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Focus

Focus. Vocabulary French and Indian War Albany Plan of Union Militia Prime minister Siege Treaty of Paris (1763). Bellringer: How did Salutary Neglect help lead to the American Revolution?

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Focus

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  1. Focus Vocabulary • French and Indian War • Albany Plan of Union • Militia • Prime minister • Siege • Treaty of Paris (1763) Bellringer: • How did Salutary Neglect help lead to the American Revolution? • What do you know about the French and Indian War? Include who was involved? Why it occurred? Outcome? Etc.

  2. Pre-Test

  3. ThinkPairShare Have you seen this before? What do you think it means? Who published it? Why is this picture significant?

  4. Read “Join or Die” • Read silently • Discuss with your partner if your interpretation of the cartoon was accurate.

  5. 4.1 The French and Indian War thesandwichjourney.blogspot.com

  6. I Can… • Summarize the causes of the French and Indian War. • Describe how the British won the French and Indian War. • Analyze how the war weakened the colonists’ loyalty to Britain. Learning Targets:

  7. George Washington • The French, who far outnumbered the British, soon surrounded the fort and forced a surrender. • The colonists returned to Virginia defeated and disgraced. • It was not a good start for their 21-year-old commander, George Washington. • After ambushing a French scouting party in Western Pennsylvania in May 1754, a small force of British colonists built a stronghold named Fort Necessity. • There they waited for the French to try to retake the Ohio Valley, which both Britain and France claimed.

  8. George Washington en.wikipedia.org

  9. Causes of WarRivalry Between Britain and France • While the English built their settlements along the eastern seacoast during the 1600s, the French explored farther inland: along the St. Lawrence River, the Great Lakes, and the Mississippi River. • The French claimed a vast region stretching from the Appalachian Mountains in the east to the Rocky Mountains in the West. • The English claimed some of this territory as well. • Washington’s unsuccessful expedition was the first minor battle of a war that lasted until 1763. • The French and Indian war was a nine-year conflict that ended the struggle among the French, the British, and Native Americans for control of eastern NA.

  10. www1.american.edu

  11. Patterns of Colonization • As a result, French relations with NAs were generally better. • In the late 1600s, GB and France were often at war in Europe and then between the colonists. • British settlers founded towns and cleared land for planting crops • French colonists established forts to protect their land claims and trade with NAs.

  12. Increasingly, these conflicts focused on the rivalry in NA. • The last of them, the French and Indian War, actually started in the colonies and spread to Europe. • The European phase began in 1756, about two years after the fighting was under way in America, in Europe it was called the Seven years’ War.

  13. At the time George Washington and his small force held out at Fort Necessity, a meeting of delegates from seven northern colonies convened at Albany, New York, in June 1754. • The delegates hoped to strengthen ties with the Iroquois league as potential allies. The Albany Plan of Union

  14. Forts of the War mccordfamilyassn.com

  15. Another reason for the Albany meeting was to work out a unified war effort in the Northern colonies. • Benjamin Franklin, a PA delegate, offered an ambitious plan for a permanent union of the colonies. • Named the Albany Plan of Union, it called for a grand council of delegates from each colony, elected by their colonial legislatures. Unity

  16. Heading the council would be a president general, appointed by the British crown. • Franklin believed that just as the Iroquois nation had strengthened itself by forming a league, the British colonies would benefit from greater unity. • The delegates approved the plan but the colonists rejected it. • They were unwilling to give that much power to a central government. • It is important because it provided a model for the U.S. government later. Results

  17. Early British Defeats • The most impressive of the French victories took place once again in western PA. • On July 9, 1755, about 900 French and NAs surprised a force of nearly 1,500 British troops and 450 colonial militia, armed citizens who serve as soldiers during an emergency. • British soldiers had been trained to fight in straight lines in the open. • They were no match for an enemy who hid behind rocks and trees. • In the fierce 3 hour battle, about a third of the British force was killed or wounded including British commander, General Edward Braddock.

  18. Famous Colonists • Colonist Daniel Boone survived to become famous on the Kentucky frontier. • George Washington had two horses killed under him and ended the battle with four bullet holes in his coat after organizing the retreat. boonesociety.org

  19. The British win the war • In 1756 GB formally declared war on France. • As fighting spread to Europe and Asia, the British repeated their American military disasters. • In 1757 William Pitt became Britain’s prime minister, the highest official of a parliamentary government. • Believing that the entire British Empire could be at stake, Pitt persuaded Parliament to raise taxes and borrow huge sums of money to fight the war. en.wikipedia.org

  20. The tide of war turns • In July 1758, British forces sized Louisbourg, an important French fortress on the Gulf of St. Lawrence. • In November they captured Fort Duquesne in PA. • The fort, renamed Fort Pitt for the British leader, eventually became the city of Pittsburgh. • In 1758, better-prepared and better-led British troops began to overwhelm French and Indian forces in western PA and Canada. • They first attacked the long line of forts and settlements that the French had built.

  21. British Victory • In July 1759 British troops took Fort Niagara. • The British victory put the French on the defensive. • They abandoned their forts in New York and retreated to Canada. • The Iroquois, who had been playing both sides, decided that the French cause was hopeless and began to support the British. wargame.ch

  22. The fall of quebec • In the late spring of 1759, the British began a campaign to invade Canada and capture Quebec, the capital of New France. • The city sat high on the cliffs overlooking the St. Lawrence River, General James Wolfe commanded about 9,000 British troops. • Some 7,500 French forces led by the Marquis de Montcalm defended Quebec. • After suffering heavy losses in a direct attack in July 1959, Wolfe settled down to a siege of the city. • A siege is a tactic were the enemy is trapped and starved into surrendering. • Wolfe had limited time for the siege to work. • British warships supporting his army had to withdraw from the river as winter approached.

  23. A Daring Tactic • On the night of Sept. 12, Wolfe began moving troops up a narrow, undefended path on the side of Quebec’s cliffs. • By dawn 4,500 troops were in position to attack. • Montcalm moved his 4,500 troops out of the city to battle the enemy without waiting for reinforcements. • Both Wolfe and Montcalm were killed in the fighting. • A few days later, the city surrendered. • With the fall of Quebec the war was nearly over. • The following Sept., British forces took the city of Montreal, giving GB control over all of Canada. • By 1761, the British had seized Fort Detroit and other French posts along the Great Lakes.

  24. The treaty of Paris • The only exception was the city of New Orleans, which France had given to Spain in a secret treaty the year before. • The British returned Cuba, captured during the war, to Spain in exchange for Florida. • In 1763, representatives of GB, France, and France’s ally Spain signed the Treaty of Paris (1763) in Paris, France ending the War. • France turned Canada over to Britain and surrendered its claim to all lands east of the Miss. River.

  25. Weakened loyalty to Britain • They demanded to be led by colonial officers, which the British viewed as treason. • The war strained the relations between the British and American colonists. • The British thought the colonists did not provide enough support to the war fought for their protection. • The Americans were shocked by the weakness of British military tactics.

  26. A loss of respect for the British military power. • The other was that the British did not share the same values as Americans or treat them with respect. • Now that the French no longer held Canada or the region west of the Appalachian Mountains, the colonists wanted to expand and prosper on their own, without British help. The end of the war left colonists with two beliefs:

  27. Exit Slip • Organizing Information: Outline the major causes and effects of the French and Indian War. • Drawing Conclusions: What made it possible for the British to win the French and Indian War? • Why was the Treaty of Paris significant? • How did the French and Indian War cause the colonists to rethink their relationship with Britain?

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