The Chronicles of America Series, Volume 10Yale University Press, 1918 |
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Page 55
... Britain . Port Royal was renamed Annapolis and Vetch was made its Governor . Three times before had the English come to Port Royal as conquerors and then gone away , but now they were to remain . Ever since that October day , when ...
... Britain . Port Royal was renamed Annapolis and Vetch was made its Governor . Three times before had the English come to Port Royal as conquerors and then gone away , but now they were to remain . Ever since that October day , when ...
Page 57
... Britain dispatched seven regiments of regulars , numbering in all five thousand five hundred men , and there were be- sides in the fleet some thousands of sailors and marines . Never before had the English sent to North America a force ...
... Britain dispatched seven regiments of regulars , numbering in all five thousand five hundred men , and there were be- sides in the fleet some thousands of sailors and marines . Never before had the English sent to North America a force ...
Page 64
... Britain had lost one of her chief assets . His name had become a terror to France . To this day , both in France and in French Canada , is sung the popular ditty " Monsieur Malbrouck est mort , " a song of delight at a report that ...
... Britain had lost one of her chief assets . His name had become a terror to France . To this day , both in France and in French Canada , is sung the popular ditty " Monsieur Malbrouck est mort , " a song of delight at a report that ...
Page 65
... Britain her claim to Acadia , Newfoundland , and Hudson Bay . She regarded this , however , as only a temporary set ... Britain would not yield Acadia , dreading chiefly perhaps the wrath of New England which had conquered Port Royal ...
... Britain her claim to Acadia , Newfoundland , and Hudson Bay . She regarded this , however , as only a temporary set ... Britain would not yield Acadia , dreading chiefly perhaps the wrath of New England which had conquered Port Royal ...
Page 66
the English colonies . While it yielded Hudson Bay to Britain , it settled nothing as to frontiers in the wilderness which stretched beyond the Great Lakes into the Far West and which had vast wealth in furs . CHAPTER IV LOUISBOURG AND ...
the English colonies . While it yielded Hudson Bay to Britain , it settled nothing as to frontiers in the wilderness which stretched beyond the Great Lakes into the Far West and which had vast wealth in furs . CHAPTER IV LOUISBOURG AND ...
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Acadians army attack Boston Bougainville Britain brothers CALIFORNIA LIBRARY Canada Canadian canoes Cape Breton Catholic Céloron Church colonists command disaster enemy England English colonies Europe farther fight flowing force Fort Beauséjour Fort La Reine Fort William Henry fortress France France's François French Frontenac frontier furs Governor of Canada Halifax harbor Hendry Hudson Bay hundred Iroquois Jesuit Jonquière journey King knew La Vérendrye Lake Champlain land Lawrence leader Lévis lish Louis XIV Louisbourg Mandan Massachusetts menace miles military minister Mississippi Montcalm Montreal mouth nearly North America Nova Scotia officers Ohio peace Phips Port Royal prairie priest prisoners Protestant Quebec reached region river sailed sailors Saint-Pierre Saskatchewan savages sent ships soldiers soon south shore surrender thought thousand took trade Treaty of Utrecht tribes troops UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Vaudreuil Vérendrye Versailles Vetch victory village waters West Western Sea westward William winter Wolfe