FRENCH AND INDIAN WARS

1689–1763, the name given by American historians to the North American colonial wars between Great Britain and France in the late 17th and the 18th cent. They were really campaigns in the worldwide struggle for empire and were roughly linked to wars of the European coalitions. At the time they were viewed in Europe as only an unimportant aspect of the struggle, and, although the stakes were Canada, the American West, and the West Indies, the fortunes of war in Europe had more effect in determining the winner than the fighting in the disputed territory itself.

To the settlers in America, however, the rivalry of the two powers was of immediate concern, for the fighting meant not only raids by the French or the British but also the horrors of tribal border warfare. The conflict may be looked on, from the American viewpoint, as a single war with interruptions. The ultimate aim—domination of the eastern part of the continent—was the same; and the methods—capture of the seaboard strongholds and the little Western forts and attacks on frontier settlements—were the same.

The wars helped to bring about important changes in the British colonies. In addition to the fact of their ocean-wide distance from the mother country, the colonies felt themselves less dependent militarily on the British by the end of the wars; they became most concerned with their own problems and put greater value on their own institutions. In other words, they began to think of themselves as American rather than British.

King William's War

The first of the wars, King William's War (1689–97), approximately corresponds to the European War of the Grand Alliance (1688–97). It was marked in America principally by frontier attacks on the British colonies and by the taking of Port Royal (now Annapolis Royal, N.S.) by British colonial forces under Sir William Phips in 1690. (The French recaptured it the next year.) The British were unable to take Quebec, and the French commander, the comte de Frontenac, attacked the British coast. The peace that followed the Treaty of Ryswick in 1697 was short-lived, and shortly the colonies were plunged into war again.

Queen Anne's War

Queen Anne's War (1702–13) corresponds to the War of the Spanish Succession. The frontier was again the scene of many bloody battles; the French and Native American raid (1704) on Deerfield, Mass., was especially notable. Another British attempt to take Quebec, this time by naval attack, failed. Port Royal, and with it Acadia, fell (1710) to an expedition under Francis Nicholson and was confirmed to the British in the Peace of Utrecht, as were Newfoundland and the fur-trading posts about Hudson Bay.

King George's War

Hostilities lapsed for years until trouble between England and Spain led to the so-called War of Jenkins's Ear, which merged into the War of the Austrian Succession. The American phase, King George's War, did not begin until 1744, when the French made an unsuccessful assault on Port Royal. The next year, a Massachusetts-planned expedition under William Pepperrell with a British fleet under Sir Peter Warren took Louisburg. Border warfare was severe but not conclusive. The Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle (1748) returned Louisburg to France, but the hostile feelings that had been aroused did not die.

The French and Indian War

Rivalry for the West, particularly for the valley of the upper Ohio, prepared the way for another war. In 1748 a group of Virginians interested in Western lands formed the Ohio Company, and at the same time the French were investigating possibilities of occupying the upper Ohio region. The French were first to act, moving S from Canada and founding two forts. Robert Dinwiddie, governor of Virginia, sent an emissary, young George Washington, to protest.

The contest between the Ohio Company and the French was now joined and hinged on possession of the spot where the Monongahela and the Allegheny join to form the Ohio (the site of Pittsburgh). The English started a fort there but were expelled by the French, who built Fort Duquesne in 1754. Dinwiddie, after attempting to get aid from the other colonies, sent out an expedition under Washington. He defeated a small force of French and Native Americans but had to withdraw and, building Fort Necessity, held his ground until forced to surrender (July, 1754). The British colonies, alarmed by French activities at their back door, attempted to correlate their activities in the Albany Congress. War had thus broken out before fighting began in Europe in the Seven Years War.

The American conflict, the last and by far the most important of the series, is usually called simply the French and Indian War. The British undertook to capture the French forts in the West—not only Duquesne, but also Fort Frontenac (see Kingston, Ont., Canada), Fort Niagara, and the posts at Ticonderoga and Crown Point. They also set out to take Louisburg and the French cities on the St. Lawrence, Quebec and Montreal. They at first failed in their attempts. The expedition led by Edward Braddock against Duquesne in 1755 was a costly fiasco, and the attempt by Admiral Boscawen to blockade Canada and the first expeditions against Niagara and Crown Point were fruitless.

After 1757, when the British ministry of the elder William Pitt was reconstituted, Pitt was able to supervise the war in America. Affairs then took a better turn for the British. Lord Amherst in 1758 took Louisburg, where James Wolfe distinguished himself. That same year Gen. John Forbes took Fort Duquesne (which became Fort Pitt).

The French Louis Joseph de Montcalm, one of the great commanders of his time, distinguished himself (1758) by repulsing the attack of James Abercromby on Ticonderoga. The next year that fort fell to Amherst. In the West, the hold of Sir William Johnson over the Iroquois and the activities of border troops under his general command—most spectacular, perhaps, were the exploits of the rangers under Robert Rogers—reduced French holdings and influence.

The war became a fight for the St. Lawrence, with Montcalm pitted against the brilliant Wolfe. The climax came in 1759 in the open battle on the Plains of Abraham (see Abraham, Plains of). Both Wolfe and Montcalm were killed, but Quebec fell to the British. In 1760, Montreal also fell, and the war was over. The Treaty of Paris in 1763 (see Paris, Treaty of) ended French control of Canada, which went to Great Britain.

Bibliography

The classic works in English on the conflict are those of Francis Parkman. See also W. Wood, The Passing of New France (1915); G. M. Wrong, The Conquest of New France (1918); L. H. Gipson, The British Empire before the American Revolution, Vol. IV–VIII (with individual titles, 1939–53); B. Connell, The Savage Years (1959); E. P. Hamilton, The French and Indian Wars (1962); H. Bird, Battle for a Continent (1965); G. Fregault, Canada: The War of the Conquest (1955, tr. 1969); F. Anderson, Crucible of War (2000).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: French and Indian Wars  - 29760 results

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...The Indian wars were the logical...1 Plains Indians had what anthropologists...Northeast, and the French inhabited Canada...bring about Indian wars. Their motive...eighteenth-century French biologist...compassion in Indian wars, and military...
...Civil War and the Plains Indian wars, and died on duty in Nebraska...Schenofsky, a Belgian with French military training who was...to engage in the Plains Indian wars, resigned to serve as a captain of French cavalry in the Franco-Prussian...
...2 THE FRENCH AND INDIAN WARS 16 3...series of wars that lasted...Quebec, the French and their Indian allies began...the original French or English...returned to the Indians. HARDWARE...The Indian Wars took place...
...major conflicts fought during the 1600s and 1700s by the whites in their midst- the French and Indian Wars and the American Revolution. The French and Indian Wars consisted of four conflicts that raged between England and France and their allies...
...the St. Lawrence the Frenchman regarded the Indian as a possible friend...joined with him in his wars as well as in his...dealing with our early Indian wars should come from...communication between Indians and French was not intimate at...
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...concludes with an all-too-brief summary of the wars consequences. Bornemans narrative is a fine read...as what amounts to an honorable mention of the Indian theater of war. However, The French Indian War, as indicated by its title, dwells...
...humane treatment of Indians, Bancroft sees all...and cruel Frenchman should be permitted...means; and this French butcher finds among...at a period when Indian populations reached...early champion of Indian rights. It appears...not only from anti-French prejudice but from...
Forgotten Wars: The End of Britains...between its role in all-Indian developments and the...humane when compared to French and Dutch efforts by...political independence. Indian pressures forced the...partition terminated the Indian Army on which British...
...Spanish, and French sources...book on the Indian slave trade...of Indian wars that engulfed...fomenting Indian wars in order to obtain more Indian slaves. He...Florida and French Louisiana...Although the French and Spanish...stop the wars of Indian enslavement...
...to a local newspaper, the pageant depicted "the coming of the French and the English to the colonial frontiers, the plots and counterplots...including Gertrude Bonnin and Carlos Montezuma, took the other Indian roles. Eastman noted to the Minneapolis Journal that the cast...
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magazine articles on: French and Indian Wars  - 478 results

