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Journal # 14. Militia – civilians serving as soldiers Casualties – killed, injured, or captured soldiers Backcountry – a thinly populated area between the coastal towns and the Appalachian Mountains Pioneers – the first Europeans to settle the backcountry.
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Journal #14 • Militia – civilians serving as soldiers • Casualties – killed, injured, or captured soldiers • Backcountry – a thinly populated area between the coastal towns and the Appalachian Mountains • Pioneers – the first Europeans to settle the backcountry
Bonus Questions • What was the Great Awakening? • How did the Great Awakening affect society and politics? • Name one of the leaders of the Scientific Revolution • State 3 facts about Benjamin Franklin
Today’s Topics • 5.1 – Trouble on the Frontier • 5.2 – Consequences of the French and Indian War
King Phillip’s War • Metacomet was a main chief of the Wampanoag tribe, his father made a longstanding peace with the Pilgrims • Metacomet tried to live in peace with the English, buying English clothes and taking the English name Phillip • Eventually, with the Iroquois pushing his people from the west and the English pushing from the east, he fought back • The war between the Wampanoag and the English colonists is called King Phillip’s War
King Phillips War • Both sides attacked each other’s settlements • 600 settlers die along with 3,000 Indians • Metacomet is shot through the heart in Rhode Island • After his death, his head is mounted on the entrance to Fort Plymouth and his body was cut up and put in the trees – his head remains there for 20 years • Metacomet’s wife and children are sold into slavery in Bermuda
King Phillip’s War • Some Native groups helped the English fight against Metacomet • French colonists traded and allied with the Algonquian people • English colonists traded and allied with the Iroquois league • Native Americans’ #1 goal was always independence
Conflicts with France • In the late 1600s, France and England both wanted control over Europe and North America • They fought a series of wars • King William’s War – 1689 to 1697 • Queen Anne’s War – 1702 to 1713 • Spain and France vs. England • Each side had Native American Allies • King George’s War – 1740s • Both sides were still competing for the Ohio River Valley and Great Lakes area in the 1750s
Conflicts With France • The English wanted the Ohio River Valley and Great Lakes area for settlement • The French believed settlements would ruin their profitable trade with Indians in the area • This trade was called The Middle Ground • The French build 3 forts to keep the English out • When the English start building forts along the Ohio River in 1754 – the French and Indian War began
The French and Indian War Begins • The French destroy an English fort and build Fort Duquesne • George Washington attempts to build another English fort and is forced to surrender • Fighting also began in Europe – that fighting is called the Seven Years’ War
The French and Indian War • The British started off poorly – General Edward Braddock tries to attack Fort Duquesne and is ambushed – 900 of his 1,400 men are killed • Eventually the British begin to win and in 1759 they capture Quebec – the capital of New France • Fighting continues until 1763 with the British winning most of the battles
The Treaty of Paris • In 1763 the Treaty of Paris was the peace treaty that ended the French and Indian (or Seven Years”) war • Britain gained land in this treaty, afterward they owned Canada and everything east of the Mississippi River except New Orleans • Britain also received Florida from Spain • Spain now owned everything west of the Mississippi River
The Treaty of Paris’ Effect on Native Americans • Native Americans were considered an enemy because many allied with the French (some allied with England but that didn’t matter to most people) • Native Americans lost the power to play countries off of one another (play-off politics) • The British now felt that they had the right to all Native lands east of the Mississippi River (formerly “owned” by France)
The Frontier • Colonists set up most of the early settlements along the eastern coast • To the west was a huge frontier • Europeans slowly moved west into this frontier, also called the backcountry • The people who moved into these areas were called pioneers • After the French and Indian War, settlers began moving west in greater numbers • Many crossed the Appalachians into the Ohio River Valley • Towns were small
Conflict in the Ohio River Valley • After the Treaty of Paris, Britain replaced France as the European power in the Ohio River Valley and in the Great Lakes • Unlike the French, the British want to build settlements • Native Americans begin to join together to resist the British
Chief Pontiac • Ottawa Chief • Leader of Pontiac’s Rebellion (1763 – 1766) • A group of Indians attack British forts in the Ohio River Valley/Great Lakes area • In one month they capture or destroy 7 forts • The Indians fail to take Fort Detroit and Fort Pitt, two very important forts • In 1766, Pontiac surrenders
The Proclamation of 1763 • Fighting with Native Americans worried British leaders who didn’t want more fighting or their trade disrupted • King George III signs the Proclamation of 1763 which banned the British from settling west of the Appalachian Mountains • It also called for those living in the Ohio River valley to “remove themselves from such settlements” • The Proclamation was difficult to enforce, many people disobeyed the law – this showed the colonists unhappiness with British attempts to control them