European Competition
European Competition
Library of Congress
A New Map of North America, with the British, French, Spanish, Dutch & Danish dominions on that Great Continent . . . , London: 1750, detail
As Britain emerged as the dominant imperial power of Europe in the 1700s, American colonists were more than pleased to share
the bounty. “In the intertwined commercial and military successes, the British and their colonists found the measure of their virtues,”
3
writes historian Alan Taylor. “Enthusiastic participants in this patriotism of empire, the American colonists felt more strongly tied to
the mother country.” This “patriotism of empire,” however, would be sorely tested as the colonies’ western claims were threatened
by the “encroachments” of the French and Spanish with their Indian allies, and as Britain’s power over its colonies came to resemble
that of an autocratic guardian rather than a “mother country.”
The commentary presented here ⎯ including reports, essays, poems, maps, a narrative, and a sermon ⎯ samples the British and
American perspective on the competition for territory and dominance in North America from 1699 to 1763.
*
National Humanities Center, 2009: nationalhumanitiescenter.org/pds/. Spelling and punctuation modernized by NHC for clarity. Permission pending
from the American Antiquarian Society for texts accessed through the online digital collection Early American Imprints. Complete image credits at
nationalhumanitiescenter.org/pds/becomingamer/imagecredits.htm.
1
The four imperial wars in North America, primarily between Britain and France, were:
1. King William's War, 1689-1697; ended in a treaty with no victor.
2. Queen Anne's War, 1702-1713, ended in an armistice. Britain gained some French Canadian territory.
3. King George's War, 1744-1748, ended in a treaty with no victor.
4. The French and Indian War (Seven Years' War), 1754-1763; ended with British victory and acquisition of Spanish Florida, French Canada, and
all French territory east of the Mississippi River.
2
The exchange of territory in the late 1700s resembles a game of musical chairs. French Louisiana was ceded to Spain in a secret treaty in 1762,
returned to France in another secret treaty in 1800, and then sold to the United States in 1803. Florida was ceded to Britain by Spain in 1763,
returned to Spain after Britain’s defeat in the American Revolution, and then acquired by the United States in 1819 by treaty.
3
Alan S. Taylor, American Colonies: The Settling of North America (Viking/Penguin, 2001), p. 300.
An English official visiting [South] Carolina
warns Britain that the settlers might aban-
1699 “the Inhabitants greatly alarmed” don the young colony if provided no pro-
tection from the French to their west.
I find the Inhabitants greatly alarmed upon the news that the French continue their resolution to
make a settling [near the] Mississippi River, from [where] they may come over land to the head of Ashley
River without opposition; ’tis not yet known what care the Lords Proprietors intend to take for their
preservation. Some ingenious gentlemen of this Province (not of the Council) have lately told me the
Deputies have talked of making an Address to the Lords Proprietors for relief. But ’tis apparent that all
the time of this French War, they never sent them one barrel of powder or a pound of lead to help them.
They conclude they have no reason to depend upon them for assistance, and are resolved to forsake
[abandon] this Country betimes [sometime] if they find the French are settled at Mississippi, or if, upon
the death of the King of Spain, these Countries [colonies] fall into the hands of the French, as inevitably
they will (if not timely prevented), and return with their families to England or some other place where
they may find safety and protection.
Edward Randolph, Surveyor-General of His Majesty’s Customs for North America,
4
Letter to the English Board of Trade and Plantations, 16 March 1699, excerpt.
3[RD] QUERY: What is the strength of the several nations of Indians in the neighborhood of Carolina
and are their inclinations for us or for the French or Spaniards?
[ANSWER]: By the within [enclosed] account of the number of Indians subject to the government of
South Carolina in the year 1715, your lordships will find upwards of eight and twenty
thousand souls of which there was nine thousand men, [who] traded for above £10,000
sterling yearly in cloth, guns, powder, bullets and ironware, and made return in buck
skins, doe skins, furs and other peltry; and there was one way or other near 200 English
Indian traders employed as factors by the merchants of Carolina amongst them. But in the
said year 1715 most of them rose in rebellion and murdered the said traders and several
of the planters and their families that lay most exposed to them. But before the end of the
said year we recovered the Charokees and the northward Indians after several slaughters
and blood sheddings, which has lessened their numbers and utterly extirpating some little
tribes as the Congerees, Santees, Seawees, Pedees, Waxaws and some Corsaboys; so that
war, pestilence, and civil war amongst themselves the Charokees may be computed
reduced to about 10,000 souls and the northern Indians to 2,500 souls.