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Chairs, Rag Mags, Indian Wars: What to Read This Month...hair in Champagne, as the French do?"; "Why dont you wear...history of the American Indians struggle with whites...ended, as thousands of Indians streamed into the reservations...
...Extraordinary Events in the French and Indian Wars. by Craig Lancto...Montreal were divided among the Indians and French. To one side of the Old Burying...collectively came to be called the French and Indian Wars grew from tensions between...
...are capable of winning them, he says, hot wars are "a constant imbalance at the center...recent European acquisition, a legacy of the French Revolution: nothing to do with roots sunk...European culture is not only enriched by Indian mathematics, Arab medicine, or Far East...
...and Slim, both generals with Indian Army backgrounds, demonstrated...in modern warfare. Fighting wars far from home, they learned...tutelage. It was the European wars of the twentieth century that...relatively limited duration. The French on the other hand never truly...
...ruins of the previous wars on their soil. And yet...between central Asia and the Indian subcontinent. Afghanistan...victory of the British, French, and Turkish allies over...better of them in both wars. "Their dashing and bold...by the new movement for Indian independence, combines...
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...sweet centres. This is style wars. New upwardly mobile Indian food now demands surroundings...as a moderately aspirational French restaurant. But again, why...higher-than-average levels of care and skill. Indian food is seriously labour-intensive...
...Tuchman calculated that the French Army suffered about 300...Small War. The 1940 "Small Wars Manual" by the U.S. Marine...prolonged conflicts of the Indian Wars. Contrary to popular myth...successfully fighting small wars, but since World War II...
...Oregonians could fight their own Indian wars and that the Mounted Rifles were no longer...troops to Oregon, where the scope of the Indian threat had been recognized. The Mounted...wanted American officers to replace the French officers in his army. He asked Sherman...
...appreciate food that is not French. Michelin is completely...horribly ignorant about Indian food, says Charles Campion...monstrously unfair. An Indian restaurant in Paris might...by Naret. There is no French bias, he says. The inspectors...whose food certainly isnt French. However, the new breed...
...boom-or-bust "Bra Wars" being waged by Wonderbra...year-old Choctaw Indian girl who had a one-night...She speaks fluent French and Japanese and...Brenda married a Frenchman but later separated...cause of American Indians - and was reunited...natural mum at an Indian festival.
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encyclopedia articles on: French and Indian Wars  - 138 results

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FRENCH AND INDIAN WARS 1689 1763, the...The first of the wars, King Williams War...Phips in 1690. (The French recaptured it the...The French and Indian War Rivalry for...Hamilton, The French and Indian Wars (1962); H. Bird...
INDIAN WARS in American history, general...Confederacy , although the French missionaries and traders maintained...considered the last battle of the Indian Wars although there was an expedition...W. Jennison, The American Indian Wars (1961); J. Tebbel, The Compact...
...the last of the three wars was a wider conflict in which French interests played a primary...especially in the East Indian trade and in the West...the first of the great wars of Louis XIV of France...Dutch competition with French trade and to extend...
ARAB-ISRAELI WARS conflicts in 1948 49, 1956, 1967, 1973...Israeli successes were reinforced by an Anglo-French invasion along the canal. Although the...without which Israel was cut off from the Indian Ocean, had been guaranteed. The 1967...
...responsible for Johnsons success and reputation among Native Americans. In the French and Indian War (see under French and Indian Wars he caused many tribes to desert the French cause. See biographies by A. T. Volwiler (1926, repr. 1971) and N...
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