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French and Indian WarEncyclopedia Article
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Introduction; Early Rivalries; Beginning of the French and Indian War; The Military Struggle; Consequences of the War
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 until 1756, 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 or resources to the fighting in America. Each side primarily attacked enemy forts in unsettled areas along the frontier. Two battles of significance did take place during this phase. The French ambushed and defeated two regiments reluctantly despatched by Britain and led by Sir Edward Braddock as they attempted to drive the French from Fort Duquesne in 1755. Later British and colonial forces offset these losses by capturing two French forts in Nova Scotia. Subsequently, the British deported more than 6,000 French inhabitants from Nova Scotia.
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 the British 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 Albany. Then the French offensive faltered. This was largely because Britain held the strategic advantage in North America. The French had to travel vast distances, and had few local sources of supply. Most importantly, the small French-Canadian population was not large enough to provide food and soldiers for a lengthy campaign. In contrast, Britain could call upon a population more than ten times as large to provide troops and supplies for an all-out assault on Canada. The only other obstacles to British success were political support from the colonial assemblies, which was provided somewhat begrudgingly, and firm direction and financial assistance from the British government, which finally arrived after William Pitt became secretary of state for the Southern Department (foreign affairs), with sole responsibility for the prosecution of the war, in June 1757.
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 and colonial troops advanced from Albany towards Montreal in 1758. This expedition, commanded by General James Abercrombie, stalled in the face of French opposition at Fort Ticonderoga in north-eastern New York. However, British and colonial troops under General Jeffrey Amherst captured the fortress of Louisbourg and 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 financed the mobilization of 20,000 colonial troops and elevated Amherst to commander of all British forces in America. Amherst's army promptly continued the advance on Canada, capturing Fort Niagara, at the junction of lakes Erie and Ontario, and forcing the French to abandon the strategic Fort Ticonderoga. By early August 1759 the French had retreated to an inner line of defence that protected the major cities along the St Lawrence River. The British quickly breached these defences and despatched a large fleet and an army up the river from Louisbourg. Late in 1759 British troops led by James Wolfe defeated a French army commanded by Louis Joseph Marquis de Montcalm de St-Véran on the Plains of Abraham, just outside Quebec. The capture of the fortified city of Quebec was the climax of the 'year of victories' for Britain. Only Montreal remained in French hands, and it surrendered to British forces in September 1760.
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 British settlers 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 had reached 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. When warfare ended in 1763 the strategy of attacking their enemies’ colonial possessions had extended British power all over the world.
The French and Indian War reduced the once-impressive French empire in North America to a handful of sugar plantations in the Caribbean and two rocky islands off the coast of Newfoundland. It also ended the century-long threat of a French or Spanish invasion of the American mainland colonies and ensured that British institutions would dominate in eastern North America. Through the Treaty of Paris of 1763, Britain gained control of over half of the North American continent, including French Canada, all French territorial claims east of the Mississippi River, and Spanish Florida. France’s desire to avenge its humiliating defeat in the war later prompted it to provide financial and military aid to the American rebels during the American War of Independence. This aid was instrumental in the loss of Britain’s American colonies, but it also contributed to the French financial crisis that climaxed in the French Revolution of 1789. Another result of the war was British re-evaluation of its imperial relationship with its colonies. Before the French and Indian War, Britain had not controlled its colonies closely. British leaders regarded the colonial governments as subordinate bodies, subject to the sovereign authority of king and Parliament. As long as few serious conflicts of interest arose between Britain and its American possessions, the British government permitted colonial assemblies to oversee enforcement of instructions of the royal governors or to pass new legislation suited to their own needs. Edmund Burke described this imperial system as “salutary neglect” because he believed its leniency was beneficial, allowing the colonists to develop a political and economic system that was virtually independent. The colonists were loyal, although somewhat uncooperative, subjects of the Crown. However, the British government became concerned about the colonists’ lack of cooperation during the French and Indian War. They resented the fact that the prosperous colonists were unwilling to undertake their own defence. The British also suspected that the assemblies took advantage of the war to increase their own political power. Colonists demanded greater authority over finances and military appointments in return for their approval of war-related measures. This crisis of confidence in the old imperial system was exacerbated by pressing financial problems. Britain began fighting in 1754 with a national debt of approximately £75 million, but the war effort caused the debt to soar to £133 million by 1763. American colonists had benefited substantially from these military expenditures. They had received £1 million in direct subsidies and millions more in contracts for food, supplies, and transport for the British military forces in America. After these huge expenditures, Britain was reluctant to offer additional subsidies for the peacetime defence of the colonies. Money was needed to maintain the British troops who occupied the conquered provinces of Canada and Florida and defended a chain of western frontier posts. Given the size of the British debt and the extent of American colonial prosperity, British leaders saw no feasible alternative to taxing the colonists. For the colonists, the French and Indian War increased their concern over the permanent presence of a British army. They believed that a standing army threatened liberty and representative government. These fears intensified with British demands for reform of the imperial system, the imposition of direct taxes, and the stationing of army units in the colonial port cities. Britain’s demands quickly led the colonists to active resistance and paved the way for the American War of Independence.
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