French and Indian War: George Washington surrenders Fort Necessity to French forces.
The French and Indian War (1754-1763)
was a theater of the Seven Years' War, which pitted the North American colonies
of the British Empire against those of the French, each side being supported by
various Native American tribes. At the start of the war, the French colonies
had a population of roughly 60,000 settlers, compared with 2 million in the
British colonies. The outnumbered French particularly depended on the natives.
Two years into the French and Indian
War, in 1756, Great Britain declared war on France, beginning the worldwide
Seven Years' War. Many view the French and Indian War as being merely the
American theater of this conflict; however, in the United States the French and
Indian War is viewed as a singular conflict which was not associated with any
European war. French Canadians call it the guerre de la Conquête
('War of the Conquest').
The British colonists were supported
at various times by the Iroquois, Catawba, and Cherokee tribes, and the French
colonists were supported by Wabanaki Confederacy member tribes Abenaki and
Mi'kmaq, and the Algonquin, Lenape, Ojibwa, Ottawa, Shawnee, and Wyandot
(Huron) tribes. Fighting took place primarily along the frontiers between New
France and the British colonies, from the Province of Virginia in the south to
Newfoundland in the north. It began with a dispute over control of the
confluence of the Allegheny River and Monongahela River called the Forks of the
Ohio, and the site of the French Fort Duquesne at the location that later
became Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The dispute erupted into violence in the
Battle of Jumonville Glen in May 1754, during which Virginia militiamen under
the command of 22-year-old George Washington ambushed a French patrol.
In 1755, six colonial governors met
with General Edward Braddock, the newly arrived British Army commander, and
planned a four-way attack on the French. None succeeded, and the main effort by
Braddock proved a disaster; he lost the Battle of the Monongahela on July 9,
1755, and died a few days later. British operations failed in the frontier
areas of the Province of Pennsylvania and the Province of New York during
1755-57 due to a combination of poor management, internal divisions, effective
Canadian scouts, French regular forces, and Native warrior allies. In 1755, the
British captured Fort Beauséjour on the border separating Nova Scotia from
Acadia, and they ordered the expulsion of the Acadians (1755-64) soon
afterwards. Orders for the deportation were given by Commander-in-Chief William
Shirley without direction from Great Britain. The Acadians were expelled, both
those captured in arms and those who had sworn the loyalty oath to the King.
Natives likewise were driven off the land to make way for settlers from New
England.
The British colonial government fell
in the region of Nova Scotia after several disastrous campaigns in 1757,
including a failed expedition against Louisbourg and the Siege of Fort William
Henry; this last was followed by the Natives torturing and massacring their
colonial victims. William Pitt came to power and significantly increased
British military resources in the colonies at a time when France was unwilling
to risk large convoys to aid the limited forces hat they had in New France,
preferring to concentrate their forces against Prussia and its allies who were
now engaged in the Seven Years' War in Europe. The conflict in Ohio ended in
1758 with the British-American victory in the Ohio Country. Between 1758 and
1760, the British military launched a campaign to capture French Canada. They
succeeded in capturing territory in surrounding colonies and ultimately the
city of Quebec (1759). The following year the British were victorious in the
Montreal Campaign in which the French ceded Canada in accordance with the
Treaty of Paris (1763).
France also ceded its territory
east of the Mississippi to Great Britain, as well as French Louisiana west of
the Mississippi River to its ally Spain in compensation for Spain's loss to
Britain of Spanish Florida. (Spain had ceded Florida to Britain in exchange for
the return of Havana, Cuba.) France's colonial presence north of the Caribbean
was reduced to the islands of Saint Pierre and Miquelon, confirming Great
Britain's position as the dominant colonial power in northern America.
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