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The Seven Years' War was a global conflict that involved various European powers and their colonies. It was the last major conflict prior to the revolutionary period in history and lasted from 1756 to 1763.
Image Courtesy of BritannicaBy 1754, European countries were competing for world domination by dueling for land in North America. Great Britain, France, and Spain all held various areas in the New World. This competition would disrupt the lives of both American colonists and Native Americans.
The Ohio Valley became a hotspot for conflict. The British saw this area as their gateway to western expansion, and the French viewed it as their vital link between their possessions in Canada and the Lower Mississippi Valley.
Generally, Britain would fight against either France, Spain, or both. Prior to the French and Indian War, Britain would fight the French over New France (Canada) and their French charismatic beaver trappers, who were expanding their travels into contested lands.
Native Americans formed strategic alliances to protect their lands and maintain trade relationships. The Iroquois Confederacy generally allied with the British, while Huron, Ottawa, and other Algonquian-speaking tribes primarily aligned with the French.
Western Pennsylvania became the sight of the first shots of the French and Indian War. George Washington, a young Lt. Colonel from Virginia, was sent by the Governor of Virginia to an area near Ft. Duquesne (Pittsburgh) to lay claim to this land. Washington engaged French troops in a 10-hour battle and was defeated by French forces at nearby Fort Necessity in 1754.
In the summer of 1754, the British created a meeting for the colonies in Albany, New York. Their motive was to entice the Iroquois Indians to remain their allies and also to unify the disjointed 13 colonies against their French enemies.
Ben Franklin represented Pennsylvania as one of the seven colonies to attend. Franklin's Albany Plan attempted to establish a colonial government based on home rule. It called for:
The Albany Plan was rejected by both the British government and the colonies. The colonists felt it did not give them enough authority, while London argued it gave them too much.
Franklin created one of the "first" U.S. political cartoons - the "JOIN, or DIE" snake that highlighted the need for colonial unity.
General Edward Braddock was a British army officer sent to North America to expel the French from the Ohio River Valley. In 1755, his expedition was ambushed by a French and native force. The British and colonial troops suffered heavy losses, including the death of General Braddock himself.
The defeat at the Battle of the Monongahela was a major setback for the British and revealed significant differences between colonial and British approaches to warfare:
Area of Tension | Colonials | British |
---|---|---|
Methods of Fighting | Native American guerrilla tactics | March in formation or bayonet charge |
Military Organization | Colonial militias served under their own captains | British officers wanted to take charge of colonials |
Military Discipline | No military deference or protocols observed | Drills and tough discipline |
Finances | Resistance to rising taxes | Colonists should pay for their own defense |
Demeanor | Casual, very nonprofessional | British officers with servants and tea settings |
As newly instated Prime Minister and Minister for War, William Pitt implemented significant changes to Britain's military and foreign policy. He increased funding for the military, deployed more troops to North America, and reimbursed colonial assemblies for their costs.
Pitt understood colonial concerns and offered them a compromise, seeing these conflicts as a way to expand the British empire. This raised colonial morale by 1758, enabling a series of British victories.
The battle of Quebec was fought on the plains of Abraham between the British army, led by General James Wolfe, and the French army, led by General Louis-Joseph de Montcalm. Both Wolfe and Montcalm were mortally wounded in the conflict. The French army was decisively defeated, and the British captured Quebec.
This battle was a major turning point in the war, as it effectively ended French resistance in North America. The British went on to win further victories, including the capture of Montreal by 1760.
Under the terms of the treaty:
The transfer of so much territory from France to Britain marked the beginning of the British Empire in North America.
The aftermath of the Seven Years' War would help cause the American Revolutionary War. The war cost Britain a substantial amount of money, leading to efforts to raise colonial taxes to pay for these war debts.
The colonists no longer needed British protection from the French in the Ohio Valley, and they felt compelled to travel and settle in the west. Colonial militia gained confidence and military experience during the conflict, with leaders like Washington learning valuable skills.
After the war, the British issued the Proclamation of 1763, which prohibited colonists from traveling beyond the Appalachian Mountains. The British felt this would prevent problems with Native Americans, but colonists detested this restrictive law and broke it at will.
The elimination of French power in North America reduced Native Americans' ability to play European powers against each other. Tribes that had allied with France lost a powerful ally.
Increased pressure on tribal lands from British colonial expansion led to resistance movements, including Pontiac's War in 1763. Though Native resistance continued, their overall position was weakened.
The Seven Years' War fundamentally changed colonial-imperial relations: