the french & indian war american history i part c the road to revolution

20
The French & Indian War American History I Part C The Road to Revolution

Upload: dana-scott

Post on 13-Jan-2016

214 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: The French & Indian War American History I Part C The Road to Revolution

The French & Indian War

American History I Part C The Road to Revolution

Page 2: The French & Indian War American History I Part C The Road to Revolution
Page 3: The French & Indian War American History I Part C The Road to Revolution

The Ohio River Valley• By the 1740s, both

French and English traders had begun entering the Ohio River Valley, leading to rival claims to the region

• This led both sides to begin building forts to protect their claims

Page 4: The French & Indian War American History I Part C The Road to Revolution

George Washington• After the French seized

an English fort in western Pennsylvania, Virginia governor Robert Dinwiddie ordered a young Virginia militia officer named George Washington to raise a force and retake the fort

Page 5: The French & Indian War American History I Part C The Road to Revolution

Fort Necessity• In 1754, the 22-year-old

Washington’s troops engaged the French in battle, but were forced to retreat and build their own temporary defensive position at Ft. Necessity

• Eventually, Washington was forced to surrender to the French, leaving them in control of the Ohio River Valley

Page 6: The French & Indian War American History I Part C The Road to Revolution

The Albany Conference• Representatives from 7

English colonies tried to convince the Iroquois tribe, who controlled western New York, to ally themselves with England against France

• While the Iroquois refused an alliance, they did agree to remain neutral and not support the French

Page 7: The French & Indian War American History I Part C The Road to Revolution

The Albany Plan of Union• The representatives who met

for the Albany Conference agreed to ask Britain to unite all colonial forces under one commanding officer

• They also drafted an idea known as the Albany Plan of Union, which proposed that the colonies unite and form their own federal government, but the idea was ultimately rejected

Page 8: The French & Indian War American History I Part C The Road to Revolution

Gen. Edward Braddock• In 1755, the British sent

General Edward Braddock and 1500 British soldiers to command the defense of the Colonies

• Braddock appointed Washington as his top aide and marched out to retake Ft. Duquesne

Page 9: The French & Indian War American History I Part C The Road to Revolution

Braddock’s Expedition• Braddock’s army was

ambushed by the French and their Indian allies

• Braddock was killed in the fighting and only Washington’s calm command allowed the British and Colonial forces to escape and retreat

Page 10: The French & Indian War American History I Part C The Road to Revolution

Indian Skirmishes• With the English defeat,

many of the Indian tribes grew bolder and began attacking settlers along the Appalachian frontier

• For the next two years the English, French, and Indians raided each other along the frontier and the Ohio River Valley

Page 11: The French & Indian War American History I Part C The Road to Revolution

The Seven Years’ War• By 1756, the fighting

between the English and French had spread to an all out world war – the two enemies weren’t just fighting in North America, but also in Europe, Africa, and India

Page 12: The French & Indian War American History I Part C The Road to Revolution
Page 13: The French & Indian War American History I Part C The Road to Revolution

French Lose Support• The powerful British Navy

gained control of the Atlantic, cutting off French supplies and reinforcements to North America

• Additionally, the Iroquois began to put pressure on other Native American tribes to end their support for the French, leaving the French badly outnumbered and ill-supplied

Page 14: The French & Indian War American History I Part C The Road to Revolution

Forbes Expedition• In 1758, English General

John Forbes successfully pushed the French out of Ft. Duquesne and rebuilt it as Ft. Pitt (now Pittsburgh)

• The French were forced to retreat back into Canada

Page 15: The French & Indian War American History I Part C The Road to Revolution

Battle of the Plains of Abraham• In 1759, English General

James Wolfe moved his forces up the St. Lawrence River and attacked the city of Quebec

• The English won the battle (although Wolfe was killed), effectively ending the major fighting of the North American theater of the war

Page 16: The French & Indian War American History I Part C The Road to Revolution

The Spanish Disaster• In 1761, Spain entered

the war in support of France, but the English dominated the Spanish, seizing their colonies of the Philippines (in East Asia) and Cuba (in the Caribbean)

• By 1763, France and Spain sued for an end to the war

Page 17: The French & Indian War American History I Part C The Road to Revolution

The Treaty of Paris (1763)• Formally ended the

Seven Years’ War (and it’s North American component, the French & Indian War) between England and France

• The treaty would result in a major redrawing of the map of North America

Page 18: The French & Indian War American History I Part C The Road to Revolution

The Redrawing of a Continent• England gained control of Canada

and all French claims east of the Mississippi River from France and control of Florida from Spain

• Spain was given the port of New Orleans and all French claims west of the Mississippi River by France as an apology for getting Spain involved

• England returned Cuba and the Philippines to Spanish control

• France was left with only a few sugar producing islands in the Caribbean from what had once been a huge North American empire

Page 19: The French & Indian War American History I Part C The Road to Revolution
Page 20: The French & Indian War American History I Part C The Road to Revolution

An Expensive War • The British government

had taken on enormous debts to fund the war and support quickly grew in Parliament for making the Colonies pay at least a part of the cost of their defense