The Chronicles of America Series, Volume 10Yale University Press, 1918 |
À l'intérieur du livre
Résultats 1-5 sur 38
Page 7
... soon came to despise their primitive implements . More and more they craved the supplies from Europe which multiplied in a hun- dred ways their strength in the conflict with na- ture and with man . To the Indian tribes trade with the ...
... soon came to despise their primitive implements . More and more they craved the supplies from Europe which multiplied in a hun- dred ways their strength in the conflict with na- ture and with man . To the Indian tribes trade with the ...
Page 15
... soon on foot . Sir William Phips of Massachusetts , the son of a poor settler on the Kennebec River , had made his first advance in life by taking up the trade of car- penter in Boston . Only when grown up had he learned to read and ...
... soon on foot . Sir William Phips of Massachusetts , the son of a poor settler on the Kennebec River , had made his first advance in life by taking up the trade of car- penter in Boston . Only when grown up had he learned to read and ...
Page 21
... Soon Phips was short of ammunition . A second time he made a landing in order to attack Quebec from the valley of the St. Charles but French regu- lars fought with militia and Indians to drive off his forces . Phips held a meeting with ...
... Soon Phips was short of ammunition . A second time he made a landing in order to attack Quebec from the valley of the St. Charles but French regu- lars fought with militia and Indians to drive off his forces . Phips held a meeting with ...
Page 27
... soon lose the meager strip , fifty miles wide , which France might yield . These dreams of power had a certain substance . It seems to us now that , from the first , the French were dreaming of the impossible . We know what has happened ...
... soon lose the meager strip , fifty miles wide , which France might yield . These dreams of power had a certain substance . It seems to us now that , from the first , the French were dreaming of the impossible . We know what has happened ...
Page 34
to the Roman communion . Suspicion of the King's designs soon became certainty and , after four years of bitter conflict with James , the in- evitable happened . The Roman Catholic Stuart King was driven from his throne and his daughter ...
to the Roman communion . Suspicion of the King's designs soon became certainty and , after four years of bitter conflict with James , the in- evitable happened . The Roman Catholic Stuart King was driven from his throne and his daughter ...
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
Expressions et termes fréquents
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