and told him of our findings. He commanded me to lead the army to this path. On the right of September 12-13 1759 I led the troops up the path. When the French woke up we had positioned ourselves on the Plains of Abraham outside the city.…

    • 382 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    African American

    • 1230 Words
    • 5 Pages

    F) Spain received New Orleans and the huge French province of Louisiana in central North America.…

    • 1230 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Johns built a settlement, and claimed that this was the first British colonies in North America, though the colony’s culture and behaviors still follow the French ways, because it’s hard to change one’s system when it falls into a pattern for a couple years as the First Nations will obey the French behaviors not on purpose. However, facing the sturdy protective barrier that the French had built, English began to change the New France by using force. In October 1763, the English King ordered Canada to use their cultural behavior instead of using French’s, as against of those French immigrations. One year later, the Great Britain allowed them to use French system in Quebec , in order to alleviate the feeling of resentment and antagonism from colonies, which is beneficial to dominate the settlement. Afterwards, British changed the behaviors of aboriginal people into English ways smoothly, and now in today’s Canada, you can hardly see people act French behaviour in some…

    • 1132 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The first European to arrive to the Midwest region of the US was Etienne Brule during the early 1600’s. In 1622 or 1623 he went around Lake Superior, yet the record of his excursion was just composed down from gossip after Brule passed away by Gabriel Sagard-Theodat. One of a kind data about Wisconsin additionally shows up on Samuel de Champlain's guide of New France distributed in 1632, two years before Jean Nicolet came to Wisconsin, and is dared to have come to Champlain from Brule. Therefore, Jacques Marquette, a French missionary, was sent on a mission to Canada in 1666. Substituting Father Allouez at Chequamegon Bay in 1669, Marquette went ahead to construct the St. Ignace mission in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, in 1671 before the exploration of the Mississippi with Louis Joliet in 1673.…

    • 568 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    In the heart of a poor neighborhood at the eastern edge of Paris, there was a massive fortress prison, the Bastille. It had eight huge towers and thick walls 80 feet high. On the 14th of July 1789, hundreds of ordinary Parisians, mostly men but a few women as well, poured over the drawbridge of the Bastille looking for gunpowder and changed the course of French history. On that day, they made the French Revolution a reality. The paper will cover the storming of the Bastille shortly. But first, let’s talk about July 15th, the very day after the successful assault on the Bastille. Paris was still barricading against a possible attack by the royal army, and a man named Palloy, Pierre- Francois Palloy 1755-1835,…

    • 1211 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays