Skip to main content

tv   Lectures in History  CSPAN  July 13, 2014 12:01am-1:11am EDT

12:01 am
>> follow us on twitter, @cspanhistory, for information on our schedule, our latest programs, and to keep up with history news. america"eek, "reel brings archival films. -- in 1972, former lyndon johnson spoke at a civil rights symposium in what was his final public speech before his death only six weeks later. he talked about the future of civil rights and the role of government in ensuring equality for all citizens.
12:02 am
>> he ordered that the slaves should be free from their bondage. weecade ago and 1963, observed the 100 proclamation of that declaration signing. on the memorial of that fateful year, i was called upon as the last president to speak at gettysburg cemetery -- as the vice president to speak at gettysburg cemetery, where a century before, words had been spoken which all of us have long remembered and on that occasion, i said this. until justice is blind to color, until education is unaware of race, until opportunity is unconcerned with the color of men's skin, emancipation will be a proclamation but not a fact.
12:03 am
to the extent that the proclamation of emancipation is not full felt in fact, to that extent, we have fallen short of assuring freedom to the freed. when i spoke as the vice president, i could not know that the future would present me shortly with the opportunity and the responsibility to contribute more toward fulfilling the fact of emancipation. even if i could have known what lay ahead, i'm not sure now that i could have believed at that time that the progress which has been won in these past 10 years is a fact. black americans are voting now, where as they were not voting at all 10 years ago.
12:04 am
but let me say quickly that not enough are voting. little more than half of all eligible americans voted in the last national election. i don't know how many of those that didn't vote were black, but i do know this. we have to come up with some kind of plan or incentive to perfect our democracy by seeing that more of our people do vote. and i certainly mean to include more of our black people.
12:05 am
>> each week, american history tv sits in on a lecture with one of the nation's college professors. you can watch the lecture every saturday evening at 8:00 p.m. and midnight eastern. next professor brett rushforth , talks about france's impact on north america in the early 1700's. he also details the territorial tensions between the french and great britain that brought the seven years' war to north america. he discusses the way britain's eventual victory impacted french holdings and settlers who remained after the war ended. the college is the college of william and mary in virginia. the class is about an hour. >> we're going to talk about the seven years' war. it is often known as the first global war. it is a war that in the united states is often called the french and indian war. in quebec, it is the war of the conquest.
12:06 am
in europe and many other areas, it is called the seven years' war. the name is important. the civil war is one -- calling it the civil war is interpretation, but calling it one the war of northern aggression means you have a different interpretation. in quebec, the war of the conquest has a really heavy political implication because they see this as the moment society wascanadian taken over, conquered by the british, and therefore, the ir the seizedthere culture has to start dealing a longitish canada in a
12:07 am
and brutal struggle for autonomy. the name the french and indian war comes from the british themselves. this is who they are blaming, blaming french aggression, indian actors and their allies. they put the blame on the french. the seven years' war is its name in europe. the war begins to north america in 1754 and ends with a peace treaty in 1763. despite the fact that it lasts nine years, it is still called because years' war, the nine years' war was already taken. so we call it the seven years' war. but really, it is the nine year war, and it is part of an almost century long war for various colonial locations throughout the globe, in this case, particularly north america. instead of telling the story of the seven years' war as it is always told, which typically in
12:08 am
north america is something along the lines of this is the war that set up the american revolution. this is the war that kicked the french out of north america, led the colonists to be more unified, and led to all of the crises that would culminate in the american revolution. there is a documentary that pbs put out not long ago and they call it the war that made america. this kind of storyline is an important one. and it is one we could sell, but because this is a course on a french atlantic world i wanted , to focus on the war as it was experienced by the people we have been talking about all semester. the war in the french atlantic. much less focus on north america. much less focus on future implications for the united states. much more focus on the french atlantic as a whole. there are lots of ways i could do this. i could talk about diplomats. i
12:09 am
could talk about kings. i could talk about battles. but instead i want to talk about individuals. how four different individuals experience the war, the dislocations, adapted to the war, and what it tells about the theme of broader imperialism. the four individuals -- charles-michel de langlade. he is of french and native american dissent. marie-joseph de l'enfant jesus. she is an ursuline. she was born in the english colonies with a different name. wheelwright. we will talk about how she was captured, adopted and "redeemed" by the french. she became an
12:10 am
important figure in the ursuline order. the third is a man named charles evenot. he is a mayor, and he was born a french territory. i'm sorry -- he was of both french and african descent. and he represents some of the larger themes we have talked about there. negotiations of french and african power. the negotiation of commerce and power. the fourth person we do not have a name. the executioner on the island of martinique. he had to do some pretty grim things. we like to talk about grim things in this class, so i guess we will and tenure that tradition -- continue that tradition. if we're going to talk about the
12:11 am
causes of the war, we can step back and give two general causes and some particular causes. first, the general causes. the largest general cause is the integration of the atlantic world in the 18th century. what i mean by that -- across the course of the 18th century, colonial spaces, whether it is in west africa, the caribbean, north america, even in europe -- these places are becoming increasingly integrated over the course of the century through things like the slave trade and other commodity trades. as they become closer and closer in economic ties, in the movement of people, in the it administrative apparatus that brings people together, it means
12:12 am
empires start to think about the interrelationship between these various places. something that happens in the ohio river valley can raise concerns about what will happen in bengal. and what happens in the caribbean raises concerns over what can happen in senegal. and as soon as you have this integration, conflicts that might have been local, that might have seemed small in the past, can start to take on a more global, oversized importance. because they start to seem like patterns of behavior of the other empire. there are some ways in which the integration elevated the concerns of the french and british and led to war. we will talk about why in a second. a second reason we can talk about as an origin of the war is the general search for wealth in the americas. again, this is a fairly general category. this has two components. one is the search for wealth in ways people understand and know.
12:13 am
meaning a commodity they sold in the past -- meaning caribbean slavery particularly -- but also spanish mining, which produced a lot of wealth, and was the envy of britain and france. there becomes an increasing concern that colonial economies and colonial imports and colonists themselves, as consumers of european goods, a re really important to european empires. and that increased importance empires are more willing to go to war to defend those interests and expand those interests there. the one thing about north america that set it apart was how little europeans actually knew about it. this map suggests ways in which the french and british sort of have a lot of conjecture,
12:14 am
a lot of assumption about what is in north america, but also a lot of speculation. mapping, they had not figured out what north america look ed like. this map is a pretty good example. it is fairly well mapped through the mississippi valley, and even the american southwest, but the american northwest is blank. they put those cartoonish and's it to mask their level of ignorance. this ignorance had important consequences. for the french, that ignorance about the american west at first met they believed anything could be out there. they were really excited about the possibility may be of silver mines or a northwest passage. they thought it might be an opportunity to get out and trade in the pacific very easily,
12:15 am
which was a centuries-old goal in north america for french colonists. after the mid-century, french diplomats and colonial officials became more and more skeptical of north america. just over the horizon, they had thought over and over, there was going to be this great source of wealth, and over and over again they were shown to be wrong. it was the mid-century where they start to learn about the great plains a little bit more, how distant and vast they are. there are no sources of wealth they can see. great britain at the same time is really interested, not so much about what is available in north america, but how they can get to the pacific, to access spanish wealth. places like hudson bay, which is really quite isolated, they start to search for passages out
12:16 am
of north america so they can access spanish wealth. the french watch this carefully. they are afraid, even if they are skeptical, that they may be beaten to the punch, and the british would get access to the spanish trade and they would be left out of the game and they would be increasingly eclipsed. not only in the colonies, but also as a european power. as we have seen all the way back to the 16th century, colonial wealth translates to european power. remember, the spanish century? all that wealth in america generates power for spain. that example is not lost on europeans. it is heightened by the 18th century because britain is growing more and more powerful and france is growing more and more concerned. as britain starts to move westward, they start to take an interest in the area the on the appalachians and hudson's bay.
12:17 am
france sees this as a threat. not just in north america, but in europe at large. there are are also a series of events that take this concern -- this general concern -- and the integration of the atlantic world and make it particular and create a spark that then leads to war. there are two instances i am going to talk about. i could talk about a lot more. one is in 1752 and the other is in 1754. the first one in 1752. in present day ohio, not far from dayton, there was a settlement started by miami indians, but also had a lot of other native peoples, that was set up as a trade center. the point of this was for the indians to be able to trade equally with the english and the french. because it was not at the french trading post, and it was not at
12:18 am
these sort of british trading areas in pennsylvania, but it was intended it could access both. so it became a very independent place. a place that tried to set itself apart from empire, that tried to play them off each other, which it had done for quite a while. by the mid-18th century, that was getting harder and harder. these alliances became more and more firm. the french were less and less interested in being an alternative to the british. they really wanted these alliances to be exclusive. remember we talked about the native american cultural expectation that trade and alliance were taken to be one thing? this is something the french kept repeating back to them. if you are going to trade with the british, you are their allies and our enemies. the indians would counter with, you are trading with our enemies, so we will do the same with you.
12:19 am
there was a bit of jockeying for power in all of this. but mainly it was about commercial interests. these native peoples wanted a place where they could access french goods and british goods. the french in the early 1750's came to see this as a threat. partly because their entire existence in north america native allies. these alliances that kept them safe in previous colonial wars looked like they might the starting to break down. and they were afraid if the example was set that there could be a large independent town that did not really have to choose a side, that's their whole model for north american colonization would be threatened. they could not rely on these alliances as buffers against the british. because these people would also
12:20 am
be trade partners with the british. so, they gathered a group of ottawa indians and french settlers in 1752, and they raided it and destroyed it. they waited until the men were away. they attacked in a time of weakness and it was a complete rout. this success on the french side upset both the native americans and the british. as you can imagine. the native americans were upset because they felt like they were being threatened that people -- by people were their trading partners, and in fact even by other indians, who in some cases were extended kin. ottawas raiding ottawas.
12:21 am
miamis in illinois who are allied to the french were involved in a raid that was targeting kin. the british see this as a threat because they see this as british -- as french ambition on ohio. if you ever thought ohio would be worth fighting a global war over -- i'm sorry anyone from ohio. fighting a global war over dayton -- it is not what you expect is all i am saying. but the british start seeing this action as part of this larger concern that the french are becoming more and more aggressive. the french are getting increasingly bold in their efforts to try to curtail british growth in the colonies. the other thing that happens is it solidifies around the british colonies this narrative that the french are trying to take over the ohio valley and ohio itself. at the time in the 1750's, ohio is more or less empty. it is not totally empty.
12:22 am
there are some native villages along the rivers, but not many. and there certainly are not any many colonial settlements. it is one of the reasons this settlement was able to exist the way it was. but as the french come and take the settlement, the british become concerned because they see this as an example of larger and more aggressive actions by the french. and the french start building forts along the ohio river drainage system, broadly speaking. the one that most concerns the british is fort duquesne, which was established at present day pittsburgh. again, if you think a global war is going to be fought over ohio and pittsburgh -- well, it's true. the french start to build fort
12:23 am
duquesne. word comes to the british this is happening. it raises this big concern that the french are trying to push out any british opportunities and the ohio valley. and they would use this, by the raids.aunch frontier during king george's war, there had been dozens and dozens of french and native raids on frontier settlements that had been devastating. we talked earlier about the war of the spanish succession, how the villages were left sort of devastated on the french and british side. this happened again in the 1740's. not long after that they see the french moving in, attacking
12:24 am
a native town, setting up a fort, and they fear that it will be a launching spot for a lot of those raids, and they start to demand the british colonies take interest and hopefully try to stop it. in 1754, there is a young military officer who was commissioned to go up and check things out. his job is really just a reconnaissance mission. he is supposed to go up, find out what is happening with the french. he does take a small group of soldiers with him. he joins up with some native allies. they go and they find a fort, a makeshift fort, that has army officers or militia and in confusion and panic, the british fire shots. there is a small skirmish, and this is seen as the start of actual hostilities.
12:25 am
the name of this military officer? george washington. george washington starts the first global war. all these surprises, right? they are fighting over pittsburgh and ohio and george washington is to blame. all of that to say, a very small place that does not have a lot going, because of these larger concerns of empire, takes on a larger importance. and becomes something that people feel is worth going to war over. the governor of virginia is really shocked about this. in part because this territory of ohio is a region virginian's s believe they have a right to. and they see their future moving into virginia and, particularly those in power, speculating on land in ohio and making a great
12:26 am
deal of wealth as people move out. governor dinwiddie -- wouldn't you like to have that name? he says this. maybe we can have a microphone and have someone read this for us. can we go that route? who wants to do this for us? do not want to be on tv? all right, go ahead. >> we must not suspend or delay the proper measures to defend ourselves. all north america will be lost if these practices are tolerated, and no work can be worse than this, then the suffering of such insults as these. the truth is the french claim almost all of north america. and from whence they will drive us as soon as they please or as soon as there shall be a declared war.
12:27 am
>> ok, so dinwiddie expresses this concern. the french are grabbing all of north america and they are becoming more aggressive. the concern is not just they will lose ohio. the concern is not there will be indian skirmishes over trade. the concern is they are going to lose all of north america. this concern is a little exaggerated. it is a concern that really is not based in that one act. it is instead based in a series of interpretations of a bunch of separate acts all over north america, and even globally, where the french and british start to believe that the other is intent on taking them over. at the end of a series of colonial global wars, they probably are not totally wrong, but in this case, it is sort of reading into something very small something that ends up very large. in 1754, the british colonists
12:28 am
do start to fight actively against the french, and it is not until 1756 it becomes a war in europe. but the fighting in north america starts in 1754. we're going to go through a real brief timeline and then i want to look at the individuals we will focus on. we talked about the 1754 battle of fort necessity. this is the battle where washington -- battle is a little bit more grander than it deserves. it is really just a quick firefight. that is what really sparks the war. early on, the french have a lot of successes. in 1755, when the british send regular army officers and soldiers to help with the colonists, to fight against the french, they think they are going to win pretty easily. they are dismissive of native americans as warriors, and they
12:29 am
think they can't possibly stand against the disciplined european regiment. in 1755, a general by the name of braddock lead the campaign to retake fort duquesne. he is very confident and thinks they will build on that and push the french out of other areas. it turns out they are completely wrong. they face not just a small contingent of french, but several hundred native american allies who have traveled from as far away as modern-day wisconsin and michigan. and these indians have come to fight with their french allies, because they have a material and cultural relationship that we have talked about so many times. this commercial connection to the french that is also
12:30 am
inseparable from these cultural and military, diplomatic relationships. and by this time, many of them have family relationships. many of the native people who come from the great lakes region to fight have, in one way or another, a family connection to the french. they may be the child of a french man and a native woman. they maybe married themselves to -- they might be married themselves to a native woman or the native men might have connections through their sisters, their kin, with the french. we will talk about that more in a minute. but the braddock expedition is completely routed. just to give a sense of the level of disparity in the
12:31 am
victory, braddock loses 400 dead and 400 wounded. there are only about a dozen on the french side killed. it is a massively lopsided victory for the french. the british are really surprised. the next year the focus of the war starts in europe and britain is not sending a lot of troops or supplies yet. the french are able to have a series of early victories. in 1757, famously they take fort william henry. it is depicted in "the last of the mohicans," if you have seen this. this is again a group of french and native allies. they go and lay siege to the fort. eventually the british surrender there. following that siege, there was an incident where there was a group of native americans who
12:32 am
were promised that they could plunder the fort and be paid for their efforts by getting a lot of colonial trade goods. they were then told they could not plunder, because the terms of the surrender meant the british had to be respected, captives could not be taken, goods could not be taken. the indians felt betrayed. they had been sold a bill of goods. they decided on their own accord to raid, take the goods and prisoners. this becomes known to the british as the massacre at fort william henry. and it becomes a rallying cry for people in britain who are supporters of north american colonies to try to rally for more money and military support for their efforts in north america. eventually, they do. in 1758, some of the british decide to send massive amounts
12:33 am
military support. william pitt decides they need to focus completely on north america to defeat the french and then focus on other areas, like senegal and the caribbean. the push in north america becomes very successful very fast. by 1759, they had taken over in a siege. the next year, 1760, montréal surrenders, really without a fight. and north america within two years becomes completely surrendered to the british in war. really a profound turnaround. and north america within two years becomes completely surrendered to the british in this war.
