Transcript for:
Overview of the French and Indian War

Well hey there and welcome back to Heimler’s  History. And welcome to the first topic video   for Unit 3 of the AP U.S. History curriculum. Now  this unit covers the time period 1754 to 1800,   and in this video we’re going to begin by  talking about the French and Indian War,   so if them brain cows are ready  to get milked, let’s get to it. Now, before we begin let me mention that if  you’re needing more help than these videos   note guides to follow along, practice  questions, and everything you need   to get an A in your class and a five on  your exam. I really think it’ll help you,   and it helps support the work I’m doing here, so  if that’s something you’re into, check it out. Okay, the French and Indian War. If I  was in class, the first thing I would   ask my students is to name the two sides  in this war, and inevitably someone would   raise their hand and tell me that the French  were fighting the Indians. And then I would   smile and gently correct them by saying,  WRONG. I’m kidding, I love my students. Anyway, this was not a conflict between the  French and the Indians. It was a conflict   between the British and the French, and the French  allied themselves with several groups of American   Indians, and to be fair, so did the British, but  their alliances weren’t as important for this   conflict. So it’s the French and Indians versus  the British. Okay, so with that established,   let me tell you what we’ll be trying to  accomplish in this video. Basically we’re   just trying to explain the causes and effects  of the French and Indian War. Okay, easy. So let’s start with the causes. Now  the first thing you need to know is   that the French and Indian War was actually  a smaller conflict in the context of a much   larger global conflict between the  British and French called the Seven   Years’ War. So the Seven Years’  War was the worldwide conflict,   and the French and Indian War was the part of  that conflict which occurred on American soil. So the cause of this war was pretty simple:  the British American colonists were steadily   encroaching on land in the Ohio River Valley  that the French laid claim to. And here’s where   I introduce you to a young and scrappy Virginian  officer named George Washington. By 1753 he had   been appointed Lieutenant Colonel in the Virginia  militia, and as such, Virginia’s governor sent   Washington west to warn the French of encroaching  on British holdings in the Ohio River Valley. The French commander whom Washington met rebuffed  him—“Consider yourself rebuffed—and six months   later this same commander took control of  a British post in Pennsylvania called Fort   Duquesne. And so fresh from chopping down a cherry  tree (don’t write that down, that’s not real)   Washington, with help from his American Indian  allies, led a surprise attack on the fort in 1754   and gained it back. And then two months later, the  French, salty about their own rebuff at the hands   of the man whom they rebuffed, led a much larger  force against the fort and took it right back. Now why is any of this important?  Because this was the cause of the   French and Indian War. Territorial  disputes in the Ohio River Valley   between the French and the British  caused this war to begin in 1754. Now even before Washington was defeated  at Fort Duquesne, a congress was meeting   to try to figure out British colonial defense  against the French and Indians. It was known as   the Albany Congress or the Albany Convention.  Here, delegates from several of the British   colonies met to discuss a more organized  colonial response to frontier defense, trade,   and westward expansion. They also invited  a delegation from the Iroquois Confederacy   to join them with the hopes of allying with this  powerful Indian association, but I guess they were   more like a token presence because the delegates  didn’t really involve them in the discussions. Side note: you may be wondering why the American  Indians were willing to ally themselves with   either side at all. Like, weren’t the European  settlers taking over their ancestral lands?   Why in the world are they making friends with  them? Well, for most American Indian groups,   they could see that the best chance of maintaining  some modicum of control over their lands lay in   the perpetual conflict between European powers.  Like, as long as these two European nations were   fighting each other, the American Indians had a  chance to maintain some control. What they feared   most is ONE of these European nations gaining  control of the North America. But I’m sure   they don’t have anything to worry about,  that’s not going to happen, right? Right? Anyway, it was at the Albany Congress that our  boy Benjamin Franklin took the opportunity to   introduce his Albany Plan of Union. Under  this plan the colonies would establish a   council of representatives to decide on those  matters I already mentioned: frontier defense,   trade, and westward expansion. Now  this plan was ultimately rejected,   not least because the taxation  it required to exist stunk in   the nostrils of the delegates. But the  reason it was important is that it laid   the foundation for the future revolutionary  Congress, on which, more in another video. Now, back to the war. At first the French kind of  mopped the floor with the British colonists, and   it was going very badly for them. Add to  that, as the Seven Years’ War expanded more   and more into a global conflict, the British  implemented policies that ended up being very   unpopular with their American colonists. First,  the British cranked up the forced impressment   of American men to join the ranks of the Royal  Navy. That’s one point in the lasting colonial   resentment category. Second, throughout the  war the British quartered troops in colonial   homes. And if anyone resisted feeding and  housing soldiers at their own expense,   they were threatened with violence. That’s another  point in the lasting colonial resentment category. Now as the war dragged on, eventually King  George was getting a little twitchy about how   much it was costing, and so he opened formal  peace negotiations with the French. And the   war was ended in 1763 with the signing of  the Peace of Paris. Now this treaty had   massive results for the American colonists.  First, Spain ceded Florida to the British.   Second, the French were ousted from the North  American continent and the Spanish were given   control of the former French lands west of  the Mississippi. Third, all the land east   of the Mississippi River, which is to say, the  Ohio River Valley, was granted to the British. And now is where we start talking about the  effects of the French and Indian War, and there   were two main consequences I need to mention.  First, because the land in the Ohio River Valley   was under British control now, American colonists  hungry for more land began to push westward. And,   as you can imagine, this migration intensified  conflicts with the Native Americans who lived   there. And when news of this new land arrangement  reached the Ottowa leader Pontiac, he led raids   against the encroaching colonists in Detroit and  other military forts in Virginia and Pennsylvania. And seeking to protect their colonists from  more violence with the natives of the region,   the British Parliament established the  Proclamation Line of 1763 which forbade   colonists from migrating west across  the Appalachian mountains and taking   land in the Ohio River Valley. But  the colonists were like, YEAH RIGHT.   And went ahead and migrated west anyway. And their  reasoning was that this war was fought on their   soil at the cost of their blood, and therefore  they were entitled to the spoils of that war. But   when the British said, nuh uh, that put another  point in the lasting colonial resentment category. And the second major consequence of  the war was that it was expensive. As   a result of fighting this war, the British  national debt roughly doubled. Add to that,   the cost of running the colonies increased  something like five-fold. And so in order   to pay for all of that, the British Parliament  decided to raise the revenue by raising taxes   on the American colonies—BIG MISTAKE—and to  see why that mistake added yet another point   to the lasting colonial resentment score,  you’ll have to join me for the next video. Alright, thanks for hanging out with me and  that’s what you need to know about Unit 3   topic 2 of the AP U.S. History Curriculum.  As I mentioned before, the Ultimate Review   Packet is your friend when it comes to doing  well in this class and on your exam in May,   so if you’d like that help and you’d like to  support this work, then click here to grab it.   And if you want me to keep making these videos for  you, then let me know by subscribing, Heimler out.