"Since the English have in their power an officer and two cadets, and, in general all the prisoners whom they took when [they] assassinated Sieur de Jumonville they now promise to send them with an escort to Fort Duquesne, situated on Belle River, and to secure the safe performance of this treaty article, as was as of the treaty ... "
- English translation of the "Articles of Capitulation" after the Battle of Fort Necessity, Article 7 - the French text of which was mistakenly signed by George Washington (who did not speak French) on 3 July 1754, in the belief that the translation given to him had been accurate (which it probably wasn't)
This documentary is about the French and Indian War, not the American Revolutionary War ...
When most people hear the phrase "the war that made America," the event they would think of is the
"American War of Independence." (Or as we call it in
America, the
"American Revolution," or the
"American Revolutionary War.") Most people would be surprised to learn, then, that this is about the
"French and Indian War" - or the
"Seven Years' War," as it's known elsewhere (including in
Canada). This war took place over a decade before the creation of the
United States, and ended some years before the first shots of the
Revolution were fired at
Lexington and Concord. It's also important for the future history of
Canada, because it turned
Canada from a
French colony into a
British colony, and thus secured the dominance of
English speakers in the region. The year
1759 is thus a controversial year in Canadian history, and it is resented bitterly by
French Canadians - not to mention the
First Nations Canadians. Nonetheless, it is
American history that is the focus here, even if the documentary is narrated by the
First Nations Canadian Graham Greene (which it is).
Battle of the Plains of Abraham - Quebec, 1759
The bitter strife of the Revolution actually had its roots in this war
At this time, the
British Crown ruled the
Eastern Seaboard of this continent, and its colonies were loyal outposts of the
British Empire. These colonies all had their own militias that took part in this struggle, but they were not terribly impressive compared to the professional
Redcoat soldiers, who
arrived from Britain in considerable numbers after the war began. These
Redcoat soldiers were the real backbone of the British presence there, and they had reason to view the colonial militias with some contempt. They were tactless enough to express this contempt more than once, and there were signs of friction between the two even during this period. The colonial governments resisted
London's attempts to pay for the war by
taxing the colonies, and they actually insisted on retaining local control over the colonial militias with regards to staffing and - even more importantly -
military strategy. The bitter strife of the
Revolution thus had its roots in this war; and the two groups' fighting alongside each other was a temporary situation that would not last.