At the same time, the fate of our southern and western Indians was quite turned to our
disadvantage, for as soon as the Albamas had murdered our factor, the French imme-
diately took possession of our place and built a fort by the name of Toulouse at the
Albamous [Alabama River], thereby encroaching upon us and taking the trade of the
Chickesaws, Albamas and a great part of the Tollaboosees, Abikaws, which will make
near 6 to 7,000 souls.
The Spaniards built a fort at Apalatchee and has taken the Apalatchees and the most
desperate Creek Indians from us and the Yamasees removed to St. Augustine from
whence they still continue their depredations. As for the Creeks they are situated now in
4
Narratives of Early Carolina, ed. Alexander S. Salley, Jr., (New York: Scribner’s, 1911), pp. 204-210; in series Original Narratives of Early American
History, gen. ed., J. Franklin Jameson.
ANSWER: St. Augustine is the only town the Spaniards are possessed of in Florida and is situated in
the latitude of 29 degrees and fifty five minutes north and about one hundred families of
inhabitants, that make near one hundred more men, besides women and children whose
chief support depends on the expense and pay of the soldiers. Out of this number they
make a troop of about 40 horse and in and about the place in 4 or 5 villages they have 3
or 400 armed Indian men, most of which are Yamasees that lately committed the
barbarous massacre on his Majesty’s subjects of Carolina and still continue (even during
the peace with Spain by connivances of the Spaniards) their depredations and murders on
the English. . . .
The Spaniards at St. Augustine, having encouraged the Indians under their government to
come and murder and plunder his Majesty’s subjects in Carolina, and themselves har-
bouring rebels, felons, debtors, servants, and Negro slaves, putting this government under
a necessity of keeping a [military] force and some thousand pounds yearly charged to
guard the frontiers, even in time of peace, there is an absolute necessity for us to expel
them out of St. Augustine. We soon should reap the benefit of it by enlarging the trade of
the colony by so many hands idle and maintained by the rest that could follow their work
and a number more would flock into us who are deter’d by the dread this sculking war
brings with it; and even our own Indians would be less insolent and more obedient to us
who we are forced to court lest they should revolt. . . .
5TH. QUERY: How the French settlements on the River Mississippi may affect the people of
Carolina; whether they have seized the fort of Pensacola belonging to the Spaniards;
and what can be done to prevent any hazard or inconveniences Carolina may be
exposed to from those settlements.
ANSWER: Tis without dispute that the French are very strong there. By all accounts they are already
not less than five or six thousand fighting men, and more are daily sent over from France
with a design to make a very considerable settlement there. . . .
The Muse, disgusted at an Age and Clime, There shall be sung another golden Age,
Barren of every glorious Theme, The rise of Empire and of Arts,
In distant Lands now waits a better Time, The Good and Great inspiring epic Rage,
Producing Subjects worthy Fame: The wisest Heads and noblest Hearts.
In happy Climes, where from the genial Sun Not such as Europe breeds in her decay;
And virgin Earth such Scenes ensue, Such as she bred when fresh and young,
The Force of Art by Nature seems outdone, When heavenly Flame did animate her Clay,
And fancied Beauties by the true: By future Poets shall be sung.
In happy Climes the Seat of Innocence, Westward the Course of Empire takes its Way;
Where Nature guides and Virtue rules, The four first Acts already past,
Where Men shall not impose for Truth and Sense, A fifth shall close the Drama with the Day;
The Pedantry of Courts and Schools: Time’s noblest Offspring is the last
What a great Difference there is between our managing a War, and our Enemies [managing a war].
The most we do is to defend ourselves at Home, but they are for an offensive War. . .
It is observable to all who know the State of these Frontiers that there is not due Provision made to
furnish Men our on any Occasion after the Enemy. There is neither Bread nor Meat, Shoes, Blankets, &c.,
that a Number of Men may take on any sudden Occasion. . . And so long as this is the Case, the Enemy
never need fear our annoying of them when they have distressed us. . . .
We may observe that in this War, as we increased our Number of Men in our Forts or Scouts, the
Enemy have increased their Numbers; and the longer the War continued the oftener they came, and the
more bold they grew. Which shows us what we must expect if the War breaks out a-new: Especially at
this Time where there is no provision made for Men in our Frontiers.
