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(1378) The FRENCH AND INDIAN War (The Seven Years' War) [APUSH Review Unit 3 Topic 2] Period 3: 1754-1800

Introduction

  • Overview of the video topic: French and Indian War (1754-1763)

  • Part of the broader Seven Years’ War

Misunderstanding of the Conflict

  • Common misconception: Conflict between the French and Indians

    • Correct view: British vs. French, with French allied to several American Indian tribes

Causes of the French and Indian War

  • Context: A smaller conflict within the global Seven Years’ War

  • Territorial disputes in the Ohio River Valley between British colonists and French.

  • Key figure: George Washington

    • Appointed as Lieutenant Colonel in the Virginia militia

    • Sent to warn French of British claims in the Ohio Valley

    • Incident with French commander and Fort Duquesne (1754) led to escalating tensions

Albany Congress (1754)

  • Purpose: Discuss organized colonial response to defense, trade, and expansion

  • Involvement of the Iroquois Confederacy for potential alliance

  • Benjamin Franklin's Albany Plan of Union introduced

    • Proposed council of representatives from the colonies

    • Rejected mainly due to taxation concerns

    • Important for laying groundwork for future revolutionary Congress

Initial Phase of the War

  • Early struggles for the British colonists; French had early military successes

  • Unpopular British policies worsened colonial relations:

    • Forced impressment of American men into Royal Navy

    • Quartering British troops in colonial homes, leading to resentment

Conclusion of the War

  • War ended in 1763 with the Treaty of Paris

  • Major outcomes of the treaty:

    • Spain ceded Florida to Britain

    • French were removed entirely from North America

    • Spanish gained control of lands west of the Mississippi River

    • British gained Ohio River Valley

Effects of the French and Indian War

  • Territorial Expansion and Conflict

    • Increased American colonial migration westward into Ohio Valley

    • Led to intensifying conflicts with Native Americans (e.g., Pontiac’s raids)

    • British response: Proclamation Line of 1763 forbidding westward migration

      • Colonists ignored this and pushed west, causing further resentment

  • Financial Consequences

    • British national debt doubled due to war expenses

    • Cost of administering colonies increased significantly

    • British Parliament's response: Raised taxes on American colonies, deepening resentment

Conclusion

  • The French and Indian War set the stage for colonial discontent leading to future conflicts.