Losing a Continent: France's North American Policy, 1753-1763

Losing a Continent: France's North American Policy, 1753-1763

by Frank W. Brecher
Losing a Continent: France's North American Policy, 1753-1763

Losing a Continent: France's North American Policy, 1753-1763

by Frank W. Brecher

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Overview

England's capture of Canada in 1760 was the culmination of the French and Indian War and of a century and a half of conflict between Britain and France for control of the North American continent. During that long period, there were several English military efforts to evict the French, but all failed. Therefore, at the war's start, few among the English entertained serious thoughts of totally evicting France from all of Canada. Nor did the French consider such a result a serious possibility. Drawing heavily on primary sources, Brecher tells the dramatic story of why the war's outcome differed so sharply from original expectations. He does so from the vantage point of France, while demonstrating in greater depth than has been available to date the linkages between France's American policy and involvement in the Seven Years' War.

Brecher provides an unprecedently full-scale analysis of the political, military, social, and economic conditions of mid-18th-century France and its North American colony, New France. That analysis also examines the direct connection between those internal conditions and the results for France of the war that ended in 1763. In doing so, Brecher assesses France's military strategy and major battles in Europe and America, as well as the diplomatic goals Versailles set for itself in the conduct of the war. Further, he describes why France concurred in leaving not only Canada, but also the vast Louisiana territory, to be divided between England and France's belated wartime ally, Bourbon Spain. Finally, Brecher explains the longer-term implications of the war for North American development and for the future of France. This is an important study for students and scholars of French and colonial American history and for the broad reading public, as well as those interested in the more recent Quebec problem.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780313307867
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 09/17/1998
Series: Contributions to the Study of World History , #62
Pages: 240
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.69(d)
Lexile: 1800L (what's this?)

About the Author

FRANK W. BRECHER is a former career member of the U.S. Senior Foreign Service. He holds degrees from CCNY and Columbia University, and was a Fellow at Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. Among his earlier publications is Reluctant Ally: U.S. Foreign Policy Toward the Jews from Wilson to Roosevelt (Greenwood Press, 1991). Mr. Brecher is preparing a sequel to the present study, assessing France's early relations with the United States up to the Louisiana Purchase.

Table of Contents

Introduction
The International Setting on the Eve of War
Bourbon France at Mid-century
The Opening Moves toward War, 1753-1754
War Comes to France
Drawing the Lines in North America, 1755
The French and Indian War begins in Earnest, 1755
The Fully Military Phase, 1756-1757
The Fully Military Phase, 1758-1762
The Politics and Diplomacy of Peace and War, 1754-1761
The Politics and Diplomacy of Peace and War, 1762-1763
Conclusions
Appendix A: Biographic Data
Appendix B: For Further Reading
Appendix C: Maps
Index

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