Rev. Benjamin Doolittle, A Short Narrative of Mischief Done by the French and Indian Enemy on the Western Frontiers of the
7
Province of the Massachusetts-Bay; From the Beginning of the French War . . . , 1750, excerpts.
5
Records in the British Public Records Office Relating to South Carolina (South Carolina Dept. of Archives and History, 1955) Vol. 7, pp. 233-250;
reprinted in H. Roy Merrens, ed., The South Carolina Scene: Contemporary Views, 1697-1774 (University of South Carolina Press, 1977); permission
pending. Indian nations printed as in Johnson’s reply; place names modernized for clarity by NHC.
6
David S. Shields, ed., American Poetry: The Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries (Library of America, 2007), p. 346; permission pending.
7
Early American Imprints, American Antiquarian Society; permission pending.
1750 “the best Gems in his Crown” English mapmaker warns the King that Britain
risks losing vast territorial claims on the continent
to the “boundless ambition” of the French.
Library of Congress
Were there nothing at Stake between the Crown of Great Britain & France but the Lands on the
Ohio, we may reckon it as great a Prize as has ever been contended for between two nations.
For this Country is of that vast Extent Westward, as to exceed in good land all the European
Dominions of Great Britain, France & Spain, and which are almost destitute of Inhabitants. It
is impossible to conceive that had his Majesty been made acquainted with its Value & great
Importance, the large Strides the French have been making for several Years past in their
Incroachments on his Dominions, that his Majesty would Sacrifice one of the best Gems in his
Crown to their Usurpation & boundless Ambition.
A New Map of North America, with the British, French, Spanish, Dutch & Danish dominions on that Great Continent . . . ,
8
printed for Robert Sayer, London, ca. 1750, details.
8
Courtesy of the Library of Congress, Geography and Map Division, Call No.G3300 1750 .S3 Vault; online at hdl.loc.gov/loc.gmd/g3300.np000059.
1754 “And what a horrid scene is this” governor and assembly of Massachusetts,
predicts a final and “violent concussion” of
the British and French in North America.
We are peaceably extending our settlements upon our own territories. They [the French] are
extending theirs beyond their own, by force of arms. We must meet at length, which cannot be without a
violent concussion, and the time seems not to be far off. . . The continent is not wide enough for us both;
and they are resolved to have the whole. ⎯ The Court of Versailles [i.e., the French king], for extending
the French dominions in America, hath ever adopted this maxim, Divide et Impera [divide and conquer],
and, in pursuing it, hath stuck at no measures of perfidy or violence for rooting out their neighbours.
And what horrid scene is this, which restless, roving fancy, or something of a higher nature, presents
to me and so chills my blood! Do I behold these territories of freedom become the prey of arbitrary
power? Do I see the motley armies of French and painted Savages taking our fortresses and erecting their
own, even in our capital towns and cities! Do I behold them spreading desolation thro’ the land! Do I see
the slaves of Lewis [i.e., King Louis XV of France] with their Indian allies dispossessing the free-born
subjects of King GEORGE, of the inheritance received from their forefathers, and purchased by them at
the expense of their ease, their treasure, their blood!
9
Rev. Jonathan Mayhew, sermon, Boston, 29 May 1754, excerpts.
1754 “a great accession of power” French and Indian War, proposes two new
settlements in the Ohio River Valley to
“prevent the growth of the French power.”
The great country back of the Appalachian mountains, on both sides the Ohio, and between that river
and the lakes, is now well known both to the English and French to be one of the finest in North America,
for the extreme richness and fertility of the land, the healthy temperature of the air, and mildness of the
climate; the plenty of hunting, fishing, and fowling; the facility of trade with the Indians; and the vast
convenience of inland navigation or water-carriage by the lakes and great rivers, many hundred of leagues
around. From these natural advantages it must undoubtedly (perhaps in less than another century) become
a populous and powerful dominion; and a great accession of power, either to England or France.
The French are now making open encroachments on these territories in defiance of our known
rights; and, if we longer delay to settle that country and suffer them to possess it, these inconveniences
and mischiefs will probably follow:
1. Our People, being confined to the country between the sea and the mountains, cannot much more
increase in number, people increasing in proportion to their room and means of subsistence. . . .
2. The French will increase much more, by that acquired room and plenty of subsistence, and become
a great people behind us [to the west of us].
3. Many of our debtors, and loose English people, our German servants, and slaves, will probably
desert to them and increase their numbers and strength, to the lessening and weakening of ours.
