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French
and Indian War
I.
Introduction
French and Indian War (1754-1763), the last of four
North American wars waged from 1689 to 1763 between
the British and the French. In these struggles, each
country fought for control of the continent with the
assistance of Native American and colonial allies.
The French and Indian War differed from previous confrontations,
however. The earlier wars consisted primarily of skirmishes
between small regular units of the European powers
aided by local militiamen. The French and Indian War
was part of a "great war for empire," a determined
and eventually successful attempt by the British to
attain a dominant position in North America, the West
Indies, and the subcontinent of India. Although the
French and Indian War began in America, it expanded
into Europe as the Seven Years' War (1756-1763), and
at the same time into Asia as the Third Carnatic War.
The French and Indian War not only stripped France
of its North American empire, it also caused Britain
to change its relationship to its colonies, a change
that eventually led to the American Revolution.
II.
Early Rivalries
By the end of the 17th century, the British had established
flourishing colonial settlements along the Atlantic
Coast in New England and in the Chesapeake Bay region.
At the same time, France had founded small communities
along the St. Lawrence River and had claimed the entire
Mississippi River Valley, following the expeditions
of French explorers Louis Joliet and René-Robert Cavelier,
Sieur de La Salle. These North American colonies became
part of an intense rivalry between Great Britain and
France. Each country tried to equal or surpass the
economic, political, and military power of the other
through colonization, alliances, and warfare.

Archive Photos
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White
traders and Native Americans exchanged many items,
including food, guns, and blankets. Among the
most profitable trading items were furs from animals
such as the beaver. Usually Native Americans would
trap the animals, skin them, and then bring the
furs to the traders who would ship them to Europe.
The French dominated the early years of the trade,
but competition with the British and American
colonists grew more intense during the years before
the French and Indian War.
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Beginning
in 1689, Britain fought a century-long series of wars
with France and its ally, Spain. On three occasions
prior to the French and Indian War, these hostilities
spilled over into the western hemisphere where overseas
colonies could provide important advantages. Britain
and France competed to control the valuable fur trade
on the North American mainland and the rich sugar
production on the islands of the West Indies. Both
nations received military assistance from colonists
in these wars, but also relied on the help of Native
American peoples who participated because of their
own rivalries for land and power.
The
first of these conflicts was King
William's War (1689-1697), known in Europe as
the War of the League of Augsburg. In North America,
this war consisted of a number of skirmishes that
produced no changes in territory. The New England
militia and their Native American allies, the Iroquois,
fought against French troops and their Algonquian
Native American allies on the northern frontier in
the American colonies and in Canada. The New Englanders
captured Port Royal, the capital of French Acadia
(now the portion of Canada that includes Nova Scotia,
New Brunswick, and Prince Edward Island), but the
Peace of Ryswick (1697) that ended the war in Europe
also returned Acadia to France.
The
next conflict was Queen Anne's
War (1702-1713), known in Europe as the War of
the Spanish Succession. During this war, the French
and British again fought battles along the New England
frontier. However, the northern region of New York
remained quiet because the Iroquois adopted a policy
of “aggressive neutrality,” selling furs to both the
French and the English but refusing to fight for either
side. The major battle was a British and colonial
attempt to capture Québec in 1710. Although the expedition
failed, Britain used victories in Europe to gain significant
additional territory in the Peace of Utrecht (1713-1714).
From France, Britain obtained Newfoundland, Acadia,
the Hudson Bay region of northern Canada, and greater
access to the Native American fur trade. From Spain,
France's ally, Britain acquired the Mediterranean
fortress of Gibraltar and trading privileges in Spanish
America. These gains enhanced Britain's commercial
supremacy and gave it extensive territories in North
America.
A
new conflict, King George's
War (1744-1748), began outside of North America
in 1739 when Spain tried to halt commerce between
its North American colonies and Britain. This trade
war became part of a general European conflict, the
War of Austrian Succession (1740-1748). In 1745 New
England militiamen captured the French naval fortress
of Louisbourg on Cape Breton Island (near the mouth
of the St. Lawrence River), but the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle
(1748) returned the fortress to France.
III.
Beginning of the French and Indian War
The last of the conflicts between Britain and France
for control of North America was the French and Indian
War. It began in the struggle for control of the Ohio
Valley. For more than a generation, the powerful Iroquois
Confederacy, an alliance of several Native American
nations from the Iroquoian language family, dominated
a middle ground between the French and British colonies
in North America. The Iroquois, originally centered
in western New York, had gained control of a vast
region in the interior of the continent by alliances
with other Native American peoples and had successfully
excluded the European nations from this territory.