12:34 am
the british begin attacking areas that are important for the slave and sugar trades. in the case of senegal, one other commodity -- gum arabic. we talked about that little bit. in senegal, there are only two fortresses the french hold. of these two places become access points for this gum trade. the british decide to use the war as an opportunity to take this over and to benefit from this gum trade. in 1752, they also attacked martinique. in 1763, there is a capitulation treaty. a couple items that ended up in first, the french would get completely out of new france. they gave up on north america. canada went to britain and louisiana went to spain. a lot of the territories to
12:35 am
ended up getting taken over by the british were returned. martinique was returned to the french. the french do end up losing a couple of caribbean islands, but not the major ones. they remain in the french empire, and that has profound invitations for the second half -- has profound implications for the second half of the 18th century. with that brief timeline, you can see that this war has important geopolitical implications. meaning that north america completely changes. and a landscape where native french andld play british off one another. that is completely over. the british are the only game in town. it changes the way colonial powers deal with native people. it also means all kinds of areas
12:36 am
that were contested between the british and the french are no longer contested and the british can move in. it allows for a lot more westward movement, which has important implications later. we will talk about 1763 and beyond next time. but personally, it was experienced in very different ways. people on the ground who made accommodations to the french empire did not experience the geopolitical settlement of this as some kind of massive break. they oftentimes just continue doing what they had been doing, and they used it as an opportunity may be to make their situation just a little bit better. i want to talk about these four individuals and how they experience the war, what role they played, and how they adapted to its course and its outcome. first, i want to talk about
12:37 am
charles-michel de langlade. his full name is kind of a mouthful. he was born here, and he is the son of a french trader and minor military officer. and his mother is in ottawa indian. an ottawa indian. an importanter is ottawa war chief. he is born into an important ottawa family and in the region an important french family. he is raised speaking both ottawa and french and he is
12:38 am
involved in the fur trade. and military expeditions. his connections to these two communities are equally strong. he is catholic, but he also participates in native war rituals. he is loyal to the french crown, but mostly to the extent that they are able to serve the interests of his ottawa family. in 1752, langlade plays an important role in the attack in ohio. he is able to get a large group of supporters among the ottawa to join the expedition, despite the fact they will be attacking people, in some cases, that were previously allies or in some few cases were extended kin. he is the linchpin of the recruitment effort, getting native people to participate in the attack. he is also the linchpin in
12:39 am
getting native people to participate in another battle where braddock was defeated. all of those indian allies that travel from the great lakes and end up fighting and defeating braddock were connected in some way to the networks langlade had formed. he was also present at the battle of william henry --fort william henry, and he is also present at the siege of quebec. he is sort of like the forrest gump of colonial wars in the mid 18th century. his relatives stopped supporting the french.
12:40 am
this plays a role in france's losses. part of that is that william pitt umps a bunch of money and sends all kinds of support. but really the alliance system starts to fracture. there are two reasons. one has to do with fort william henry itself. the native people were promised they would be able to get goods, get captives, and they had been denied this. it meant they lacked trust now. and when the french asked them to come to war again in 1758, a lot of them stayed back. because they did not feel like they would be taken care of after the war. the second reason has to do with disease. in 1757, there is a smallpox epidemic. it is brought back to the great lakes by the soldiers and warriors who fought in the early stages of the war.
12:41 am
when they return, people start to get sick. throughout the fall of 1757, hundreds die. if you look through the catholic baptismal registries for october 7057, for example, you start to see these terse little entries. baptized so and so, in danger of death. buried so-and-so. this happens day after day, the slow, steady dying off of people in the settlement. and because it had been brought back after the war, people do not want to go to the war front because they are afraid they might catch the disease and bring it back. all of that together suggest there are personal and family reasons for participating in these imperial rivalries and commercial reasons.