4. They will cut us off from all commerce and alliance with the western Indians, to the great prejudice
of Britain, by preventing the sale and consumption of its manufactures.
5. They will both in time of peace and war (as they have always done against New England) set the
Indians on to harass our Frontiers, kill and scalp our people, and drive in the advanced settlers; and
so, in preventing our obtaining more subsistence by cultivating of new lands, they discourage our
marriages and keep our people from increasing, thus (if the expression may be allowed) killing
thousands of our children before they are born.
9
Rev. Jonathan Mayhew, A Sermon Preach'd in the Audience of His Excellency William Shirley, Esq; Captain General, Governour and Commander in
Chief, The Honourable His Majesty's Council, and the Honourable House of Representatives, of the Province of the Massachusetts-Bay, in New-
England. May 29th 1754, 1754; accessed through Early American Imprints, American Antiquarian Society; permission pending.
The importance of Indians is now generally known and understood. A Doubt remains not that the
prosperity of our Colonies will stand or fall with our Interest and favour among them. When they are our
Friends, they are the Cheapest and strongest Barrier for the Protection of our Settlements; when Enemies,
they are capable of ravaging in their methods of War, in spite of all we can do to render those Possessions
almost useless. Of this the French are sensible, as well as of our Natural Advantages beyond their own,
that they have employed all their Art, not only to embroil us with the Indians . . . but to destroy and utterly
extirpate those Nations whose affections they could not gain by setting one against another, and them-
selves assisting to do it. The same reason should certainly make it our Policy to support and preserve them.
11
Edmond Aitken, Report to the British Board of Trade, 1755, excerpts.
The French Court seem always to have made North-America an Object of great Attention, and long
ago to have formed a Plan which they have been steadily, tho’ slowly, carrying into Execution.
Since the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle 12 they have been more hasty, well knowing of what Advantage
it would be to their ambitious Views of universal Monarchy to accomplish it. Their Encroachments have
been more numerous, their Hostilities more violent. . . .
Clarke reviews the French construction of forts in Canada near the British colonies in New England and in the disputed
territory along the Ohio River, and summarizes the French and Indian attacks on British settlers and militia troops.
This Conduct of the French has deterred all the Traders of his Majesty’s Colonies from passing into
the Indian Countries for the sake of Commerce, altho’ before these Hostilities of the French, three
Hundred Traders went yearly from the single Colony of Pennsylvania.
Besides these open Hostilities and Bare-faced Encroachments, the French are continually making
use of every Art, Policy can suggest, with the greatest Industry human Nature is capable of, to seduce the
Indians in Alliance with the English and draw them over to their Interest. For this Purpose, the most artful
& zealous of their Missionaries are sent among them. The lower People are encouraged to live amongst
and intermarry with the Natives. The Priests, after they are admitted amongst them, soon gain a great
Ascendency over them. They make use of the Religion they teach them to inspire them with the greatest
hatred to the English, and attachment to the French. In this they have had but too much Success, assisted
as they have been by the bad Conduct of some of the English Governments to the Indians, of the most
Consequence. . . .
The French not only excite the Indians to Acts of Hostility but Reward them for it by buying the
10
First printed In Benjamin Vaughan, ed., Political, Miscellaneous, and Philosophical Pieces; . . . Written by Benj. Franklin, LL.D. and F.R.S., London:
1779, pp. 133-143 (also fragments of copy: American Philosophical Society); reprinted in The Papers of Benjamin Franklin, eds. Leonard W.
Labaree et al. (Yale University Press, 1959–) #623327; permission pending.
11
Wilbur R. Jacobs, ed., The Appalachian Indian Frontier: The Edmond Aitken Report and Plan of 1755 (University of Nebraska Press, 1967), pp. 7-8;
permission pending.
12
1748, ending King George’s War (War of the Austrian Succession), 1740-1748, the third imperial war between Britain and France in North America.
It is therefore highly necessary that the most vigorous measures should be speedily and unitedly
projected and pursued to oppose any further Encroachments of the French, and to oblige them to
relinquish those they have already made. The Safety and Security of all the English Colonies in North
America, their very being as English Colonies, make such Measures absolutely necessary, and that
without any Loss of Time. And how far the Interest of Great Britain itself may make such measures
necessary will appear from considering the Importance of these Colonies to the Mother Kingdom. . . .
