The Chronicles of America Series, Volume 10Yale University Press, 1918 |
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Page 6
... tribes . Some of the natives were by no means without political capacity . On the contrary , they were long clever enough to pit English against French to their own advantage as the real sovereigns in North America . One of them , whose ...
... tribes . Some of the natives were by no means without political capacity . On the contrary , they were long clever enough to pit English against French to their own advantage as the real sovereigns in North America . One of them , whose ...
Page 7
... tribes trade with the French or English soon became a vital necessity . From the far northwest for a thousand miles to the bleak shores of Hudson Bay , from the banks of the Mississippi to the banks of the St. Lawrence and the Hudson ...
... tribes trade with the French or English soon became a vital necessity . From the far northwest for a thousand miles to the bleak shores of Hudson Bay , from the banks of the Mississippi to the banks of the St. Lawrence and the Hudson ...
Page 8
... tribes , held the lands bordering on Lake Ontario which commanded the approaches from both the Hudson and the St. Lawrence by the Great Lakes to the spacious regions of the West . The five tribes known as the Iroquois had shown marked ...
... tribes , held the lands bordering on Lake Ontario which commanded the approaches from both the Hudson and the St. Lawrence by the Great Lakes to the spacious regions of the West . The five tribes known as the Iroquois had shown marked ...
Page 14
... tribes that prudence dictated alliance with the French and not with the English . Frontenac wrote a tale of blood . There were three war parties ; one set out from Montreal against New York , and one from Three Rivers and one from ...
... tribes that prudence dictated alliance with the French and not with the English . Frontenac wrote a tale of blood . There were three war parties ; one set out from Montreal against New York , and one from Three Rivers and one from ...
Page 22
... tribes of the Iroquois . On the journey from the south shore of Lake Ontario , the old man of seventy - five was unable to walk over the rough portages and fifty Indians shouting songs of joy carried his great canoe on their shoulders ...
... tribes of the Iroquois . On the journey from the south shore of Lake Ontario , the old man of seventy - five was unable to walk over the rough portages and fifty Indians shouting songs of joy carried his great canoe on their shoulders ...
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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