Broadcast: May 1, 2003
By Nancy Steinbach and Paul Thompson
VOICE ONE:
This is Rich Kleinfeldt.
VOICE TWO:
And this is Sarah Long with the MAKING
OF A NATION, A V-O-A Special English
program about the history of the United
States.
Today, we tell about the conflicts
among the nations in Europe during
the eighteenth century and how they
affected North America.
VOICE ONE:
During the Eighteenth Century, Spain,
France and Britain controlled land
in North America. Spain controlled
Florida. France was powerful in the
northern and central areas. Britain
controlled the east. All three nations
knew they could not exist together
peacefully in North America. The situation
could only be settled by war.
The powerful European nations already
were fighting each other for land
and money all over the world. These
small wars continued for more than
one-hundred years. They were called
King William’s War, Queen Anne’s War,
King George’s War and the French and
Indian War.
VOICE TWO:
The French and Indian War was fought
to decide if Britain or France would
be the strong power in North America.
France and its colonists and Indian
allies fought against Britain, its
colonists1 and Indian allies2.
The war began with conflicts about
land. French explorers had been the
first Europeans in the areas around
the Great Lakes and the Ohio and Mississippi
rivers. France had sent traders and
trappers to these territories and
had established trading centers there.
Britain claimed the same land. When
the king gave land in North America
to someone, the land was considered
to extend from east coast to west
coast, even though no one knew where
the west coast was. The land along
the east coast had become crowded,
and settlers were moving west. White
people were destroying the Indians'
hunting areas. And Indians became
worried that they would lose the use
of their land.
VOICE ONE:
The Indian tribes may have been able
to resist the people moving west if
they had been united. But their own
conflicts kept the Indian groups apart.
When Britain and France started fighting
each other, some Indians helped the
British. Others helped the French.
The French settlers lived mainly in
what was called New France. Today
it is part of Canada. Life there was
different from life in the British
colonies to the south. There was no
religious freedom, for example. All
settlers in French territories had
to be French and belong to the Roman
Catholic Church. So, many French people
who belonged to Protestant churches
settled in the British colonies.
France also did not like the fact
that the British paid the Indians
high prices for animal furs. France
was more interested in the fur trade
than in settling the land. The British
hurt the French traders' business
when they bought fur from the Indians.
VOICE TWO:
One of the French trading forts3 was
built in the area where the city of
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania is today.
The French called it Fort Duquesne
(Doo-kane). The British claimed it
was in Virginia and that the land
belonged to them. In Seventeen-Fifty-Four,
the governor of Virginia sent a twenty-one-year-old
colonist named George Washington to
tell the French to get out. This was
the same George Washington who would
later become the first President of
the United States.
The French refused to leave Fort Duquesne.
So Washington and one-hundred-fifty
men tried to force them out. They
attacked a group of Frenchmen and
killed ten of them. The French and
Indian War had begun.
VOICE ONE:
British troops under the command of
General Edward Braddock joined George
Washington at Fort Duquesne. The British
general expected to fight the way
battles were fought in Europe. There,
troops lined up on open fields and
fired their weapons as they marched
toward each other. The French and
Indians did not fight this way. They
hid in the woods. They wore clothes
that made them difficult to see. They
shot at the British from behind trees.
The British had more troops than the
other side. But the French and Indians
won the battle of Fort Duquesne. General
Braddock was killed.
VOICE TWO:
Most of the French and Indian War
was fought along two lakes in an area
of New York state near the border
with Canada.
One was Lake George. The other, Lake
Champlain. Lake Champlain north of
Lake George. It reaches almost all
the way to the city of Montreal in
Canada.
These lakes provided the best way
to move troops and supplies during
the French and Indian war. Few roads
existed in North America at that time.
The military4 force which controlled
the lakes and rivers controlled much
of North America.
VOICE ONE:
The French had military bases in the
cities of Quebec and Montreal. The
British had military bases along New
York's Hudson River. The area between
them became the great battle ground.
Fighting increased after the British
defeated the French near Lake George
in the last months of Seventeen-Fifty-Five.
The French then built a new military
base to control Lake Champlain and
the surrounding area.
The French military base was at the
southern end of Lake Champlain. They
built a strong camp, the kind called
a fort. hey called it Fort Carillon(Car-ee-own).
The fort would control Lake Champlain
and the area needed to reach the northern
part of Lake George. The fort was
designed to provide a strong defense
against attack. The French built two
big walls of logs, several meters
apart. The area between the walls
was filled with dirt. Later, a strong
stone front was added. Troops inside
the walls were well protected. The
British built a similar fort at the
southern end of Lake George. They
called it Fort William Henry.
VOICE TWO:
France sent one of its best military
commanders to take command of its
troops in America. His name was the
Marquis de Montcalm. General Montcalm
attacked several British forts in
Seventeen-Fifty-Seven. One of these
was Fort William Henry on Lake George.
The British commander was forced to
surrender5.
General Montcalm promised that the
British troops would be treated fairly
if they surrendered. But the Indian
allies of the French did not honor
the surrender agreement. They began
to kill British soldiers and settlers.
No one is sure how many people died.
It could have been more than one-thousand.
VOICE ONE:
In Seventeen Fifty-Eight, a strong
British force attacked Fort Carillon
on Lake Champlain. General Montcalm
was the French commander. Fort Carillon
was strong enough that the smaller
French force was able to defeat the
bigger British force. The British
withdrew, but attacked again the next
year. This time the British commander
was General Jeffery Amhurst.
Amhurst was successful. The British
defeated the French. They changed
the name of Fort Carillon to Fort
Ticonderoga. It became an important
military center in the French and
Indian War. Fort Ticonderoga would
also become important later, during
America's war for independence.
VOICE TWO:
The French and Indian war ended after
the British defeated the French in
Quebec. Britain and France signed
a treaty ending the war in Paris in
Seventeen Sixty-Three. The British
had won the French and Indian War.
They took control of the lands that
had been claimed by France.
Britain now claimed all the land from
the east coast of North America to
the Mississippi River. Everything
west of that river belonged to Spain.
France gave all its western lands
to Spain to keep the British out.
Indians still controlled most of the
western lands, except for some Spanish
colonies in Texas and New Mexico.
VOICE TWO:
Today, you can still visit the two
forts htat were so important in the
French and Indian War. Little of the
original buildings have survived.
However, both have been re-built using
the original designs. The area surrounding
both forts is very beautiful, including
the two lakes, Lake George and Lake
Champlain.
Many people spend their holidays in
this area enjoying the outdoors. The
area includes one of America's national
historical parks, Saratoga. It also
includes the Lake George Beach State
Park. Few people who visit the area
stop to remember the terrible fighting
that took place there two-hundred
fifty years ago.
VOICE ONE:
Today’s MAKING OF A NATION program
was written by Nancy Steinbach and
Paul Thompson. This is Sarah Long.
VOICE TWO:
And this is Rich Kleinfeldt. Join
us again next week for another Special
English program about the history
of the United States.
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