12:42 am
trade is really central, really important. langlade is actually at michelin mackinac when the french come to take it over. after the fall of montréal, there is an agreement the great lakes will be handed over to be british. when they arrived to take it over, it is langlade who hands over the reins to the british. and he becomes an important ally of the british. why would he do this? he is french. the fact is, the british are there. and his family, the ottawas, are still there. he has to do the best he can do. he becomes a trade partner to the british. he also becomes a military ally
12:43 am
to the british and he fights with the british in the american revolution. he finds a way to adapt himself -- first to the french. his family had done this for a generation. and then again to the british as they arrive. it suggests a couple of things. one, this french native system -- this relationship between trade, cultural adaptation, intermarriage, it creates profound loyalties, but not loyalties that are national in any sense. it is not as though now that the french are gone he cannot have anything to do with the british. his loyalties are personal. his loyalties are local. when the british are the personal and the local, he finds it is no problem at all to adapt those loyalties and be allies and trade partners with the british. another thing it signals is that this french system doesn't really go away. there are some problems at the end of the war, and we will talk about those next time -- some
12:44 am
serious problems -- but in the longer run, the system of trade, alliance, intermarriage persists well after the french leave. the second person we're going to talk about is esther wheelwright, also known as marie-joseph de l'enfant jesus. esther wheelwright was born in maine. in 1703, during the war of the spanish succession, she was taken captive by a group of indians who are allies of the french. they adopted her into their family and they eventually would allow the french governor to pay them a price and reclaim her. he adopted her. she lived for several years in the early 1700s in the home of the french governor. eventually, they decided to put her in the convent, and she is
12:45 am
able then to learn french. she becomes catholic. and she becomes very well-versed in the politics and the religious agendas of the ursuline order. as we talked about before, this includes a lot of social and political involvement. a lot of the efforts to educate. a lot of the efforts to take care of the poor and the indigent. a lot of efforts to take care of social services -- broadly speaking. they were performed by these nuns and they operated largely independently. do you remember a story we talked about martinique, when the ursulines were suspected of being part of the slave conspiracy? the order maintained this
12:46 am
corporate sovereignty, the separation from control of the government for quite some time. well, the life of a nun at this point was very different than you might think. they are very involved. they are not hidden behind walls. they are important figures in the community. during the siege of quebec, marie-joseph starts to play an important role. she is bilingual. she speaks french and english. when the british take over, they take over the ursuline convent and turn it into a military hospital. the first two floors are dedicated to the healing of soldiers, and she plays an
12:47 am
important role because she is able to communicate with people and she has this family connection still to be british colonies. and she is able to become an intermediary. then she is able to turn that into becoming an important political figure who negotiates the place of catholicism, the place of the ursulines and what is now becoming a british colony. as the british take over quebec, they make accommodations to the french canadians. they allow them to practice catholicism. there are legal accommodations so certain parts of their legal system remains intact. esther, marie-joseph becomes mother superior of this convent because of her ability to be the intermediary between these french-canadians and the british. this suggests a couple of things. there are a lot of things it
12:48 am
could suggest. there is a scholar named ann littles writing a biography of this woman right now. i am very interested to read it when it comes out. in one way, it suggests adaptability. she was captured by the abernathy. a terrifying experience. imagine being taken away to a place where you do not speak the language. you are taken to the home of the governor. far from home. butdo not know anybody. at over time, she develops the ability to play an important social, religious role in the colony. because you have to do what you
12:49 am
have to do, i guess, is part of it. but violence can create not only distance and separation, but also points of contact and integration. there was a group of english captives in new france that had become catholic and remained there after the captivity, but they continue to remain contacts with the english colonies, and in fact this happens between montréal and albany, where there were all of these movements between the french and british colonies based on the extended kin networks of these people who had, through various ways, been involved in colonial war. so, the war does not just separate, right? war can bring people violently together. the other thing that is important to recognize -- in a colonial setting, women played an important social and political role. -- in the french colonial played anomen
12:50 am
important social and political role. all right -- example number three. he was an interesting territory. -- personality. he was born in a small island off the coast of senegal. he was the son of a french officer in the west indian company and a west african woman. he was what people call mixed-race. at the time they called them what was french for mulatto, meaning he had an african mother and french father. during the 18th century, there were a series of accommodations that were essential to the operation of these colonial spaces. if you remember, african women become very important in connecting the french members of the company to the people who are doing trading, whether it is gum arabic or gold or slaves. and families really run these
12:51 am
operations day-to-day. when the british see -- when the british lay siege. it is not much of a siege. they really just march in and take over. they find this arrangement is quite surprising to them. it is not what they are used to. it is not what they have seen in other places. he comes forward early on after the british arrived to let them know he has a certain stature in this community. he comes forward to insist that their rights as -- it is like an inhabitant, someone who has property. and his rights as a leader in the community, his right to have inheritance, his right to have recognition as a free person, as
12:52 am
being able to participate in civic society. and the british that are pressured to recognize these mixed-race families in the treaty of capitulation. so, they insist in the treaty itself that they are guaranteed their property. so, in a setting where it could have gone a very different way -- these people could have been marginalized. they could have been the real losers in this situation. the mixed-race community actually rise in authority. and they actually gain a more firm foothold. he calls himself, when he goes to the british, the mayor. he says that he is the -- there is this position that has been recognized, although the french never administered that terminology. it was really more in practice, he was the one who was the leader of this community.