The Iroquois were able to maintain their power against
that of both the British and the French, but this
three-way balance of power began to break down during
the 1740s. British traders penetrated deep into the
Ohio country and established direct relations with
tribal groups who previously had been controlled by
the Iroquois or had traded only with the French.
A.
Rivalry for the Ohio Valley
The
Ohio company, an association of land speculators based
in Virginia, encouraged the British excursions. The
company had received a grant of 500,000 acres from
the British king and wanted to move traders and settlers
into this interior region. In 1753 Governor Robert
Dinwiddie of Virginia, who was also a leading member
of the Ohio Company, dispatched 21-year-old George
Washington on his first military mission. Washington
carried a message to the French, warning them to leave
the region. In the following year Governor Dinwiddie
ordered the construction of a fort at the forks of
the Ohio (where the Monongahela and Allegheny rivers
meet), later the site of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
These
developments convinced the French governor-general
of Canada of the need to dominate the Ohio Valley
militarily in order to protect France's strategic
interests in the American interior. The French immediately
reinforced their existing forts south of Lake Erie
and expelled the British from the forks of the Ohio.
At that strategic site, they built a new military
post, Fort Duquesne, and established firm title to
the region. The French government realized that not
only were the profits of the fur trade at stake, but
also possession of the vast Ohio and Mississippi river
valleys.
These
rival territorial claims in the Ohio Valley quickly
led to violence. An armed party of Virginians under
the command of George Washington defeated a small
French force east of the Ohio River and built a log
stockade that became known as Fort Necessity. The
French gathered more troops and quickly laid siege
to this small fort, forcing Washington and his troops
to surrender on July 4, 1754. The French then sent
Washington and his troops back to Virginia. The French
and Indian War had begun.
B.
The Albany Congress
The British Board of Trade had anticipated the outbreak
of war, and only weeks before had urged the colonial
governors to seek an alliance with the Iroquois Confederacy,
often referred to as the Six Nations. In June 1754
delegates from seven colonies met with 150 Iroquois
leaders in Albany, New York. Some members of the Iroquois
Confederacy already in alliances with the British
colonies complained of poor treatment. The Native
Americans also protested that the British governor
of Virginia as well as the French governor-general
of Canada had attempted to seize their lands. After
receiving large presents of supplies and arms, the
Iroquois grudgingly renewed their alliances with the
British colonies. Delegates then moved on to plan
other defensive measures.
An
important topic was a plan of union developed by Benjamin
Franklin. The Albany Plan, as it became known, proposed
a single institution to govern all of the British
colonies in America. Under the plan, each colony would
send delegates to an American continental assembly,
presided over by a British governor-general. This
council would assume responsibility for the western
affairs of the colonies, including trade, Native American
policy, and defense. The Albany Plan was never implemented
because the British government feared the consequences
of convening a great American assembly, and individual
colonial assemblies refused to support the proposal
because they wanted to preserve their autonomy.
IV.
The Military Struggle
The British had no desire to begin a war in America.
The last conflict with France, which ended in 1748,
had depleted the British treasury, and Parliament
refused to impose new taxes. But British leaders,
such as William Pitt, 1st earl of Chatham, who were
intent on expanding British influence, demanded action.
As a result, Britain dispatched two regiments of troops,
under Sir Edward Braddock, to America. Eventually,
however, many more troops were needed. During the
next five years, the government sent thousands of
regular troops under a succession of British commanders.
In addition, Parliament financed the enlistment and
supply of more than 20,000 American troops during
the period of heaviest fighting from 1758 to 1760.
A.
Phase One: Initial Skirmishes
The French and Indian War had four distinct phases.
The first began with the French capture of Washington
and his troops at Fort Necessity in 1754 and lasted
until 1756, when war was formally declared. During
these two years both Britain and France hoped to avoid
a general European war and so committed few troops
or resources to the fighting in America. Each side
primarily attacked enemy forts in unsettled areas
along the frontier.
Two
battles of considerable significance did take place
during this phase, however. The French ambushed and
defeated forces led by British General Edward Braddock
as they attempted to drive the French from Fort Duquesne.
