
View - OhioLINK Electronic Theses and Dissertations Center
... Indian tribes who lived in the Illinois Country did not perceive its potential and cared little about its yield until the French arrived in 1699 to instruct them.1 The French alone among Europeans understood the country and inhabitants along the great river. They brought Old World peasant folkways a ...
... Indian tribes who lived in the Illinois Country did not perceive its potential and cared little about its yield until the French arrived in 1699 to instruct them.1 The French alone among Europeans understood the country and inhabitants along the great river. They brought Old World peasant folkways a ...
Petite Politique: The British, French, Iroquois, and Everyday Power
... of no man’s land demarcating the unofficial border between the French and British empires, the priest and the Iroquois visited Genesee Falls. The excursion to the scenic waterfall involved an encounter with a multitude of rattlesnakes, forty-two of which were killed by the Indians, who remained unsc ...
... of no man’s land demarcating the unofficial border between the French and British empires, the priest and the Iroquois visited Genesee Falls. The excursion to the scenic waterfall involved an encounter with a multitude of rattlesnakes, forty-two of which were killed by the Indians, who remained unsc ...
Curriculum Map - Crawford Central School District
... World Empire led to the creation of enormous wealth for Spain but decimated Native culture. ...
... World Empire led to the creation of enormous wealth for Spain but decimated Native culture. ...
Emergence and Progression of Acadian Ethnic and Political Identities
... after the first winter. Although the settlement was not successful, Rudin (2009) notes that this settlement presented important foundations for relationships between Acadians and local Aboriginal populations; however, it was not with the Mi’kmaq, but with the Passamaquoddy. The Passamaquoddy aided t ...
... after the first winter. Although the settlement was not successful, Rudin (2009) notes that this settlement presented important foundations for relationships between Acadians and local Aboriginal populations; however, it was not with the Mi’kmaq, but with the Passamaquoddy. The Passamaquoddy aided t ...
8/21/16 1 I. Congress Drafts George Washington • Second
... • London officials adopted intricate scheme to capture Hudson River valley in 1777: –If successful, would sever New England from rest of the states and paralyze American cause: • General John Burgoyne would push down Lake Champlain route from Canada • General Howe’s troops would advance up Hudson an ...
... • London officials adopted intricate scheme to capture Hudson River valley in 1777: –If successful, would sever New England from rest of the states and paralyze American cause: • General John Burgoyne would push down Lake Champlain route from Canada • General Howe’s troops would advance up Hudson an ...
chapter-3-lecture-notes
... The earliest known view of New Amsterdam, published in 1651. Indian traders are shown arriving with their goods in a dugout canoe of distinctive design known to have been produced by the native people of Long Island Sound. Twenty-five years after its founding, the Dutch settlement still occupies on ...
... The earliest known view of New Amsterdam, published in 1651. Indian traders are shown arriving with their goods in a dugout canoe of distinctive design known to have been produced by the native people of Long Island Sound. Twenty-five years after its founding, the Dutch settlement still occupies on ...
Chapter 3 PPT
... The earliest known view of New Amsterdam, published in 1651. Indian traders are shown arriving with their goods in a dugout canoe of distinctive design known to have been produced by the native people of Long Island Sound. Twenty-five years after its founding, the Dutch settlement still occupies on ...
... The earliest known view of New Amsterdam, published in 1651. Indian traders are shown arriving with their goods in a dugout canoe of distinctive design known to have been produced by the native people of Long Island Sound. Twenty-five years after its founding, the Dutch settlement still occupies on ...
Exploration and Technology
... Americans that the Pilgrims met were helpful to them. An Abenaki named welcomed the Pilgrims. He brought a Wampanoag named ...
... Americans that the Pilgrims met were helpful to them. An Abenaki named welcomed the Pilgrims. He brought a Wampanoag named ...
Ch. 8 Bailey PPT
... • London officials adopted intricate scheme to capture Hudson River valley in 1777: – If successful, would sever New England from rest of the states and paralyze American cause: • General John Burgoyne would push down Lake Champlain route from Canada • General Howe’s troops would advance up Hudson a ...
... • London officials adopted intricate scheme to capture Hudson River valley in 1777: – If successful, would sever New England from rest of the states and paralyze American cause: • General John Burgoyne would push down Lake Champlain route from Canada • General Howe’s troops would advance up Hudson a ...
Declaration of Independence
... – their independence not achieved until conflict became a multipower world war too much for Britain to handle – from 1778 to 1783, France provided rebels with guns, money, equipment, and armed forces ...
... – their independence not achieved until conflict became a multipower world war too much for Britain to handle – from 1778 to 1783, France provided rebels with guns, money, equipment, and armed forces ...
Slide 1 - Brookville Local Schools
... • On February 6, 1778, France offered the Americans a treaty of alliance • The young republic concluded its first entangling military alliance and would soon regret it • The Treaty with France constituted an official recognition of America’s independence • Both allies bound themselves together to se ...