12:53 am
he wanted that formalized and use the british arrival for the opportunity to formalize that law -- with law that status that had only been a working relationship before. even as the french move out, they have to flee and leave all of their property behind, this is able to benefit from this in -- this mixed race community is able to benefit from this in some ways. the other thing that happened, when the company leaves, they leave behind a lot of stuff. buildings, trade goods, boats. the families who were involved in this community and in trade with them end up taking this over. not only do they elevate themselves politically, but also materially, and they end up in some ways really benefiting from
12:54 am
this takeover. now, he is interesting in another way. one of the things he discusses would be british when he is trying to make his case for being an important figure is the fact that he is -- he has also been to france. because his father was in the company, he then got a job as part of the company, and in that capacity he traveled at least once, maybe a couple times to a place called orleans, were the company had its headquarters. he spoke french. he had knowledge of the local african community and of the operation of french trade. so, it allowed for him to really benefit from both of these worlds. the other thing it did for the british was that it forced them into new arrangements had not really had and their west african settlements.
12:55 am
and in some ways, it gave them talking points for new discussions. there was a man by the name of john lindsay who arrived there with the british invasion. he was a priest, a religious figure. he writes a memoir. in that, he talks about this community. he talks about people like this, and he says, maybe this is a good idea. maybe we ought to be intermarrying with africans and it could work out for the best. not that everybody believes that, right? it is not all of the sudden kumbaya and racism is gone. but it does allow for talking points, for legal recognition in some cases of status that otherwise would not have been recognized. and after all of this is over, there are a bunch of ships back
12:56 am
shifts back and forth of property. they end up losing the only thing the french get back. this has longer-term applications for the french empire in senegal, which we will talk about next time. the final story is these sadder one. maybe i should not have had this last. this is kind of depressing, the story. martinique. remember a few weeks ago we read the trial transcripts of the slave conspiracy interrogations from 1710? and you remember, that conspiracy was concerning to be french, particularly because it happened at a time of war. this was during the war of the spanish succession. british ships are coming and going. they were afraid the island was going to be attacked. it crystallizes their general fear of enslaved people rising up and claiming authority, claiming freedom. the same thing happens during the seven years' war.
12:57 am
starting in the late 1750's and going up to the siege of martinique in 1762, there are a series of high-profile escapes and plots discovered. there was a man who wrote a memoir. he was from martinique. he was a slave holder. he talks about how day after day, runaway slaves were brought back to the square in martinique and executed in a very public way. because they had to be examples. because as they saw the masts of british ships coming closer and closer, as they heard these stories of british takeover of colonial areas, they became concerned this would be a
12:58 am
pretext not just for individuals running away, but a coordinated colonial rebellion. the executioner is asked to do a series of horrific things. he not only has to hang people who tried to run away, but do things like break them on the wheel. he is charged with burning their bodies after they are killed publicly. to terrify. remember angelique in montréal, how she was hanged? her body was burned. it was an act of terrorism, right, to terrorize the people into submission. himself, the executioner wasn't enslaved person. he was part of this community at st. pierre that certainly involved a lot of friends. these people, when they were not looking, they would spend time together. they had social relationships, sexual relationships, family relationships.
12:59 am
and this community, even though it was a port city, is a fairly small town. so, what is in all likelihood the case? this enslaved man as being asked to do these horrific things not to an abstract, faceless group of people, but his friends. imagine that for a second. the french tried to put a good face on this war. they will say we will fight to stop the british, who are going to be desperate. they tell the indians they will be destroyed by the british because they will no longer have us to worry about. that turns out to be true. but they say other things to the slaves in martinique. the horror stories you hear about the british caribbean do not happen here because we treat you as catholics, more as equals than these horrible british. no one really believes it, it turns out, and they are right not to believe it.
1:00 am
the violence of slavery was at the center of this war. it is important to end on this in some ways, because if we forget this, we forget really what is at stake. there is the potential of the spanish silver trade at stake here. that is theoretical. there is the potential control of the trade in india and bengal, where you will get cotton and silk and other things.
1:01 am
1:02 am
1:03 am
1:04 am
1:05 am
1:06 am
1:07 am
1:08 am
1:09 am
1:10 am

54 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on