The defeat was costly for the British: General Braddock
lost his life, more than 900 of his men were killed
or wounded, and British prestige among Native Americans
in the region declined. British and colonial forces
offset these losses by victories in Nova Scotia, where
they captured two French forts. Subsequently, the
British deported more than 6000 of the French inhabitants
of Nova Scotia, known as Acadians, a signal of the
growing brutality of the conflict.
B.
Phase Two: French Successes
The second phase of the war in America was fought
with much larger armies and opened with a series of
French victories. In mid-1756 a French force captured
the British fort at Oswego in northern New York. The
French advance continued in 1757 with a victory over
British regulars and New England militia at Fort William
Henry, within striking distance of the important fur-trading
town of Albany, New York. Then the French offensive
faltered.
France's
regular troops and their Native American allies could
not continue the war in populated areas of the British
colonies. They had to travel vast distances, where
there were few local sources of supply. Most importantly,
the small French Canadian population was not large
enough to provide food and soldiers for a lengthy
campaign.
In
the end, the British had the strategic advantage in
North America. Britain could call upon a population
more than ten times as large to provide troops and
supplies for an all-out assault on Canada. The only
other necessities were political support from the
colonial assemblies, which were provided somewhat
begrudgingly, and firm direction and financial assistance
from the British ministry. Strong support by the British
government began after William Pitt became secretary
of state in June 1757. Pitt firmly believed the way
to defeat France in Europe was to attack French possessions
around the world, including India, North America,
and the West Indies.
C.
Phase Three: British Victories in North America
In 1757 Pitt launched the third phase of the war by
sending thousands of British troops to America and
ordering a direct attack on Canada. A force of 16,000
British and colonial troops advanced from Albany toward
Montréal, Canada, in 1758. This expedition, commanded
by General James Abercrombie, stalled in the face
of French opposition at Fort Ticonderoga in northeastern
New York. However, British and colonial troops under
General Jeffrey Amherst did capture the fortress of
Louisbourg on Cape Breton Island near the mouth of
the St. Lawrence River. Additional British victories
came at Fort Frontenac, on Lake Ontario, and at Fort
Duquesne.
Bolstered
by these successes, William Pitt ordered a new British
offensive for 1759. He agreed to finance the mobilization
of 20,000 colonial troops and elevated Amherst to
the command of all British forces in America. Amherst's
army promptly continued the advance on Canada, capturing
Fort Niagara at the junction of lakes Erie and Ontario
and forcing the French to abandon the strategic Fort
Ticonderoga. By early August 1759 the French had retreated
to their inner line of defense which protected the
major cities along the St. Lawrence River.
The
British quickly breached these defenses and dispatched
a large fleet and an army up the river from Louisbourg.
Late in 1759 British troops led by James Wolfe defeated
a French army commanded by Louis Joseph Marquis de
Montcalm de Saint-Véran on the Plains of Abraham,
just outside of Québec. The capture of the fortified
city of Québec was the climax of the "year of victories"
for Great Britain. Only Montréal remained in French
hands, and it surrendered to British forces in September
1760.
D.
Phase Four: Worldwide Conflict
The fall of Canada began the fourth and last stage
of the war. Only minor conflicts continued on the
mainland of North America. Many of these occurred
between British settlers in the Carolinas and Native
American peoples like the Cherokee,
who had sided with the French to protect their lands.
In Europe, the Seven Years' War had reached a stalemate,
with neither the British nor the French alliances
able to dominate.
On
many other battlefronts around the world, however,
the British had great successes. The English East
India Company captured French trading posts and dominated
commercial markets in large sections of India. British
forces seized French Senegal in West Africa, the French
sugar islands of Martinique and Guadeloupe, and the
Spanish colonies of Cuba and the Philippine Islands.
When warfare ended in 1763, William Pitt had left
office, but his strategy of attacking the enemies'
colonial possessions had extended British power all
over the world.
V.
Results of the War
Warfare ended with the Treaty of Paris in 1763, and
the peace terms reflected British military successes.
Britain gained control over half the North American
continent, including French Canada, all French territorial
claims east of the Mississippi River, and Spanish
Florida. In return, Britain gave Cuba and the Philippines
back to Spain, and France compensated its Spanish
ally for the loss of Florida by giving it title to
all of Louisiana west of the Mississippi River.
A.