... • On February 6, 1778, France offered the Americans a treaty of alliance • The young republic concluded its first entangling military alliance and would soon regret it • The Treaty with France constituted an official recognition of America’s independence • Both allies bound themselves together to se ...
File - AP US History Class Dearborn High
... • On February 6, 1778, France offered the Americans a treaty of alliance • The young republic concluded its first entangling military alliance and would soon regret it • The Treaty with France constituted an official recognition of America’s independence • Both allies bound themselves together to se ...
... • On February 6, 1778, France offered the Americans a treaty of alliance • The young republic concluded its first entangling military alliance and would soon regret it • The Treaty with France constituted an official recognition of America’s independence • Both allies bound themselves together to se ...
Transplantations and Borderlands - History 1110: UNITED STATES
... called King Philip by the English, had become sachem of this group of tribes after the death of his older brother, Wamsutta, who had maintained an uneasy truce with the colonists for the benefit of trade. • Metacomet distrusted the colonists and negotiated an alliance with many of the region’s tribe ...
... called King Philip by the English, had become sachem of this group of tribes after the death of his older brother, Wamsutta, who had maintained an uneasy truce with the colonists for the benefit of trade. • Metacomet distrusted the colonists and negotiated an alliance with many of the region’s tribe ...
Discovery - HistoryOfTheCosmos
... Columbus thought he had reached Asia, unaware he was exploring a new continent. Pedro Alvares Cabral: Portuguese navigator and explorer who explored what is now Brazil. While making a trip to India on April, 22, 1500 his fleet was forced off course by weather and he reached what is now the state of ...
... Columbus thought he had reached Asia, unaware he was exploring a new continent. Pedro Alvares Cabral: Portuguese navigator and explorer who explored what is now Brazil. While making a trip to India on April, 22, 1500 his fleet was forced off course by weather and he reached what is now the state of ...
Chapter 2: Colonizing America, 1519-1733
... region of North America, Hernando de Soto took a large expedition into the region north of Florida. De Soto’s expedition explored parts of what are today North Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama, Arkansas, and Texas. As they crisscrossed the region, the Spanish killed many Native Americans and raided thei ...
... region of North America, Hernando de Soto took a large expedition into the region north of Florida. De Soto’s expedition explored parts of what are today North Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama, Arkansas, and Texas. As they crisscrossed the region, the Spanish killed many Native Americans and raided thei ...
Unit 2 : Life in the Colonies
... In 1754, the French made good on their claim by building a fort where the city of Pittsburgh stands today. They called it Fort Duquesne (du-KANE). ...
... In 1754, the French made good on their claim by building a fort where the city of Pittsburgh stands today. They called it Fort Duquesne (du-KANE). ...
Religion, Culture - Eisenhower Junior High School
... I n her writings and activities, Eliza Lucas Pinckney celebrated a new American spirit. This spirit signaled that Americans were beginning to view themselves differently from the way Great Britain viewed them. Trouble was brewing in England-and in the colonies-during the mid-1600s. England's monarch ...
... I n her writings and activities, Eliza Lucas Pinckney celebrated a new American spirit. This spirit signaled that Americans were beginning to view themselves differently from the way Great Britain viewed them. Trouble was brewing in England-and in the colonies-during the mid-1600s. England's monarch ...
8th Grade - Tangipahoa Parish School System
... What stopped Cartier from searching for a water route through the North American continent? Rapids on the St. Lawrence River forced him to turn back. What area of North America did Henry Hudson claim for the Dutch? Hudson River Valley presidio – a Spanish fort hacienda – a large estate where cattle ...
... What stopped Cartier from searching for a water route through the North American continent? Rapids on the St. Lawrence River forced him to turn back. What area of North America did Henry Hudson claim for the Dutch? Hudson River Valley presidio – a Spanish fort hacienda – a large estate where cattle ...
A Store Almost in Sight - Iowa State University Digital Repository
... Even as the region was being transferred to Spain, the city of St. Louis was founded in 1763. St. Louis sat in the middle of a vast wilderness, at the meeting point of two of the greatest rivers on the continent. The town operated as a free-trade zone, outside the boundaries of French restrictions a ...
... Even as the region was being transferred to Spain, the city of St. Louis was founded in 1763. St. Louis sat in the middle of a vast wilderness, at the meeting point of two of the greatest rivers on the continent. The town operated as a free-trade zone, outside the boundaries of French restrictions a ...
Severing the Bonds of Empire: 1754–1774
... In the mid-eighteenth century, the British colonies along the Atlantic seaboard were surrounded by potentially hostile neighbors: Indians, the Spanish in Florida and the Gulf of Mexico, and the French along the rivers and lakes stretching from the St. Lawrence to the Mississippi. Spanish outposts po ...
