/7 LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. UNITED STATES OP AMERICA. A SHORT HISTORY OF THE Wars of the United States ; INCLUDING THE INDIAN AND COLONIAL WARS, THE INTER-COLONIAL WARS, REVOLUTIONARY WAR, WAR OF 1812, THE MEXICAN WAR, AND CIVIL WAR. PREPARED BY -^ -> v ASHBEL P. "fitch, Jr. 1892. ' PRESS, S2 LAFAYETTE PLACE, I Copyright, 1892. ■ BY ASHBEL P. FITCH, Jr. I. COLONIAL AND INDIAN WARS. Pequod War. 1637. CONNECTICUT. CAUSE. In the earlier part of 1636 the captain of a trading vessel was murdered by the Indians on Block Island. On hearing of this, Endicott, with a small torce of men went to Connecticut to avenge the injury. He laid waste a large section ot the Indians' country. This led to war, which was openly declared soon after. The next year the Pequod Indians endeavored to persuade the Narragansetts to unite with them in an attack upon the whites. But Roger Williams prevailed upon them riot to do so. An expedition under Capt. John Mason was sent out to attack the Pequods' strong- hold on the Mystic River. This they did at night, de- leating the Indians and burning their wigwams. The few Indians who remained were hunted down and killed. RESULT. The Pequod Tribe was utterly exterminated. II.— King Philip's War. 1675=1676. CAUSES. Philip, king of the Wampanoags, the son ot nas= sasoit, had long viewed the settlements ot the whites with a jealous eye. The white men were increasing in number daily, and the Indians became alarmed lest the little land which they still retained should be taken from them. The older chiefs had sold the land to the English, and the price had been fairly paid ; but the new generation of warriors could not understand why the white man should occupy the land of their fathers. 1675. Philip planned a confederation of the Indian tribes against the intruders. They commenced the war by attacking Swansea and killing several of its inhabitants. The Narragansetts, having been suspected of helping the hostile Indians, were attacked by the settlers and almost destroyed. 1676. Philip was at last tracked to his hiding place and shot by a faithless Indian. RESULTS. The expenses of this war were half a million dollars. Thirteen towns and six hundred dwellings lay smoul- dering in ashes. Six hundred men had fallen \n the field. Hundreds of families had been butchered in cold blood. lUit the Indian race was swept out ol New England. n. INTER=COLONIAL WARS. I.— King William's War. [689=1697. CAUSE. France having declared war against England, their colonies in America took up the quarrel. The Cana= dian Indians aided the French while the Iroquois as- sited the English. 1690. In January, a regiment of French and Indians left Montreal and directed their March to the South. A month later they arrived at Schenectady, New York. 5ixty persons were massacred. The few who escaped fled to Albany. New England was now thoroughly aroused. A Colo- nial Congress was held at New York, which resolved to conquer Canada. Two expeditions were organized. The hrst under Phipps wis to attack Port Royal, Aca= dia. The second was a combined land and naval at- tack upon Canada. The former proved successful, the latter was a complete iailure. i697. The treaty of Ryswick, Holland, which ended the war, was signed in this year. RESULTS. The direct result was nothing, for, according to the treaty, each party held the territory that it had at the beginning of the war. The indirect results were two. (i) A heavy debt was contracted by the colonists. (2) Many of their towns and villages had been destroyed by the Indians. II.— Queen Anne's War. 1702=1713. CAUSE. War having again been declared by England against France and Spain, hostilities commenced be- tween their colonies in America. The Indians made a treaty of neutrality at the begin- ning by which they promised not to take part in the fight ; but the French Jesuits persuaded them to vio- late this treaty. In midwinter the town of Deerfield, Mass., was destroyed, and the inhabitants were either tomahawked or cruelly compelled to w^alk through the snow to Canada. In Maine and New Hampshire similar barbarities were perpetrated. 1710. A combined force of English and Colonial troops attacked Port Royal and captured it. Anotherexpedi- tion which sailed against Quebec ended disastrously. 6 I7I3. The treaty ot Utrecht, Holland, put an end to the RESULTS. According to the treaty, Acadia and the Newfound- land fisheries were given to England. The colonial debt was made larger. III.