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King George's
War
King
George's War, third of four North American wars, waged
by the British and French from 1744 to 1748, and corresponding
to the European War of the Austrian Succession. During
the period of peace after Queen
Anne's War (1702-13), irreconcilable conflicts
arose between the French and British for control of
North America. In 1744 the French captured and destroyed
a British fort at Canso, Nova Scotia, and carried
the prisoners to the French fortress of Louisbourg
on Cape Breton Island. Governor William Shirley of
Massachusetts, fearing French invasion, appealed to
the other colonies for aid. A force of about 4000
militiamen was raised and placed under the command
of Sir William Pepperell, a Maine merchant. In April
1745, the colonial troops sailed in British ships
from Boston against Louisbourg. On June 15, after
seven weeks of attack, the colonials captured the
supposedly impregnable fortress at Louisbourg.
The
next year France sent a fleet to retake Louisbourg
and attack Boston, but the fleet was scattered by
a storm. In 1747 a second fleet sent for the same
purpose was intercepted and defeated by a British
squadron. At the end of the war in 1748, Louisbourg
was returned to the French by the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle,
in return for British control of Madras (now Chennai),
India (see Aix-la-Chapelle, Treaties of). The settlement
disgruntled the colonists, and the British only partly
placated the colonists by bearing the entire expense
of the Louisbourg expedition. The question of colonial
control was later resolved in the French
and Indian War (1754-63).
"King
George's War," Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia
2000 http://encarta.msn.com
© 1997-2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
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