... In the mid-eighteenth century, the British colonies along the Atlantic seaboard were surrounded by potentially hostile neighbors: Indians, the Spanish in Florida and the Gulf of Mexico, and the French along the rivers and lakes stretching from the St. Lawrence to the Mississippi. Spanish outposts po ...
File - perkins 8th grade
... • Sir Walter Raleigh sent about 100 men to settle on Roanoke Island off the coast of present-day North Carolina in 1585. • After the difficult winter there, the colonists returned to England. ...
... • Sir Walter Raleigh sent about 100 men to settle on Roanoke Island off the coast of present-day North Carolina in 1585. • After the difficult winter there, the colonists returned to England. ...
Social Studies Summer Assignment 2010 Boyer Chapter 2
... of rural Europeans to towns and cities. European towns were numerous but small, typically with several thousand inhabitants each. A great me tropolis like London, whose population ballooned from fifty-five thousand in 1550 to two hundred thou sand in 1600, was quite exceptional. But all towns were ...
... of rural Europeans to towns and cities. European towns were numerous but small, typically with several thousand inhabitants each. A great me tropolis like London, whose population ballooned from fifty-five thousand in 1550 to two hundred thou sand in 1600, was quite exceptional. But all towns were ...
Footsteps to the Revolution (Ranking)
... British and colonists. This struggle was over the area of land known as the Ohio territory and pitted French and many Native American tribes against the British and the colonists. For the first three years of the war, colonists, who were virtually left alone to fight, fared poorly. Once British regu ...
... British and colonists. This struggle was over the area of land known as the Ohio territory and pitted French and many Native American tribes against the British and the colonists. For the first three years of the war, colonists, who were virtually left alone to fight, fared poorly. Once British regu ...
US HISTORY
... – three ships (Susan Constant, Godspeed, & Discovery) arrive in Chesapeake Bay & sailed up one of the rivers until they found a suitable spot for settlement Named the settlement “Jamestown” and the river the “James River” Very difficult to survive...Capt. John Smith made the colonists work (farm ...
... – three ships (Susan Constant, Godspeed, & Discovery) arrive in Chesapeake Bay & sailed up one of the rivers until they found a suitable spot for settlement Named the settlement “Jamestown” and the river the “James River” Very difficult to survive...Capt. John Smith made the colonists work (farm ...
The Road to Independence
... Cities such as Cahokia depended on a combination of hunting, foraging, trading, and agriculture for their food and supplies. Influenced by the thriving societies to the south, they evolved into complex hierarchical societies that took slaves and practiced human sacrifice. In what is now the southwes ...
... Cities such as Cahokia depended on a combination of hunting, foraging, trading, and agriculture for their food and supplies. Influenced by the thriving societies to the south, they evolved into complex hierarchical societies that took slaves and practiced human sacrifice. In what is now the southwes ...
Queen Anne's War
Queen Anne's War (1702–1713), as the North American theater of the War of the Spanish Succession was known in the British colonies, was the second in a series of French and Indian Wars fought between France and England, later Great Britain, in North America for control of the continent. The War of the Spanish Succession was primarily fought in Europe. In addition to the two main combatants, the war also involved numerous Native American tribes allied with each nation, and Spain, which was allied with France. It was also known as the Third Indian War or in French as the Second Intercontinental War.The war was fought on three fronts: Spanish Florida and the English Province of Carolina were each subjected to attacks from the other, and the English engaged the French based at Mobile in what was essentially a proxy war involving primarily allied Native Americans on both sides. The southern war, although it did not result in significant territorial changes, had the effect of nearly wiping out the Native population of Spanish Florida, including parts of present-day southern Georgia, and destroying Spain's network of missions in the area. The English colonies of New England fought with French and Native American forces based in Acadia and Canada. Quebec City was repeatedly targeted (but never successfully reached) by British expeditions, and the Acadian capital Port Royal was taken in 1710. The French and Wabanaki Confederacy sought to thwart New England expansion into Acadia, whose border New France defined as the Kennebec River in southern Maine. Toward this end, they executed raids against targets in Massachusetts (including present-day Maine), most famously raiding Deerfield in 1704. On Newfoundland, English colonists based at St. John's disputed control of the island with the French based at Plaisance. Most of the conflict consisted of economically destructive raids against the other side's settlements. The French successfully captured St. John's in 1709, but the British quickly reoccupied it after the French abandoned it.Following a preliminary peace in 1712, the Treaty of Utrecht ended the war in 1713. It resulted in the French cession of claims to the territories of Hudson Bay, Acadia, and Newfoundland to Britain, while retaining Cape Breton and other islands in the Gulf of St. Lawrence. Some of its terms were ambiguous, and concerns of various Native American tribes were not included in the treaty, setting the stage for future conflicts.