A.P.
~
1608 – 1763 ~
1.
Like
a.
It
was convulsed in the 1500s by foreign wars and domestic strife.
b.
In
1598, the Edict of Nantes was issued, allowing limited toleration to the French
Huguenots.
2.
When
King Louis XIV became king, he took an interest in overseas colonies.
3.
In
1608,
4.
Samuel
de Champlain, an intrepid soldier and explorer, became known as the “Father of
New France.”
a.
He
entered into friendly relations with the neighboring Huron Indians and helped
them defeated the Iroquois.
b.
The
Iroquois, however, did hamper French efforts into the
5.
Unlike
English colonists, French colonists didn’t immigrate to
a. The peasants were too
poor, and the Huguenots weren’t allowed to leave.
a.
Beaver
hunters were known as the coureurs de bois and littered the land with
place names, including
b.
The
French voyageurs also recruited Indians to hunt for beaver as well, but
Indians were decimated by White Man’s diseases, and the beaver population was
heavily extinguished.
2.
French
Catholic missionaries zealously tried to convert Indians.
3.
To
thwart English settlers from pushing into the
a.
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.
5.
The
fertile
III.
The
Clash of Empires
1.
King
William’s War and Queen Anne’s War (two different fights)
a.
The
English colonists fought the French coureurs de bois and their Indian
allies.
i.
Neither
side considered
b.
The
French-inspired Indians ravaged
c.
The
British did try to capture
d.
The
peace deal in
2.
The
War of Jenkin’s Ear
a.
An
English Captain named Jenkin’s had his ear cut off by a Spanish commander, who
had sneered at him to go home crying (essentially).
b.
This
war was confined to the
c.
This
war soon merged with the War of Austrian Succession and came to be called King
George’s War in
e.
However,
peace terms of this war gave Louisbourg, which the New Englanders had captured,
back to
IV.
George
Washington Inaugurates War with
1.
The
a.
It
was lush and very good land.
2.
In
1754, the governor of
a.
Encountering
some Frenchmen in the forest about 40 miles from
b.
Later,
the French returned and surrounded
c.
He
was permitted to march his men away with the full honors of war.
V.
Global
War and Colonial Disunity
1.
The
fourth of these wars between empires started in
2.
The
French and Indian War (aka Seven Years’ War) began with
3.
It
was
4.
In
5.
In
previous wars, the Americans were not unified, but now they were.
6.
In
1754, an intercolonial congress was held in Albany, New York.
a.
A
month before the congress, Ben Franklin had published his famous “Join or Die”
cartoon featuring a snake in pieces, symbolizing the colonies.
7.
Franklin
helped unite the colonists in Albany, but the Albany plan failed because it
compromised too much.
VI.
Braddock’s
Blundering and Its Aftermath
1.
In
the beginning, the British sent haughty 60 year-old general Braddock to lead a
bunch of inexperienced soldiers with slow, heavy artillery.
2.
In
a battle with the French, the British were routed.
a.
In
this battle, Washington reportedly had two horses shot from under him and four
bullets go through his coat, but never him.
3.
Afterwards,
the frontier from Pennsylvania to North Carolina felt the Indian wrath, as
scalping was everywhere.
4.
As
the British tried to attack a bunch of strategic wilderness posts, defeated
after defeat piled up.
VII.
Pitt’s
Palms of Victory
1.
In
this hour of British trouble, William Pitt, the “Great Commoner,” took the
lead.
2.
In
1757, he became a foremost leader in the London government.
3.
Later
earning the title of “Organizer of Victory,” he soft-pedaled assaults on the
French West Indies, assaults which sapped British strength, and concentrated on
Quebec-Montreal.
4.
In
1758, Louisbourg fell after a blistering siege.
5.
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.
a.
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.
6.
In
the peace treaty at Paris in 1763, Britain got all of Canada, but the French
were allowed to retain several small but valuable sugar islands in the West
Indies and two never-to-be-fortified islets in the Gulf of St. Lawrence for
fishing stations.
7.
France’s
final blow came when they gave Louisiana to Spain to compensate for Spain’s
losses in the war.
a.
Great
Britain took its place as the leading naval power in the world, and a great
power in North America.
VIII.
Restless
Colonials
1.
The
colonists, having experienced war firsthand and come out victors, were very
confident.
a.
However,
the myth of British invincibility had been shattered.
2.
Ominously,
friction developed between the British officers and the colonial “boors.”
3.
The
British refused to recognize any American officers above the rank of captain.
4.
However,
the hardworking Americans believed that they were equals with the Redcoats, and
trouble began to brew.
5.
Brits
were concerned about American secret trade with enemy traders during the war;
in fact, in the last year of the war, the British forbade the export of all
supplies from New England to the middle colonies.
6.
Also,
many American colonels refused to help fight the French until Pitt offered to
reimburse them.
7.
During
the French and Indian War, though, Americans from different parts of the
colonies found, surprisingly to them, that they had a lot in common (language,
ideals), and barriers of disunity began to melt.
IX.
Americans:
A People of Destiny
1.
Now
that the French had been beaten, the colonists could now roam freely, and were
less dependent upon Great Britain.
2.
The
French consoled themselves with the thought that if they could lose such a
great empire, maybe the British would one day lose theirs too.
3.
Spain
was eliminated from Florida, and the Indians could no longer play the European
powers against each other, since it was only Great Britain in control now.
4.
In
1763, Ottawa chief Pontiac led a few French-allied tribes in a brief but bloody
campaign through the Ohio Valley, but the Whites quickly and cruelly retaliated
after being caught off guard.
a.
One
commander ordered blankets infected with smallpox to be distributed among the
Indians.
b.
Such
violence convinced Whites to station troops along the frontier.
5.
Now,
land-hungry Americans could now settle west of the Appalachians, but in 1763,
Parliament issued its Proclamation of 1763, prohibiting any settlement in the
area beyond the Appalachians.
a.
Actually,
this document was meant to work out the Indian problem, but colonists saw it as
another form of oppression from a far away country.
b.
In
1765, an estimated on thousand wagons rolled through the town of Salisbury, North
Carolina, on their way “up west” in defiance of the Proclamation.
6.
The
British, proud and haughty, were in no way to accept this blatant disobedience
by the lowly Americans, and the stage was set for the Revolutionary War.
X.
Makers
of America: The French
1.
Louis
XIV envisioned a French empire in North America, but defeats in 1713 and 1763
snuffed that out.
2.
The
first French to leave Canada were the Acadians.
a.
The
British who had won that area had demanded that all residents either swear
allegiance to Britain or leave.
b.
In
1755, they were forcefully expelled from the region.
3.
The
Acadians fled far south to the French colony of Louisiana, where they settled
among sleepy bayous, planted sugar cane and sweet potatoes, and practiced Roman
Catholicism.
a.
They
also spoke a French dialect that came to be called Cajun.
b.
Cajuns
married Spanish, French, and Germans.
c.
They
were largely isolated in large families until the 1930s, when a bridge-building
spree engineered by Governor Huey Long, broke the isolation of these bayou
communities.
4.
In
1763, a second group of French settlers in Quebec began to leave, heading
toward New England because bad harvests led to lack of food in Quebec.
a.
Most
hoped to return to Canada someday.
b.
These
people also preserved their Roman Catholicism and their language.
c.
Yet
today, almost all Cajuns and New England French-Canadians speak English.
5.
Today,
Quebec is the only sign of French existence that once ruled.
a.
French
culture is strong there in the form of road signs, classrooms, courts, and
markets, eloquently testifying to the continued vitality of French culture in
North America.