— King George's War. — (George II.; 1744=1748. CAUSE. War having once more been declared between Eng= land and France, the quarrel was taken up by their colonies in the New World, 1745. The only important event which occurred during this w^ar was the capture of Louisburg by the English. This fort was considered the key to Canada, and the French had spent a vast sum of money in building it, 1748. Peace was restored by the treaty of Aix=Ia=Chapeile, a town of western Germany. RESULTS. Louisburg was given back to France. The bounda- ries between the French and English colonies were left unsettled. The European nations cared nothing tor the welfare of their distant provinces. IV.— French and Indian War. 754=1763. CAUSE. Both England and France claimed the territory west ot the Alleghany Mountains, bordering on the Ohio River. The French had established over sixty military posts along the line of the St. Lawrence, the Great Lakes and the Mississippi. They seized English sur- veyors and broke up a British post on the fliami (me a me). They built three forts, one at Presque Isle (presk el), another called Fort le Boeuf (le but), at the present site ot Waterford, and a third called Fort Ve= nango. George Washington, then a young man of twenty- one, was sent to the commander of the French forces on the Ohio, to demand the cause of these hostile pro- ceedings. After a perilous journey he arrived at the French settlement, delivered the letter, and returned safely to Virginia. The French olificer, however, gave no satisfaction. 1754. About a year previous to this, tlie Ohio Company had commenced to build a fort at the junction ol the Alleghany and Monongahela rivers, and on receiving- the French commander's reply, Dinwiddie, the Gov- ernor of Virginia, sent a force under Colonel Frye to occupy it. Before this could be done the French sent a body ol troops, who took possession of the place, fin- ished the fort, and called it Fort Duquesne. Washing= ton, who commanded the Virginian troops, hearing of this, halted at a place called Great Meadows, near which he attacked a small body ot French, and defeated them. Colonel Frye, having been killed, Washington assumed command. He built a rude stockade, which he called Fort Necessity, and collected his troops behind it. Here he was attacked by the French, and obliged to surrender. The five objective points of the war were: (i) Fort Duquesne, which protected the territory on the west ; (2) Louisburg and Acadia, which threatened New Eng- land and guarded the fisheries ; (3) Crown Point and Ticonderoga, which controlled the route to Canada ; (4) Niagara, which protected the fur trade of the Great Lakes and the West ; (5) Quebec, which was the key to the possessions of Canada. 1755. The English attacked Acadia and captured it with- out difficulty. An expedition, commanded by General Braddock, Washington serving as aide, was sent against Fort Duquesne. Wlien within ten miles of the fort, he was suddenly attacked by a large party of Indians who were lying in ambush. A dreadful slaughter ensued. General Braddock was mortally wounded, and his men were compelled to retreat. Almost directly after this Gen. Shirley was sent against Niagara. But on. ar- riving at Oswego, and hearing of Braddock's defeat, he returned to Albany. Another expedition under General Johnson v/as sent to capture the forts on LakeChamplain, Crown Point and Fort Ticonderoga. The French, under Dieskau, were met near the head of Lake George. A batttle followed in which the English were victorious. Johnson built a fort near the battle field, which he named Fort Wil = Ham Henry. Late in the year the French, under Gen. Montcalm, captured Fort Oswego. A British squadron, with 3,000 troops, sailed from Boston and appeared in Acadia. More than 3,000 of the inoffensive inhabitants were carried away and scattered, helpless, halt-starved and dying, among the Engli'-h colonies. The history of civilization furnishes no parallel to this wicked and wanton cruelty. Long- fellow's " Evangeline " deals with a tale of woe grow- ing out of this conquest. 1757- After a siege of six days Fort William Henry sur- rendered to Montcalm. 10 1758. Qetieral Abercrombie, with 15,000 men, made an attempt to capture Fort Ticonderoga, but was repuls- ed with g-reat loss. Colonel Bradstreet captured Fort Frontenac on the St. Lawrence. Louisburg was cap- tured by Generals Amherst and Wolfe. 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