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French and Indian War
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Who was fighting? The French and Indian War pitted England and the American colonies against the French and some of the Indians in North America. When the war ended, France was no longer in control of Canada. The Indians that had been threatening the American colonists were defeated.
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How it started The French and Indian War was a continuation of a series of wars that had taken place between the French and British in North America. The French controlled the Mississippi River and claimed the Ohio River Valley as well. They began building forts in the area. The British started to build their own forts.
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Who was involved? The French expanded into areas that the British had claimed. In 1754, Major George Washington was sent by Virginia's governor to remove the French from Fort Duquesne (near today’s Pittsburgh). Washington came upon a French scouting party and ordered his men to open fire. Washington's men killed 12 Frenchmen and wounded 22.
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The Beginning of the War
During the first two years of the war the French and their Indian allies defeated the British numerous times. The war began poorly for the British and their colonial soldiers, when a British force led by British General Braddock tried to capture Fort Duquesne. A smaller French and Indian force succeeded in defeating the British force and General Braddock was defeated.
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British gain Control The tide of the war changed in 1756 when the British applied more resources into the battle in North America and slowly began to capture French forts. In 1759, the British won the Battle of The Plains of Abraham, which allowed them to occupy Quebec, Canada. The next year they captured Montreal, Canada and thus completed the capture of Canada, effectively ending the war in North America.
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The War Ends The War officially came to an end on February 10, 1763, with the signing of the Treaty of Paris. France officially ceded all of its holdings in North America, west of the Mississippi. The cost of the war and of controlling the newly acquired territories was high. The British looked to the colonies to help pay those costs. That began the long spiral of events that led to the American Revolution.
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