The Chronicles of America Series, Volume 10Yale University Press, 1918 |
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Page 15
... Canadian noblesse in the party . In the dead of night they creep up to the paling which surrounds the village . The signal is given and the village is awakened by the terrible war - whoop . Doors are smashed by axes and hatchets , and ...
... Canadian noblesse in the party . In the dead of night they creep up to the paling which surrounds the village . The signal is given and the village is awakened by the terrible war - whoop . Doors are smashed by axes and hatchets , and ...
Page 22
... Canadian settlers . Frontenac made his last great stroke in July , 1696 , when he led more than two thousand men through the primeval forest to destroy the villages of the Onondaga and the Oneida tribes of the Iroquois . On the journey ...
... Canadian settlers . Frontenac made his last great stroke in July , 1696 , when he led more than two thousand men through the primeval forest to destroy the villages of the Onondaga and the Oneida tribes of the Iroquois . On the journey ...
Page 28
... Canadian Intendant , Du- chesneau , writing from Quebec to complain of the despotic conduct of the Governor , Frontenac , paid a tribute to " the King our master , of whom the whole world stands in awe , who has just given law to all ...
... Canadian Intendant , Du- chesneau , writing from Quebec to complain of the despotic conduct of the Governor , Frontenac , paid a tribute to " the King our master , of whom the whole world stands in awe , who has just given law to all ...
Page 29
... Canadians , it was said , were a brave and warlike people , trained to endure hardship , while the English colonists were undis- ciplined , ignorant of war , and cowardly . The link between them and the motherland , said these observers ...
... Canadians , it was said , were a brave and warlike people , trained to endure hardship , while the English colonists were undis- ciplined , ignorant of war , and cowardly . The link between them and the motherland , said these observers ...
Page 35
... Canadians , but from the capacious , if now usually depleted , coffers of the French court at Versailles . In the English colonies the legislatures preferred , of all political struggles , one about money with the Governor , the ...
... Canadians , but from the capacious , if now usually depleted , coffers of the French court at Versailles . In the English colonies the legislatures preferred , of all political struggles , one about money with the Governor , the ...
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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