End of the French Empire in North America
The French and Indian War had reduced the once-impressive
French empire in North America to a handful of sugar
plantations in the West Indies and two rocky islands
off the coast of Newfoundland. It also ended the century-long
threat of a French or Spanish invasion of the American
mainland colonies and ensured that British institutions
would dominate in eastern North America. But France's
desire to avenge its humiliating defeat in the war
prompted it to provide financial and military aid
to the American rebels during the American Revolution.
This aid was instrumental in the loss of Britain's
American colonies, but it also contributed to the
French financial crisis that climaxed in the French
Revolution of 1789.
B.
Reevaluation of the Colonial Relationship
Another result of the war was a British decision to
reevaluate its relationship with its colonies. Before
the French and Indian War, Britain had not closely
controlled its colonies. British leaders regarded
the colonial governments as subordinate bodies, subject
to the sovereign authority of king and Parliament.
As long as few serious conflicts of interest arose
between Britain and its American possessions, the
British government permitted colonial assemblies to
oversee enforcement of instructions of the royal governors
or to pass new legislation suited to their own needs.
In
addition, the British did not always enforce their
laws in the colonies. For example, the British Customs
Service, which was inefficient, understaffed, and
open to bribery, did not enforce the Molasses Act
of 1733. This important measure required the colonists
to pay a duty on the molasses they imported from the
French West Indian islands. British leaders did not
insist on strict enforcement of this tax or other
commercial duties because booming American trade was
making Britain a wealthy and powerful nation. British
statesman and political theorist Edmund Burke described
his country's policies toward the colonies as “salutary
neglect” because he believed their leniency was actually
beneficial. As a result of this salutary neglect,
the colonists developed a political and economic system
that was virtually independent. They were loyal, although
somewhat uncooperative, subjects of the crown.
The
British became concerned about the colonists' lack
of cooperation during the French and Indian War. The
British initially resented the fact that the prosperous
colonists were unwilling to undertake their own defense.
Even the generous subsidies voted by Parliament at
William Pitt's urging did not cause the colonists
to respond as the British expected—colonial assemblies
still refused to send their militiamen on expeditions
to Canada. The colonists claimed that their militias
were needed to defend home territory.
The
British also suspected that the assemblies took advantage
of the war to increase their own political power.
Colonists demanded greater authority over finances
and military appointments in return for their approval
of war-related measures. The royal governors, under
strict orders from the British ministry to support
the war effort in America, often gave in to these
demands without resistance.
While
the tactics of the colonial assemblies appeared opportunistic
to the British, the actions of many American merchants
seemed almost treasonable. British government officials
were irate that many Americans continued to trade
illegally with France. Smuggling was highly profitable
and prolonged the war by sustaining the French sugar
plantations in the West Indies and providing the French
armies with food and supplies. The continuation of
this illegal trade led to British demands for more
centralized control of the empire. American conduct
during the war convinced many British leaders that
the old imperial system, with its emphasis on voluntary
cooperation between the home government and the colonies,
had been a dismal failure.
The
British government also faced pressing financial problems.
Britain began fighting in 1754 with a national debt
of approximately 75 million pounds, but the war effort
caused the debt to soar to 133 million pounds by 1763.
Americans had benefited substantially from these military
expenditures. They had received a million pounds in
direct subsidies and millions more in contracts for
food, supplies, and transport for the British military
forces in America. After these huge expenses, Britain
was reluctant to offer additional subsidies for the
peacetime defense of the colonies. Money was needed
to maintain the British troops who occupied the conquered
provinces of Canada and Florida and who defended a
chain of western frontier posts. Given the size of
the British debt and the extent of American prosperity,
British leaders saw no feasible alternative to taxing
the colonists.
For
the colonists, the French and Indian War increased
their concern over the permanent presence of a British
army. They believed that a standing army threatened
liberty and representative government. These fears
intensified as the British demanded imperial reform,
imposed direct taxes, and stationed army units in
the colonial port cities. Britain's demands soon led
the colonists to active resistance and paved the way
for the American Revolution and the creation of the
United States of America
Contributed
By: James A. Henretta, B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Priscilla
Alden Burke Professor of History, University of Maryland.
Author of Evolution and Revolution: American Society,
1600-1820 and America's History.
"French and Indian War," Microsoft® Encarta® Online
Encyclopedia 2001 http://encarta.msn.com
© 1997-2001 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
see
also History
of Native peoples in Canada
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