French and Indian War.
Publié le 03/05/2013
Extrait du document
«
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 Iroquoisgrudgingly 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 Britishcolonies in America.
Under the plan, each colony would send delegates to an American continental assembly, presided over by a British governor-general.
This councilwould assume responsibility for the western affairs of the colonies, including trade, Native American policy, and defense.
The Albany Plan was never implementedbecause the British government feared the consequences of convening a great American assembly, and individual colonial assemblies refused to support the proposalbecause 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 toimpose 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, Britaindispatched two regiments of troops, under Sir Edward Braddock, to America.
Eventually, however, many more troops were needed.
During the next five years, thegovernment sent thousands of regular troops under a succession of British commanders.
In addition, Parliament financed the enlistment and supply of more than20,000 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 until1756, 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 orresources 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 Braddockas 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 orwounded, and British prestige among Native Americans in the region declined.
British and colonial forces offset these losses by victories in Nova Scotia, where theycaptured two French forts.
Subsequently, the British deported more than 6000 of the French inhabitants of Nova Scotia, known as Acadians, a signal of the growingbrutality 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 theBritish 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, wherethere were few local sources of supply.
Most importantly, the small French Canadian population was not large enough to provide food and soldiers for a lengthycampaign.
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 foran all-out assault on Canada.
The only other necessities were political support from the colonial assemblies, which were provided somewhat begrudgingly, and firmdirection 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 andcolonial troops advanced from Albany toward Montréal, Canada, in 1758.
This expedition, commanded by General James Abercrombie, stalled in the face of Frenchopposition at Fort Ticonderoga in northeastern New York.
However, British and colonial troops under General Jeffrey Amherst did capture the fortress of Louisbourg onCape 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 elevatedAmherst 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 lakesErie 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 whichprotected 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 Wolfedefeated 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 fortifiedcity 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 September1760.
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 Britishsettlers 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 hadreached 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 dominatedcommercial markets in large sections of India.
British forces seized French Senegal in West Africa, the French sugar islands of Martinique and Guadeloupe, and theSpanish colonies of Cuba and the Philippine Islands.
When warfare ended in 1763, William Pitt had left office, but his strategy of attacking the enemies’ colonialpossessions 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,.
»
↓↓↓ APERÇU DU DOCUMENT ↓↓↓
Liens utiles
- French and Indian War - Canadian History.
- Franklin Roosevelt's Pearl Harbor Speech In this famous speech, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt lists the unprovoked attacks by Japan and details America's reasons for declaring war.
- Iphigenia Greek Daughter of Clytemnestra and Agamemnon, king of Mycenae and leader of the Greek forces in the Trojan War; sister of Electra and Orestes.
- Mars Roman The god of war who, in his earliest forms, was a god of agriculture and prosperity.
- Nerio (Nerine; Neriene; Nerienis; Valor) Roman A traditional and legendary wife of the war god Mars.