That the Consequences of these Encroachments, if the French are suffered to keep Possession of
them, and strengthen themselves in them, will be:
1. The engrossing the whole of the Fur Trade of North America to themselves.
2. The attaching all the Indians scattered thro’ that vast Continent upon the Back [i.e., west,
backcountry] of all the English Settlements to their Interest.
3. The employing those Indians when thus attached to them, even in Time of profound Peace between
the two Crowns [Britain and France], to annoy any of all his Majesty’s Colonies as may best serve
their Purposes.
4. That they will one Day make themselves Masters of all the British Colonies in North America.
That these Colonies are of such Consequence to the Trade, Wealth and Naval Power of Great Britain,
and will in future Time make so much larger Additions to it, that whilst she keeps them entire, she will be
able to maintain not only her Independency, but her Superiority as a Maritime Power. And on the other
hand, should she once lose them and the French gain them, Great Britain herself must necessarily be
reduced to an absolute Subjection to the French Crown, to be nothing more than a Province of France.
William Clarke, Observations on the Late and Present Conduct of the French, with Regard to their
13
Encroachments upon the British Colonies in North America, written 1754, published 1755, excerpts.
13
Early American Imprints, American Antiquarian Society; permission pending.
1755 “the whole is unjust and false” “bold depredations,” and acting as a “Christian
pretender” in this map published during the
French and Indian War.
Library of Congress
Virginia sidebar
western Virginia
14
Henry Overton, A Map of the British Plantations on the Continent of North America . . . , London: between 1755 and 1760, details.
In congratulatory remarks on
the British victory in French
1760 “glorious success of his Majesty’s Arms” Canada, the New York gover-
nor contrasts the combatants’
“different Disposition[s].”
I am happy in congratulating you on the glorious Success of his Majesty’s Arms, under the Conduct
of his Excellency General AMHERST, which has completed the Conquest of the whole Country of
Canada. It does the highest Honour to the General’s Reputation that he has put a Period to an Enterprise
of such Moment with so little Effusion of human Blood, and the Clemency with which he has on this
14
Courtesy of the Library of Congress, Geography and Map Division, Call No. G3300 1760 .O8 Vault; online at hdl.loc.gov/loc.gmd/g3300.ar008700.
As Providence has smiled upon the British Arms this War, we have Reason to hope that upon a
Peace [treaty] Canada will be ceded to the English. 17 If that should be the Case, America will reap the
happy Fruits of a bloody War. A vast extent of Territory will be added to the British Empire in America,
and as long as Canada is held by the English, we shall have Peace with the Savages, so that that War,
which at first seemed like to break up our new Settlements, will in the Conclusion greatly promote and
increase the Settlement and Peopling of America. . . But now behold! the Farmer may have Land for
nothing; Land that will produce all the necessaries of Life without Money and without Price ⎯ Land
enough for himself and all his Sons, be they ever so many, . . .
18
Nathaniel Ames, An Astronomical Diary: or, Almanack for the Year of Our Lord CHRIST, 1763, 1762, excerpts.
1764 “Supreme o’er all beneath the Skies” carrier (“your Boy”), Britain’s final
victory over France (Gaul) and Spain
(Iberia) is celebrated.
I. III.
Another memorable year is past, Thrice blest fair Britain! Nations bend,
And Yesterday it shone its last, Suppliant that Britain be their Friend
Britannia holds her glorious Race: And learn to conquer but by thee,
Iberia yields her Rich Domains, If haughty Spain unite with Gaul,
And groans beneath Britannia’s Chains, Her madness urges her to Fall,
So ’tis with France, dear Allies in disgrace. Before the Thund’ring Sons of Liberty.
II. IV.
Hark! whence this general Burst of Joy; Thrice blest are we, since Fate has sent
See Britain’s Genius clasps the smiling Boy, War, from the Trembling Continent;
Blest Cherub! Like thy Sire AUGUSTUS rise, Heaven grant You all domestic Joy,
And future Kings like him subdue May every Blessing still increase
Till Worlds shall learn their Fate from You, And Britain awe the World to Peace,
Supreme o’er all beneath the Skies. And Smiles and Pence the Portion of your Boy.
19
Unsigned broadside, Boston, 1 January 1764.
15
I.e., the French, with no moral qualms, have encouraged their Indian allies to treat British prisoners with brutality.
16
Early American Imprints, American Antiquarian Society; permission pending.
17
Canada was ceded to the British in the 1763 Treaty of Paris, ending the French and Indian War.
18
Early American Imprints, American Antiquarian Society; permission pending.
19
Ibid.