-
He sailed up St. Lawrence River
-
Five years later he came again with twenty eight men he landed at Quebec. He named the habitation of Quebec. Samuel de Champlain had brought French settlers to Canada to stay.
-
He set out on his longest voyage in this new country. He was going to the country of the Huron people. He was amazed by what he found. The Huron nation was different. By seeing these towns and fields was like being back in France.
-
The Hurons had one great rival, a confederacy of tribes south of Lake Ontario. The rival grew fiercer after French arrived. That summer Atironta and Champlain traveled trough the country, gathering warriors for a raid on the Iroquois. In September.
-
Samuel de Champlain's wife came and lived with him in Quebec for four years.
-
He arrived in the Huron Country eager to bring word of his god to the people there. He was determined to see his colony become a place worthy of the name New France.
-
He nurtured his colony devotedly. over the years, he crossed the Atlantic more than twenty times
-
one of the settlers daughters Anne became the first bride in New France.
-
They were in desperate trouble. the war with the Iroquois raged more furiously than ever.
-
they captured La Tour's fort at Saint John
-
then Iroquois invaded the Huron country. Soon the Iroquois were attacking New France itself.
-
Barely 3000 colonists lived in New France and the colony was growing weaker.
-
nearly a thousand agreed to seek new lives across the ocean
-
his long reign was just beginning as one of France's mightiest kings. he refused to let New France collapse. Instead he took change of his besieged colony.
-
Paris accepted the royal Invitation to sail for Canada
-
It had become home to more than ten thousand people. As New France grew, most of its people did what Francoise Hobbe and Michel Roy did: they became farmers
-
It was often at war. The English had once captured Quebec, in Champlain's day, and they tried again
-
The war with Iroquois started again. It was down river from Montreal. Jarret de Vercheres daughter Madeleine was only fourteen. But she knew first-hand the high cost of the war with the Iroquois. Now it was Madeleine's turn to take charge. Madeleine fired a singnal gun and, with the habitants, held off the attackers until soildiers from Montreal came to their aid. Madeleine became one of the heros of New France.
-
The territory of the fur trade stretched northwest from Montreal to the Prairies, and south to Louisiana and the mouth of the Mississippi through the land of the Ojibwa, Assiniboine, Winnebago, and Cree.
-
New France had really begun on the Atlantic coast, in the region called Acadia.
-
The British conquered Acadia once more. this time France did not get it back but the people remained where they were, paying a little more attention to the British rules.
-
The English once more failed in an attempt to attack the capital of New France.
-
He asked Auchagah, Cree trader about the route to the plains. Aur\chagah drew a map for him, and La Verendrye began his journeys.
-
when the war started New France was confendent that they where going to win
-
It was at The height of its power, but the war was ahead. For all the power and wealth of Britain's colonies, New France did not frear them
-
The British decided to drive Arcadians from their homes they were all separated to different country's and cities. they were thrown out before the war even started because they were ruling from 1710
-
they marched north from New York and met the French near a fort the French called Carillon and the English called Ticonderoga
-
They marched on Montreal from the west while army advanced from the south.
-
on the night of September 12th 1759, he landed his soldiers at the foot of the cliffs