The Chronicles of America Series, Volume 10Yale University Press, 1918 |
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Page 1
... England when these two states first confronted each other in America . The conflict for the New World was but the continuation of an age - long antagonism in the Old , intensified now by the savagery of the wilderness and by new dreams ...
... England when these two states first confronted each other in America . The conflict for the New World was but the continuation of an age - long antagonism in the Old , intensified now by the savagery of the wilderness and by new dreams ...
Page 2
... England remained subservient to their cousin the Bour- bon King of France and at one with him in religious faith . But after the fall of the Stuarts France bitterly denounced the new King , William of Orange , as both a heretic and a ...
... England remained subservient to their cousin the Bour- bon King of France and at one with him in religious faith . But after the fall of the Stuarts France bitterly denounced the new King , William of Orange , as both a heretic and a ...
Page 3
for renewed preparation ; and the conflict ended only when France yielded to England the mastery of her empire in America . It is the story of this struggle , covering a period of seventy years , which is told in the following pages ...
for renewed preparation ; and the conflict ended only when France yielded to England the mastery of her empire in America . It is the story of this struggle , covering a period of seventy years , which is told in the following pages ...
Page 5
... England had driven from her shores her Catholic king and when France's colony across the sea seemed to be in grave danger from the Iroquois allies of the English , Frontenac was sent again to Quebec to subdue these savages and , if he ...
... England had driven from her shores her Catholic king and when France's colony across the sea seemed to be in grave danger from the Iroquois allies of the English , Frontenac was sent again to Quebec to subdue these savages and , if he ...
Page 13
... England would be so weakened that in time it too would fall . Such was the plan of conquest which came from the brilliant chambers at Versailles . New York did not fall . The expedition so carefully planned came to nothing . Frontenac ...
... England would be so weakened that in time it too would fall . Such was the plan of conquest which came from the brilliant chambers at Versailles . New York did not fall . The expedition so carefully planned came to nothing . Frontenac ...
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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